Then there's the other half:
Every story I have read about Trump supporters in the past week
By Alexandra Petr
i  April 4
Since Donald Trump’s approval rating now looks like something  that got stuck to the bottom of my shoe, I joined the flood of  journalists who went to Real America to gloat see how the Trump supporters are getting along.
 In  the shadow of the old flag factory, Craig Slabornik sits whittling away  on a rusty nail, his only hobby since the plant shut down. He is an  American like millions of Americans, and he has no regrets about pulling  the lever for Donald Trump in November — twice, in fact, which Craig  says is just more evidence of the voter fraud plaguing the country.  Craig is a contradiction, but he does not know it.
 Each morning  he arrives at the Blue Plate Diner and tries to make sense of it all.  The regulars are already there. Lydia Borkle lives in an old shoe in the  tiny town of Tempe Work Only, Ariz., where the factory has just rusted  away into a pile of gears and dust. The jobs were replaced by robots,  not shipped overseas, but try telling Lydia that. (I did, very slowly  and patiently, I thought, but she still became quite brusque.) Her one  lifeline was an Obama-era jobs training program, but she says that she  does not regret her vote for Trump and likes what he says about  business. She makes a point of telling me that she is not racist, but I  think she probably is, a little.
Next to her sits Linda Blarnik. Like the rusty hubcaps hanging on the  wall behind her, she was made in America 50 years ago, back when this  town made things, a time she still remembers fondly. She says she has  had just enough of the “coastal elitist media who keep showing up to  write mean things about my town and my life, like that thing just now  where you said I was like a hubcap, yes you, stop writing I can see over  your shoulder.” Mournfully a whistle blows behind her, the whistle of a  train that does not stop in this America any longer.
 Linda’s sister,  Carla Blarnik is married to an undocumented immigrant yet voted for  Trump, who has vowed an increase in deportations. Asked to explain this  contradiction, she shrugs. “Do not tell Bert this,” she says, “but I  have been trying to find an unobtrusive way to break up the marriage for  years and this seemed like just the loophole I was waiting for.” Huh.  Okay.
Their waiter is David Mattress, a sentient robot who will be shut down  if Trump’s budget is put into practice. He loves Trump, insofar as love  is possible for him. When asked “Don’t you realize the contradiction of  this position?” the other regulars leap up and shout at me because the  last time this question was posed to him, David short-circuited and  emitted large quantities of smoke. “First that magazine writer,” Linda  scolds me, gesturing to a table in the corner where six other  journalists sit writing versions of this same article, “now 
you.
”
Mark Hooglats lives inside Obamacare, don’t ask him how. He voted for  Trump. He will vote for Trump again, maybe up to 10 times if he does  the thing with the economy. He is excited that Trump has said “God” out  loud for what he believes is the first time in the past eight years. (It  
isn’t.)
 In the corner, under a picture of George  Washington that is cracked and broken and stained with tobacco juice,  lies Herm Slabornik. Herm is encased in a cryogenic tube which will be  unplugged if Trump gets his way. According to a note on his cryotube, he  knows what Trump said about unplugging tubes but he does not think  Trump would unplug him personally. He will vote for Trump again in 2020,  provided he is not unplugged. Also, he hates Obamacare.
 Glom  Pfeffernitz lives in a rusty kettle. Trump’s plan will  definitely repossess his kettle, but he does not believe me when I tell  him this. “I just don’t think he’d do that,” Glom repeats. Glom’s  priority is filling the lakes with waste because he remembers when he  was a kid and the lakes used to glow, and he wants to get back to those  great days. He says his No. 1 priority is keeping telephones away from  the undeserving poor. Is everyone here messing with me?
 Claudia  Barknappen, the owner of the diner, wipes her hands on her faded God  Bless America Apron. She is taken aback to see that Trump’s budget would  replace her home with a sinkhole, but she says that she is reserving  judgment and likes how much he hates immigrants. “We’ve got to give him a  chance,” she observes. She says that one time Trump showed up at her  home and hit her dog with a broom, but in her mind this amounts to no  more than one strike. She knows that she can change Trump with love, not  that he needs to change at all. Behind her, an eagle falls out of a  tree and dies.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/blog...k/?tid=pm_opinions_pop&utm_term=.a6ecf69404c4