
Over the past few weeks, there's been no shortage of media attention regarding the supposed dominance of Hillary Clinton in the polls. Whether she's winning women, minorities, or the LGBTQ community, Clinton is portrayed as having an easy path to the White House. To bolster that claim, one needs to look at the revolving door of the Donald Trump campaign. Clearly, the Republicans are rearranging the deck chairs of the Titanic -- or are they?
Admittedly, the data looks bad. But we have to acknowledge that the mainstream media has a leftist agenda. One of the topics of which they are deficient -- indeed, so are many Americans -- is math. No matter how much the media politicizes changing demographics, no matter how often they emphasize "growth rates" and other vectors, there are scalar realities that cannot be ignored.
Bluntly, it's a white person's world. To be more specific, it's a modestly educated white person's world. According to data from the Pew Research Center and the U.S. Census Bureau, blacks, Hispanics, and Asians combined account for 29% of eligible voters for the upcoming general election. Whites make up 71%. Surprisingly, among whites, the single greatest voting base is the blue-collar worker -- exactly the core strength of Donald Trump's campaign!
In other words, there's no need to pander to any particular group. White people will determine who the next President of the United States will be. No amount of appeasement programs will offset the enormous firepower that the white voting base possesses.
That doesn't mean that minorities can be ignored outright. Here's what needs to happen. Donald Trump must win at least 80% of his core, white working class base. From there, he needs to win 45% of educated whites, who are more likely to vote for Clinton. Achieving that, he would only need to win 10% of blacks, Hispanics, and Asians, and victory shall be his.
Another scenario calls for Trump winning 90% of white workers. That would mean that only 30% of educated whites would need to swing in his favor, and 8% among each major minority group.
By no stretch of the imagination is such a task a cakewalk. But it's also not the insurmountable challenge that the liberal media makes it out to be. By focusing on his core strengths, Donald Trump will give himself a very good opportunity to take the White House.
Admittedly, the data looks bad. But we have to acknowledge that the mainstream media has a leftist agenda. One of the topics of which they are deficient -- indeed, so are many Americans -- is math. No matter how much the media politicizes changing demographics, no matter how often they emphasize "growth rates" and other vectors, there are scalar realities that cannot be ignored.
Bluntly, it's a white person's world. To be more specific, it's a modestly educated white person's world. According to data from the Pew Research Center and the U.S. Census Bureau, blacks, Hispanics, and Asians combined account for 29% of eligible voters for the upcoming general election. Whites make up 71%. Surprisingly, among whites, the single greatest voting base is the blue-collar worker -- exactly the core strength of Donald Trump's campaign!
In other words, there's no need to pander to any particular group. White people will determine who the next President of the United States will be. No amount of appeasement programs will offset the enormous firepower that the white voting base possesses.
That doesn't mean that minorities can be ignored outright. Here's what needs to happen. Donald Trump must win at least 80% of his core, white working class base. From there, he needs to win 45% of educated whites, who are more likely to vote for Clinton. Achieving that, he would only need to win 10% of blacks, Hispanics, and Asians, and victory shall be his.
Another scenario calls for Trump winning 90% of white workers. That would mean that only 30% of educated whites would need to swing in his favor, and 8% among each major minority group.
By no stretch of the imagination is such a task a cakewalk. But it's also not the insurmountable challenge that the liberal media makes it out to be. By focusing on his core strengths, Donald Trump will give himself a very good opportunity to take the White House.