And I recall countering with
MULTIPLE demonstrations that your NATIONAL survey was an outright LIE for speaking to the rural people of the upper Midwest and Appalachians. Look how effective educating you was.
Unfortunately your "demonstrations" only prove that you don't have a mind for data. The trump numbers are significantly higher than the average, and it's completely counterfactual to believe this trend somehow reverses in some special areas (and thus need to be compensated for even more elsewhere). Just because poor people exist doesn't mean they're for trump, and the fact you believe your completely irrelevant links prove this is absolutely comical. These are simply the well off with respect to their peers, looking to keep it that way by keeping minorities and other competitors out.
In fact, it's demonstrably case that living in economically effected areas has zero (if not negative) effect on overall trump support:
http://www.gallup.com/opinion/polling-matters/193898/economic-hardship-favorable-views-trump.aspx
"The analysis looked at commuting zones (CZs) that are in the top fifth and the bottom fifth of all commuting zones in the country, ranked by manufacturing orientation, exposure to Chinese imports and exposure to Mexican immigration by virtue of proximity to the U.S.-Mexico border.[2]
If there is something about living in the top fifth of these CZs that causes residents to be more likely to have a favorable view of Trump, then the expectation would be that those with underlying demographic characteristics favorable to Trump and who live in the top fifth of the CZs ranked by the three criteria I listed above would be even more likely to have a favorable opinion of him than others. And those in the bottom fifth, who otherwise fit the description of someone who would have a favorable view of Trump, would be less likely to have a favorable opinion of Trump due to their geography.
This is not the case, however. The analysis shows that individuals who have the demographic characteristic of prototypical Trump supporters are actually less likely to hold a favorable view of Trump if they live in areas with a high share of manufacturing jobs and high exposure to Chinese imports than those living in areas low on these dimensions.
Thus the apparent correlation between Trump support and the manufacturing orientation of a local area is driven, at least in part, by the demographics of those living in the place rather than by the economic characteristics of the place. Older, less-educated white men tend to live in industrial metropolitan areas, but men with these same characteristics are more likely to support Trump if they live in parts of the country that have been relatively sheltered from trade competition or manufacturing decline.
Likewise, Trump has emphasized the need to build a wall on the U.S.-Mexico border, but his support overall and even among likely Trump supporters is actually lower alongside the border and in neighboring areas with high immigrant populations than it is in the distant northern areas that would be least affected by a wall.[3]"
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I am curious though what makes you believe you're any good with empirical arguments, when the only half-decent ones you're ever been able to produce are a result of parroting people like me.
There you go again. It wasn't "rich" Californians who gave Trump a victory in swing states.
But it would be blue states who represent a majority popular vote in a national survey.
No, it was the uneducated but relatively well off rural population. The sort who want to keep all their blue-area subsidies out of the hands of welfare queens.