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Trump's Rise Was Rooted in These Three Things
American Thinker ^ | February 25, 2017 | Larry Alton

Posted on 02/25/2017 5:47:18 AM PST by Kaslin

Now that the dust has settled, protests have largely come to an end, and Donald Trump has added the title of “president” to his name, it’s worthwhile to take a breath and look back at what transpired over the past 18 months.

How did the man that millions laughed at for so many months become President Donald Trump?

It’s actually fairly simple when you study it.

The Three Factors Fueling Trump’s Improbable Rise

To say that Trump’s rise to president was as simple as a three-pronged approach would be doing a disservice to all the people who spent many sleepless nights concocting intricate strategies, quelling dangerous lies from the left, and traveling to every corner of the country for the better part of a year and a half.

But with that said, it’s easy for us to look back on the Trump campaign -- and the movement that swept the nation -- and tie his success to three significant factors.

In this article, we’re going to take a look at each of these factors and what they meant to the businessman’s success.

1. A Frustrated Middle-Class

Perhaps the most telling factor in Trump’s success has been the massive collection of frustrated middle-class families. While the lower-class and upper-class overwhelmingly voted for Hillary Clinton, Trump cleaned up with the middle class. But before we touch on how he was able to do that, let’s take a look at why the middle-class feels so disenfranchised.

(Excerpt) Read more at americanthinker.com ...


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: presidenttrump
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1 posted on 02/25/2017 5:47:18 AM PST by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin
The author overlooks the most obvious point:

Trump won because he's not a politician.

2 posted on 02/25/2017 5:57:40 AM PST by Alberta's Child ("Yo, bartender -- Jobu needs a refill!")
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To: Kaslin

Hindsight is ALWAYS 20/20.

I read through these three expounded upon points and there are some “wisdoms” contained within with which I don’t agree. In point one, it ends with frustration of the middle class including “rich-get-richer” dissatisfaction. I don’t begrudge that, nor was it EVER part of my frustration.

Point two: “unscripted personality.” Yeah, horsehockey unless you really want to nail it down and say that his appeal was and IS that he speaks from the heart, tells you the truth as he believes it, and, MORE IMPORTANTLY, has so far been the ONLY candidate to try and implement his campaign promises I can remember. The other candidates and politicians have ALL been liars of exigency, IMO.

Point three: Ability to ‘control’ the media. No. He isn’t controlling them. He is ignoring them and refusing to accept the media’s false narrative. Neither he, you, I or the media can help that he’s chose another venue to get his message out.

In summation, I submit that even those on our side who may or may not have any motives in analyzing what happened STILL DO NOT GET IT! Not a damn bit. To understand the reasons, you have had to LIVE with its causes over decades and suffered the endless lies of dissembling politicians and an intrusive government that doesn’t give a sh!t about you in an economy which has been lied about consistently.


3 posted on 02/25/2017 5:58:18 AM PST by Gaffer
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To: Kaslin

4. We sent the Republicans to congress to kill Obamacare and stop illegal immigration and they did neither.


4 posted on 02/25/2017 6:01:05 AM PST by Emergencyawesome
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To: Kaslin

The comments at AT were better than the article itself...


5 posted on 02/25/2017 6:08:54 AM PST by smileyface (Things looking up in RED PA!)
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To: Kaslin

I recall the day Trump announced he was running, Rush disrupted his monologue to break the news, and snickered while telling us, then played the Trump sound bite.

When Trump said he’d get rid of the illegals on that day, that was the day I was on his side. I also factored in his not being a politician and being very successful. I knew electing the same bunch of lying RINO’s was not cutting it.


6 posted on 02/25/2017 6:12:03 AM PST by redfreedom
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To: Kaslin

The top-rated comment to that article is worthy of its own post, but I recount it here


JohnFRoss • 6 hours ago

I find it amusing that there are so many people who seem dumbfounded that Trump won the election, and now need to analyze why. I was all in for Trump as soon as he announced in the summer of 2015, and so were a lot of other people. We weren’t all lower middle class people with stagnant wages, either. A lot of us were sick of the Uniparty sellouts in both parties.

