Why are you ignoring the obvious? The average Trump voter is richer because the average Trump voter is white. There is an enormous racial gap in income and wealth accumulation in the US (see
this for example). For all the talk of the "left behind" white working class in the Midwest, I don't hear much discussion about that.
No one said there aren't poorer people than the "average Trump supporter". What I said was that there are real problems and struggles these people experience and obviously their own problems and own struggles seem bigger to them than inner city black people's. And it is the same the other way around, by the way. Such is human nature that our own problems are more important to us than other's. But just because there are people who are poorer it doesn't negate these people's very real problems, so I am not sure what's your point in bringing up how there are black people who are poorer. Yes, there are. Does that negate rural America's very real problems though?
The article I quoted actually addressed that too:
And if you dare complain, some liberal elite will pull out their iPad and type up a rant about your racist white privilege. Already, someone has replied to this with a comment saying, "You should try living in a ghetto as a minority!" Exactly. To them, it seems like the plight of poor minorities is only used as a club to bat away white cries for help. Meanwhile, the rate of rural white suicides and overdoses skyrockets. Shit, at least politicians act like they care about the inner cities.
This type of come-back to problems that "look, someone has a bigger problem than you" is not an answer to the problems and in fact is very counter-productive. It only alienates people more because they feel like they are not being listened to they are just being told to shut up. And no, I am not saying Trump is the answer to the problems, in fact, I said I don't think he is.
If your point is that it is not some poor vs. rich thing because "see, poor black people didn't vote for Trump", you know it well that black people wouldn't have voted Republican in big numbers even if it had been a decent candidate running. That is just so historically. Moreover, you had Bernie Sanders in the Democrat primaries who is basically a socialist - possibly the best candidate for really poor people. Where do you think Sanders lost to Hillary? By black people's votes. Even when, as you said, black people are among the poorest in the US on average income, so Bernie should have been better for them. But many black people have a loyality to the Clintons. It shows that the emotional element does play a part on both sides and in fact, sometimes (or often?) in politics it trumps a rational argument.
Now, the question is what is that emotional element about Trump? You say it is racism. My difference with you is that I don't think you can put a blanket label of racism on 59 million people and say they are all racist and they all voted for Trump because they are racist. I don't think all of them had a racist motive to vote for Trump. Yes, they did ignore his racist comments (which is bad), but I don't think all of them voted for him
because of those comments (or because he is a douche with women, for that matter) but there were many who voted for him
despite of those. Because they are desperate and they see their solution in Trump. I do think these people experience real problems that they expect Trump's promises could solve. Yes, probably they are wrong and probably Trump won't be able to solve those problems. But this is
how they see it - and that's all that matters when they go to vote, not whether they are right or wrong about that perception.
Why did they see that big hope in Trump? Because he was the one addressing those problems the most. He probably did that just to get in power and yes, he addressed their problems in a demagogue way - never offering the details as to
how he plans to solve those problems. But at least he did address those problems. Hillary did it too in her own way, but she somehow was detached from them. Hell, she was even detached from a big segment of Democrat voters - since the turnout for her was a lot less than for Obama 4 and 8 years ago. She was simply uninspiring to people, it seems.
When you look at the election map and compare it to 2012, what's the difference that made it for Trump in comparation to Romney? The rust belt states. (The states around the Big Lakes with a struggling, dying industry.) Those states are exactly where these economical problems are the more prevalent. Those states voted for Obama in 2012. So do not tell me it is all about racism and the economical element and the hopelessness resulting from that is not a very important part of it.
I'm still not quite sure what people mean with the "elite" and the "establishment". Are scientists part of the elite? Experts of any kind? People with actual political experience?
Scientist are a part of the elite. Experts too. "Elite" is not in itself a negative term. What gives it a negative connotation the elite
who doesn't listen (and even worse: who arrogantly mocks). Who is just too happy to sit in his ivory tower and make judgements about them, while he ignores their struggles. "Elite" in this context - and in these people's eyes - is also the journalist who lies and distorts facts. The comedist from the city who makes fun of them and their way of life. The liberal pundit who defends Islam tooth and nail and wants to ban any criticism of Islam out of protecting religious sensitivities, but doesn't seem to have the same sensibility when it comes to the mocking of Christianity - and in fact, he encourages it because then suddenly he is all for freedom of speech. The feminist who is critical about women's place in Christianity or the stance of fundamentalist Christianity on abortion, but stays totally mum when it comes to women's place and situation in Islam. The liberal activist who bashes fundamentalist Chrisianity for its stance on homosexuality but stays totally mum about Islam's. Or I have seen Rachel Maddow on MSNBC fear mongering about the prospect of nuclear war soon after Trump was elected. She played footage of the Cuban Missile Crisis in 1962 when the US and the Soviet Union were close to a nuclear war, she played footage of nuclear rockets and explosions. You can be legitimely worried about many things regarding Trump, but c'mon this is nothing but ridiculous scare mongering. And so on and so forth. That's how these people perceive the "liberal elite": hypcoritical, with double standards and arrogant - and let's not pretend that is all just their imagination.