awm, on 2017-September-01, 09:18, said:
Certainly seems like there are a lot of people who:
1. Believe things which are factually untrue (and kind of racist).
2. Will take any attempt at presenting facts that show their beliefs are untrue as condescending and/or elitist.
3. Feel that they are "at war" with the people who disagree with them, to the degree that they are willing to harm themselves, their country, or their world provided "those people" will suffer more than they will.
The curious thing is that there IS in fact "an elite" of wealthy people and corporations who've invested a lot into deceiving these people and riling them up to behave in this way (Rupert Murdoch and the Koch brothers being good examples).
Since these folks are pretty much impervious to facts at this point (they disregard facts as fake news and liberal propaganda) and there seem to be enough of them in enough states to deliver electoral college and senatorial wins, it is hard to see a way forward...
Most likely the best bet is to run people with fame and personal charisma but basically no experience or track record that can be used to rile people up against them. Tom Hanks for president anyone?
For some reason I am reminded of the French Revolution, or rather the period just prior. The elite felt secure in their dominant positions, epitomized by Marie Antionette's famouse remark "Let them eat cake!! (which today is widely misunderstood, "cake" at that time referred to the leftover crust from baking bread). But then came the Revolution and the guillotines. The peasants didn't understand logic or facts either.
And then there was Mao Zedong's Long March in China, with "re-education camps" for the elite and intellectuals. The peasants there didn't appreciate logic and facts either.
One might want to reconsider pissing off a large segment of people by using condescending language and tone, calling them "deplorables", calling them racist, nazis, homophobes, etc., and telling them they just don't understand logic and facts.