On February 26, 2016, long before Trump won either the nomination or the election, I wrote an article for AT that unfortunately was not approved for submission. Perhaps it is more appropriate today:

I first voted as a sophomore in college when unelected incumbent Gerald Ford, considerably weakened by an almost-successful Reagan challenge in the primary, lost to Georgia Governor Jimmy Carter.

The malaise of the Carter years lasted through my college graduation, and Ronald Reagan won his 1980 landslide victory the same week that I was hired by EF Hutton, then the nation’s second-largest brokerage firm. My mother and many other relatives scoffed at Reagan (“He made a movie with a chimp”) but I was a huge fan, for primarily two reasons: First, his degree was in economics, and as a result of that, he had the unshakable belief that capitalism was the greatest engine of prosperity the world had ever seen. He also believed the free market would always correct itself, and refrained from the kinds of tinkering that politicians are wont to do, like the price controls Nixon inflicted on America. The Iranian hostages were released about five minutes after Reagan was sworn in, and when he fired all the Air Traffic Controllers that went on strike, the men in the Kremlin all raced for the toilets to deal with mass diarrhea.

As a result, after the markets realized Reagan was the Real Deal and blasted off like Secretariat in the home stretch at the Belmont, the 1980s were a tremendous time for a young man with a background in finance, a book full of clients, and a passion for building wealth. When the leadership at Hutton started to look questionable in 1986, I left and started my own investment firm. Hutton was soon bought by Shearson.

George Bush squandered the 91% approval rating he had in 1991 by breaking his “no new taxes” pledge and signing the ludicrous Assault Weapons ban, and he lost to Bill Clinton in 1992. It was then that I first heard the term “RINO,” and had the seeds planted in my mind of the concept that would mature into the UniParty.

Now, in 2016, with the disastrous foreign policy of Barack Obama finishing what Jimmy Carter started in Iran, with a record number of Americans unemployed and a record number of illegal aliens, criminals, and military-age male Muslim “refugees” pouring into our country, with a record number of Americans on food stamps, EBT cards, and WIC subsidies, and with 47% of our electorate paying NO INCOME TAXES AT ALL, we are once again in the same kind of depressing reality we endured in 1980.

Just as Ronald Reagan told us it was “Morning in America” with his sunny optimism and bedrock belief that Capitalism would lift us to new heights, we now have a man who promises to “Make America Great Again,” and has the same upbeat conviction that this country can be the best it has ever been. Ronald Reagan was derided as a B-list actor (who made a movie with a chimp), an “amiable dunce,” and a warmonger who happened to be a mental lightweight. Donald Trump is dismissed as a “reality star,” a blowhard with a massive ego, a racist, and (horror of horrors) “not a real conservative” who “should really be running as a Democrat.”

These parallels are tempting, but they miss the mark for several reasons. First of all, we are now in an environment where the Party elites (or “establishment,” if you prefer) are much more aligned with Globalization to line their own pockets at the expense of ordinary Americans compared to 1980. Further, we now have the UniParty, much more than 35 years ago. Back then I never heard anyone say “there’s no difference between the two parties.” Now that sentiment is common, and rightly so.

If you doubt the existence of the UniParty, think of all the members of the GOPe who have either said “Trump can’t beat Hillary” or that if Trump gets the nomination, they will actually VOTE for Hillary!

Donald Trump thinks big. Period. He thinks bigger than just the Presidency, and his supporters feel that in their bones, even if they don’t consciously realize it. When Donald Trump says he wants to help “Make America great again,” he actually means it. He isn’t just aiming for the Presidency, he is going for ALL the marbles. Donald Trump and his supporters don’t just want him to win the Presidency, we want him to also kill the UniParty.

