Lately, due to the GOP picking Donald Trump as their
presidential nominee, I’ve been seeing articles and think-pieces on poor whites
and their voting habits. The pieces invariably take the tone that whites are
voting against their own self-interests by voting for Republicans and that they
need understanding and kindness to help them out of this dilemma. The problem
with these articles is that they don’t realize (or want to realize) that poor
whites have competing interests – one for being poor, and the other for being
white.
Historians and social scientists are still trying to figure
out exactly when “white people” officially became a thing. Many trace it to the
colonial period in America when laws were first enacted that gave whites less
severe punishments for the same crimes that blacks had committed. Some ask if
it hadn’t started earlier; after all, something made them choose Africa as a
supply depot for slaves. Whichever it is, there is no doubt that whites have
been advantaged over blacks for the entirety of American history.
Despite working class whites lack of economic success, many still
vote for Republicans and have since the Southern Strategy peeled whites away
from Democrats over that party’s support for Civil Rights in the 1960’s.