MOMENTAN AUSVERKAUFT

People : In Your Neighborhood by Michael Wasiura (2017, Trade Paperback)

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Product Identifiers

PublisherCreateSpace
ISBN-101548377759
ISBN-139781548377755
eBay Product ID (ePID)11038585448

Product Key Features

Book TitlePeople : in Your Neighborhood
Number of Pages246 Pages
LanguageEnglish
TopicUnited States / 21st Century
Publication Year2017
GenreHistory
AuthorMichael Wasiura
FormatTrade Paperback

Dimensions

Item Height0.6 in
Item Weight11.9 Oz
Item Length8 in
Item Width5 in

Additional Product Features

Intended AudienceTrade
TitleLeadingThe
Designed byWasiura, Nina
SynopsisThe shock of the 2016 election was not that Donald Trump won-it was that he could be in a position to win. The surprise was not that one hundred thousand people spread across Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania altered the course of history-it was that, in a country of three hundred and twenty million mostly decent people, a man who promised to annihilate decency could top thirty percent. Were there idiots and jerks who voted for Donald Trump? Certainly. But there are not 62,985,106 of them. Had there been only 62,885,105, Hillary Clinton may have become president, but the frustrations and misunderstandings and prejudices and calculations and hopes and fears that persuaded even that many of your neighbors to lend their individual voice to this con artist would have remained. This book cannot claim to explain Trump's Midwestern appeal in full. It can only offer the perspectives of seventeen residents of Muskegon County-a struggling post-industrial semi-urban space on the shores of Lake Michigan that, on November 8, 2016, cast 5080 more votes for an abrasive B-list celebrity than it cast for native grandson Mitt Romney four years prior. The story is told from their perspectives, in their words. The result is a portrait of a seemingly inconsequential place that, like so many of the other seemingly inconsequential places between La Crosse and Bethlehem, played its small role in ushering the world into The Age of Trump. This is not a work of political science, nor of sociology, nor of journalism, nor of literature. It is an unvarnished look at how seventeen of your neighbors see this moment, and how they got here., The shock of the 2016 election was not that Donald Trump won-it was that he could be in a position to win. The surprise was not that one hundred thousand people spread across Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania altered the course of history-it was that, in a country of three hundred and twenty million mostly decent people, a man who promised to annihilate decency could top thirty percent. Were there idiots and jerks who voted for Donald Trump? Certainly. But there are not 62,985,106 of them. Had there been only 62,885,105, Hillary Clinton may have become president, but the frustrations and misunderstandings and prejudices and calculations and hopes and fears that persuaded even that many of your neighbors to lend their individual voice to this con artist would have remained.This book cannot claim to explain Trump's Midwestern appeal in full. It can only offer the perspectives of seventeen residents of Muskegon County-a struggling post-industrial semi-urban space on the shores of Lake Michigan that, on November 8, 2016, cast 5080 more votes for an abrasive B-list celebrity than it cast for native grandson Mitt Romney four years prior. The story is told from their perspectives, in their words. The result is a portrait of a seemingly inconsequential place that, like so many of the other seemingly inconsequential places between La Crosse and Bethlehem, played its small role in ushering the world into The Age of Trump. This is not a work of political science, nor of sociology, nor of journalism, nor of literature. It is an unvarnished look at how seventeen of your neighbors see this moment, and how they got here.