Make no mistake about this: Donald Trump is not just our candidate, he’s our MURDER WEAPON.

Like a traitor or spy in wartime as contrasted to enemy soldiers in uniform, the GOPe has arguably been an even worse agent of destruction in this country than the Socialist slime that permeates the Democratic party. The people saw the horror of an Obama Presidency, the Republicans said they needed control of the House before they could push back, so the people gave it to them in 2010. What happened? Nothing.

The Republicans then said they needed control of the Senate to stop the Marxist slide, so the people gave that to them, too, in 2014. Again nothing happened. Wait, I take that back—Paul Ryan happened.

Then the GOPe rewrote the election rules to make it more difficult for a “movement” candidate to gain traction in the Presidential election (outright majority in 8 states needed instead of just 5, changed in 2014), to assure they could field another McCain or Romney that, win or lose, would keep the elites in power at the expense of everyone else in America. Donald Trump saw this, before he announced, and put together a plan to deal with it.

Trump’s plan has been working so well that the GOPe even tried to get the rules changed BACK to the 5-state minimum when their splitter strategy to ultimately give Jeb the nomination failed so miserably. Don’t believe me that Jeb was always the chosen one? Then why on earth would the GOPe allow not one but TWO candidates into the primaries that quite possibly won’t meet the Natural Born Citizen requirement, if not to use them as splitters to eventually prop up Jeb?

Donald Trump is well aware of ALL of this, and he intends to not only crush Hillary or Sanders, but also root out the UniParty Paul Ryans that have betrayed the Republican base from within. That’s why he terrifies ALL the elites in power, and is garnering such massive support from the people of America.

Donald Trump is one of the richest men in the country. The lowest estimate of his wealth is about $5 billion, which means he’s wealthier than all but about 100 people in a country of over 300 million. Donald Trump and the next multiple generations of his family could live like kings by merely running their existing businesses in the same successful manner that they are currently doing. That wasn’t true of Ronald Reagan. And unlike Reagan, who had strained (and estranged) relationships with his children, the entire Trump family is a stellar example of cohesive love, intelligence, decency, and passion for excellence.

Instead of being content to just enjoy the fruits of his successful business, Donald Trump is demonstrating the energy of ten men a third his age by holding massive rallies all over the country, and he is exposing himself to massive physical danger from not only the mentally ill misfits that lurk around such events, but political enemies in the UniParty with access to more professional operators. Remember what happened to Vince Foster, Ron Brown, and many others?

Why is Trump doing this? Is it because he intends to seize the reins of power, sell out to the Globalists, and multiply his wealth even more?

I don’t think so. I don’t think so because I believe Donald Trump likes accomplishing what he said he’d do even more than he likes making the most possible money in a deal. I believe that because I myself am the same way: Making lots of money is great, but once you’ve done that, doing good for the country that made it possible is even better. I think that sentiment is true of most successful people. The second reason I believe Trump when he says he wants to make America great again is there is a historic precedent, and it’s not Ronald Reagan.

There was a man in America, who, like Trump, was one of the wealthiest in the country. Like Trump, he came from a wealthy family, but unlike Trump, he also married a woman even wealthier than himself. He had massive holdings, in land that stretched from Virginia to Ohio. He could have lived his entire life like royalty, and wanted for nothing. The taxes he paid, in relation to his income, were trivial.

Instead, like Trump, he wanted to Make America Great. And his desire to do this was so strong, that he risked imprisonment, losing everything he had, and death. And when he SUCCEEDED at making America great, and his work was done, he could have had anything he wanted. He could literally have been King. Instead, he looked over what he had done, smiled, and returned to his property and family.

That man was George Washington. I believe Donald Trump is of the same mettle.

2/25/2017 addition: Everything that Trump has done since his inauguration reinforces my belief in the things I wrote above.


