Los Angeles Times

Hypocrisy in D. C. fuels Trump

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Re “Workers for Trump? Why?” Opinion, Jan. 31

Garret Keizer speculates that blue- collar workers support billionair­e Donald Trump because they see him as a winner in the battle against their common enemy, the government.

Keizer is blinded by his own politics. Blue- collar workers favor Trump because they distrust the hypocrisy of career politician­s in both parties.

But Keizer says bluecollar workers are making a mistake based on their f lawed distrust of government and dismisses criticism of government as having “to do more with soul than logic.” Yet, government is the largest monopoly of all, just as prone to corrosive effects of concentrat­ed power as corporatio­ns.

Keizer will support Bernie Sanders because he prefers the monopoly of government to that of corporatio­ns. The world of the 20th century showed us how well that can work out. Today, countries such as China and Cuba are opening their economies to private property and freer markets to reduce poverty, while countries such as Venezuela are suffering the shortages, high inf lation and turmoil of their government- run monopolies.

Joe Blackman

Sierra Madre

Presidenti­al preference­s aren’t based solely on voters’ economic situation. They follow from their answer to this: “Who stands strongest for America, as I understand it?”

With our vote, we define our country. If we define America as an individual­istic, xenophobic plutocracy, we are for Trump. We don’t like government rules ( only government benefits), we don’t like immigrants ( except white ones), and we don’t care if billionair­es are taking over.

Keizer’s explicatio­n of Trumpism actually turns out to be an attack on liberal centrism and Hillary Clinton’s program of enactable progressiv­e

incrementa­lism. Keizer’s hope that Trumpists, despite having been persuaded that his country is their country, would wake up and vote for Sanders is fantasy.

Bart Mills

Manhattan Beach

American workers have enjoyed a high standard of living for many decades compared with the rest of the world. A factory worker here used to be able to look forward to a decent life, even though factory workers elsewhere faced harsher conditions.

As corporatio­ns continue to disperse American jobs to countries with cheaper labor, American working- class incomes are slowly equalizing to the rest of the world.

Demagogues such as Trump appeal to those who feel that the government is not protecting the American standard of living. The expectatio­n is that strong borders and a reinvigora­ted economy will restore the working class, but this is an illusion. There is nothing special about an American worker in a world of 7 billion other workers.

Ed Salisbury

Ontario

Blue- collar workers are supporting Trump not because they have repressed their envy. They have been convinced by the right that, in this system supposedly full of opportunit­ies, if they are poorly paid and employed, it’s their own fault.

This lie has been repeated so often it has become part of our collective psyche. Remember Mitt Romney’s 47%?

When people feel incompeten­t, they yearn for a savior. Among those deemed to be losers, ego equates strength. This is the basis for fascism, and history does repeat itself.

Marie Matthews

San Pedro

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