I don't know anyone who has publicly said
this, but I knew profs who supported Perot, so i'm sure there are some Trumpkins in all walks of life.
quote:
I went to Stanford, and I voted for Donald Trump. So did my husband. He went to Yale.
...
The common wisdom is that the majority of Trump's supporters are barely literate knuckle-draggers. They're "low-information," in the words of Trump's leading GOP rival nationwide, Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas. And it's true that the largest education-level cohort among the Republicans who have consistently given Trump a double-digit lead in the primaries consists of people with high-school educations or less.
But in Massachusetts, home of Harvard and MIT and ranked as the No. 1 state for residents possessing at least a bachelor's degree, a CNN exit poll for the March 1 GOP primary showed Trump winning over 46% of voters with college degrees and even edging out Ohio "moderate" Gov. John Kasich (29% to 28%) among voters with postgraduate sheepskins. Exit polls in other states show similar results
But if you read further into her reasons, it comes down to skepticism about Econ 101 issues related to trade.
Last night I was thinking that the perfect song for the Trump campaign is the Georgia Satellites classic with the refrain:
quote:
Don't hand me no lines and keep your hands to yourself
I was looking for the lyrics and ran across this
Rolling Stone profile of the songwriter, who was describing a new song with his current band.
quote:
Onstage later that night, Homemade Sin rip through a two-hour set of Satellites cuts, Baird solo material and songs off Get Loud, never with a set list Baird calls for songs on the fly. One of them is the Get Loud standout "Fairground People," about the hardscrabble folks eking out an existence in one of Nashville's rare neighborhoods not underdoing gentrification. It's a Southern Springsteen tale, about those born not to run, but "on the bottom rung."
"They're the poor white trash who didn't finish high school. I know they're Trump supporters and 'white man can't get a break' people, but still they're salt of the earth. I hate them and I love them," he says. "I used to work construction surveying and I know every one of them. It's like, 'Must be nice to have a new 4x4, but I'll never know.' Or 'Man, I got to put down this meth and get back on my roofing crew.'"
The song is a portrait not a judgment, Baird stresses.