7 posted on 02/25/2017 6:17:37 AM PST by XEHRpa
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To: Kaslin

I’ll give you the three H’s why Hillary lost:

Her...Hillary just isn’t very likable. Whether it’s her shrill voice, questions about her health and email servers, etc., she just wasn’t a strong candidate. Her disconnect with voters was stunning. Expecting to win simply because “it’s my turn” won’t work during a time of economic and social chaos.

Him...The Dims set themselves up for failure in 2016 way back in 2008 when they equated any criticism of Barack Hussein Obama to racism. Hillary’s no dummy; she knew the economy was crap, but couldn’t say that because of the aforementioned rule. While Trump was pounding the poor economy, social unrest and terrorist attacks, Hillary was forced to act like it was all a bed of roses. They were hoisted by their own petard.

Hutzpah (I’m using a variant spelling)...When Hillary uttered her now famous “deplorable” comment, she was toast.


8 posted on 02/25/2017 6:39:25 AM PST by Kharis13 (That noise you hear is our Founding Fathers spinning in their graves.)
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To: Gaffer

Dittos


9 posted on 02/25/2017 6:45:06 AM PST by Cvengr ( Adversity in life & death is inevitable; Stress is optional through faith in Christ.)
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To: XEHRpa

It’s important to start to focus on the fact that Trumpismo does not have a majority in either house of Congress.

A critical decision needs to be made soon, and that is - should Trump go before Congress and make a “Who’s with me?” speech? A “Love me or leave me” speech.

If he does so, some RINOs, and perhaps many RINOs, will abandon him and vote with the Democrats. This would allow Trump to run his own people in 2018 (and he has the cash and organizational talent to do it), but it would run the risk of his removal before then.

If he sticks with the GOP, he will be tangled up endlessly.

What say you?


10 posted on 02/25/2017 6:46:49 AM PST by Jim Noble (Die Gedanken sind Frei)
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To: Gaffer
The opposition candidates — the 16 or so Republicans AND Hillary Clinton — ran on the same old political party platforms they had been running on for decades.

They were out of touch with ‘flyover country’.

Clinton ran basically a 1992 type campaign with many of the same speeches and promises. The 16 or so Republicans did similar by parroting the same Republican talkingpoints — lower taxes, better wages, economic improvement, yada yada yada.

None of them offered anything new, and besides, they were politicians who few trusted to keep any promises they made.

11 posted on 02/25/2017 6:54:23 AM PST by TomGuy
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To: Kaslin

Bump


12 posted on 02/25/2017 6:57:29 AM PST by painter ( Isaiah: �Woe to those who call evil good and good evil,")
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To: TomGuy

Agree. But I DO know one thing. I don’t need a member of the media to analyze and parse why I and 62 million other Americans voted for Trump. Not by a long shot.

The real analysis and conclusion is that the pundits, politicians, media and elites in journalist didn’t know their a$$ from a hole in the ground on this, so why should I listen to them now?


13 posted on 02/25/2017 6:57:43 AM PST by Gaffer
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To: Alberta's Child

The author overlooks the most obvious point:
Trump won because he’s not a politician.

########################

Yes. Many millions of Americans would cheerfully haul our parasite class known as politicians to the guillotine. Many millions more would not lift a hand to stop it, or would applaud. Politicians are licensed criminals for the most part, at this point.


14 posted on 02/25/2017 6:58:36 AM PST by Psalm 144 (Ace McCain, the Songbird. Nearly soloed an aircraft carrier, now midwife to ISIS.)
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To: Emergencyawesome
We sent the Republicans to congress to kill Obamacare and stop illegal immigration and they did neither.

Precisely . . . a far more important factor that any of the three the author listed - the voters realized they were being lied to repeatedly.

15 posted on 02/25/2017 7:13:29 AM PST by RatRipper (The biggest threat to US national security is our government and those in it.)
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To: smileyface

Yes, they are.


