This is intended for Trump voters, especially those making less than $150,000 a year and the millions who believed they were extending the middle finger salute to the establishment.
Let me begin by recounting a Hillary Clinton fundraising campaign speech from 2016 in which she made some deeply disparaging comments about half your number, calling them "deplorables."
She also spoke about another "basket" of Trump supporters she described as "people who feel that the government has let them down, the economy has let them down ... nobody worries about what happens to their lives and their futures, and they're just desperate for change. ... These are people we have to understand and empathize with as well." This second basket of Trump voters would amount to some 37 million in 2020.
The issue here isn't that this description of your plight is wrong but that there wasn't a scintilla of sincerity and conviction behind it. As they shed their crocodile tears, neither Clinton, Obama before her, nor Biden now, has ever had the slightest interest in solving any of your real problems.
Recall Biden's recent assurances to Wall Street funders that "nothing will change" under a Biden presidency. As you certainly realize, other than for pandering for your votes, the corporate Democrats have zero respect for you, can't believe you're still falling for their con job and laugh at you behind your backs.
Now — and this will be a sticking point for many of you but please hear me out — the attitude I've just described applies equally to those who fund and control the Republican Party. All the evidence suggests that Trump's policies helped the rich get massively richer while not addressing your real-life daily grievances, the ones caused by obscene economic inequality and narrowly concentrated wealth and power.
The harsh reality is that neither the Schumers nor the McConnells are on our side. While local elections allow some citizen input, the higher the office the more one encounters a bipartisan phalanx peeing on our shoes and telling us it is raining.
The attitude of Wall Streeters, big business owners, the leisure class, those with immense inherited wealth and those highly compensated for serving them is this: "We've got ours. We want things to stay this way — unless of course, we can get even more." Meanwhile, the standard of living for ordinary citizens continues to plummet.