You made a comment that Democrats are the recipients of donations from billionaires. In support of your allegationyou linked an article containing a chart.
Your allegation is technically correct according to the article. Howefver, since you were citing billionaires' contributions the implication was that they were large donations. You did nothing to dispel this implication.
The article you linked, clearly did. In one small bit of integrity they put a qualifier right above the chart. I pointed this out in post #171, but you have failed to address it. Here is my post again...
I think you misunderstood the point I was trying to make. The key takeaway from that article and the accompanying chart was that Sanders had 0 billionaires donating to him. It was really just a side point I was bringing up; the article was not my main point. I never said anything about the size of the donations they received, but it's clear that many people from the upper classes (not just billionaires) support the Democrats.
The original question was about why Democrats have been losing support from white women. I would link this to an overall trend which was evident in the 2016 election, too. The Democrats have abandoned being the party of working people.
Trump merely had to express his opposition to NAFTA and other free trade agreements. He supported tariffs, which has been supported by the working class since even before the Civil War.
Any Democrat could have opposed NAFTA and/or favored tariffs to help the workers, but they didn't. That's the elephant in the living room that you and many partisan Democrats refuse to acknowledge.
Whatever you say about that Forbes article or your projections about me is meaningless compared to that.
Either Democrats support bringing jobs back to America, or they don't. Either Democrats support affordable housing, or they don't. Either they support socialized medicine, or they don't. From all indications, the majority of Democrats support none of these things. Billionaires don't want these things either, because then it would mean they can't screw the people anymore. Democrats are aiding and abetting them in this process, regardless of how much these billionaires donating (or not donating) to Democratic candidates.
As I wrote, the disclaimer was right above the chart. You saw the chart, you cut/pasted the chart into an RF post. You did not copy the qualifier about the $100. If that was not an intentional omission, if you just, somehow, didn't see it, I'll be glad to listen to your reasoning. Until then, in the absence of anything to the contrary, I'll have to stick with my "intentional" judgment.
To be honest, I didn't think it was relevant to the point I was making. I'm not sure why you think it's such a big deal. Are you seriously trying to argue that Democrats support working people? If so, then do you have support for such an argument? All you've really done is tell me that the Republicans are worse, which I'm not denying, but who cares?
If the Republicans are so much worse, then it should be cakewalk for Democrats every election, because there are more working and middle class Americans than there are billionaires. If the working people were convinced that their lives would get better and that they had friends in the Democratic Party, they would vote for them. My contention is that the Democrats haven't done a thing in a very long time to convince the workers that they're on their side.
Rent controls, price controls, tariffs, increased unionization, withdrawal from free trade agreements, socialized medicine, free higher education - these are things the Democrats should push for and support, and they would get votes. But they don't do that. Why do you think that is?