16 posted on 02/25/2017 7:26:20 AM PST by Psalm 144 (Ace McCain, the Songbird. Nearly soloed an aircraft carrier, now midwife to ISIS.)
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To: Jim Noble

He needs to tell Congress to stand up with him or get out of the way in about a year when there will be no time to mount impeachment proceedings before the midters. He then needs to field his candidates, esp in the Senate, to become bullet proof. All we must pray is to keep the man alive. GW stood toe to toe with the enemy. DT wis doing so as well.


17 posted on 02/25/2017 7:29:27 AM PST by Louis Foxwell (The Left has the temperament of a squealing pig.)
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To: XEHRpa

Martha married an ancestor of mine who was a major land owner from the eastern shore of MD. When he died she remarried GW making him the wealthiest man in the colonies. GW’s character and belief in the new republic are legendary. He is the only president to which President Trump can fairly be likened. President Trump is the President Washington of our age. He will, if it can be done, return us to the founding principles of the USA. If he cannot Make America Great Again it will not be his fault but the fault of Americans who seek their own comfort and not the Hand of God in human affairs.


18 posted on 02/25/2017 7:36:33 AM PST by Louis Foxwell (The Left has the temperament of a squealing pig.)
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To: XEHRpa
That comment was definitely better than the article! Thanks for posting it here.

I laughed at candidate Trump for exactly eight hours. I remember the day he announced (just up the street from where I work) and my co-workers and I shared a laugh at lunchtime when we heard about it. I did not know a lot about Donald Trump at the time and figured it was all a publicity stunt to boost his Apprentice ratings and that he'd be out of the race by Labor Day. Still, I welcomed the diversion as it appeared that Jeb Bush was on his way to a coronation and the race up to that point was a snoozefest. There was some excitement here about candidate Ted Cruz but I did not really see him beating Jeb Bush.

Then I went home that night and saw Free Republic all ablaze over Trump's announcement. I went over to YouTube to see his announcement speech and he had me within 5 minutes. He said all the right things and hit all the right buttons with me. I no longer saw him as a "joke" candidate.

Still, I did not see how he could win. The media immediately went into a frenzy over his talk about immigration and building the wall. I did not see how he could survive it. But Trump doubled down and gave every indication that he was dead serious about winning the presidency and that this was no publicity stunt.

By Independence Day (2015), I was convinced that Donald Trump would be our next president. I maintained that conviction all through the brutal primaries and general election. I paid no attention to the polls and pundits that said otherwise. My only surprise on election day was that his win wasn't bigger than it was. I expected the "hidden monster vote" to be much bigger. I truly expected Trump to carry states like VA, NH, CO, NM and NV (in addition to the other states he did win). Never had a doubt about FL, OH, PA and MI. Was pleasantly surprised by WI. I knew that Trump had that Rust Belt vote locked down all along. I just expected it to be bigger.

The good news is that Trump has only solidified his hold on the Rust Belt with his achievements since the election. Trust me on this, in 2020, Trump will own PA, MI, WI, OH and win all those states by double-digit margins. Those states are definitely not flipping back. So President Trump needs to keep the pedal to the metal for the next four years and do what he was elected to do. The re-election will take care of itself.

19 posted on 02/25/2017 8:01:08 AM PST by SamAdams76
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To: Kaslin

Frustrated middle class — check.
Unscripted personality — check.
Ability to control narrative — check.

My three reasons are simpler than that:
John Boehner (zero accomplishments, given enormous power by conservatism, squandered it for GOP-e pottage)
Mitch McConnell (zero accomplishments, given enormous power by conservatism, squandered it for GOP-e magic beans)
Donald Trump (massive accomplishments, owing nobody anything, saying what we’ve all been thinking but our GOP-e “leaders” were always unwilling to say, vowing to blow up the republicrat establishment and undo barrak obama).

It’s that simple. And, oh yes, a PS onto the Donald Trump manifest: unique, ingenious blue-collar appeal.


20 posted on 02/25/2017 8:07:23 AM PST by Migraine (Diversity is great- -- until it happens to YOU.)
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