To many hard-working
people, this is a time of economic uncertainty. Thus, it is important to
point out that America’s superrich are intentionally and brazenly
knocking down the middle class and poor to further enrich themselves.
They are aided by clueless, corrupt politicians who don’t care about the
future of ordinary Americans or of America itself. In these hard times,
along comes Donald J. Trump, a swaggering billionaire braggart
promising greatness by goading working-class white people into
mollifying their pain and anxiety by despising those “other people”
situated near them on the social-economic ladder.
The
media establishment has erroneously put the “populist” crown on Trump,
endorsing his absurd assertion that he might be a billionaire, but he’s
“our” billionaire, fighting for us commoners.
But I am here to say, don’t be a sucker.
There’s
not a single populist muscle in Donnie’s whole plutocratic body. He
will sell out wage earners, small-business people, and anyone else to
serve his own needs or whims, as his lifelong record (as opposed to his
recent rhetoric) reveals.
Donnie
learned from Daddy Fred, who built his son’s inherited fortune by
milking federal housing programs in the 1940s and ‘50s, and then – as
the landlord of these New York City apartments – flagrantly
discriminated against black
applicants. One of Fred’s tenants was Woody Guthrie, who was so
appalled that he wrote about Trump’s greed and racism. Donnie has
enhanced his fortune by emulating his father’s business ethics,
including engaging in wage theft, outsourcing his clothing line and
other brand-name products to such low-wage countries as China and
Vietnam, and underpaying undocumented immigrants engaged in dangerous
construction work on his luxury projects. Also, as of this summer, Trump
or his companies were defendants in 1,300 lawsuits – many of which were
over stiffing cabinet makers, plumbers and other small business
suppliers.
Candidate
Trump grandiosely says he’ll lift up the middle class, but his proposed
economic policies would do the opposite by expanding the GOP’s old
anti-labor agenda: giving massive new tax cuts to corporations and the
rich, slashing public spending on programs that working families rely
on, and embracing the laissez-faire ideological claptrap that Tea Party
Republicans mindlessly repeat in their ceaseless efforts to drive down
wages. On the minimum wage, he’s taken more positions than you’ll find
in the Kama Sutra. First, he said $7.25 an hour was already too
much; then he called for abolishing the wage floor entirely; then he
mused that he might be open to an increase (but certainly not the
$15-an-hour living wage that worker activists are
fighting for). Even Trump’s “rock-solid” opposition to NAFTA, the
Trans-Pacific Partnership, and other trade scams now looks to be a
political bait-andswitch fraud, as indicated by his choice of Indiana
Gov. Mike Pence to be his VP and top policy “partner.” Pence is a
notorious freetrade fanatic who pushed zealously to pass all eight trade
deals that came before him while in Congress, and he’s been lobbying
hard this year for passage of the TPP.
Now,
consider whom he’s vilifying, mocking and bullying at his rallies and
in his tweets. Overwhelmingly, they are terrorized migrants, Mexican
immigrants he labels “rapists,” black protestors experiencing police
brutality, disabled individuals, and so on. This pampered son of
privilege wants America’s hard-hit, angry working people to elect him
because he demonstrates the “courage” to be politically incorrect by
kicking the poor, the powerless and the marginalized.
Some
might see Trump as a brilliant, can-do corporate chieftain. Or they
might be tempted to cast a protest vote to throw the political class
into disarray. But people should consider the consequences and not fool
themselves into thinking Trump’s a populist who’ll be on our side. In
his heart, mind, and whole being, the central political truth about
Trump is that he’s foremost a Trumpist – of, by and for himself.