Why Don't People Like Trump Personally?

The new Quinnipiac poll asked people if they "like" Señor Trumpanzee as a... um, person. Only 31% do. (59% do not.) Let's break that number down among various demographic groups. They reported on how much each of these groups like him as a person:

• Republicans- 66%• Democrats- 8%• Independents- 24%• Men- 36%• Women- 27%• Whites with college degree- 28%• Whites- 34%• Blacks- 24%• Hispanics 19%• 18-34 year olds- 28%• 35-49 year olds- 30%• 50-64 year olds- 36%• people over 65 years old- 31%

"There's a lot of corrupt that went on both in the campaign and in the White House," said Omarosa. "And I'm going to blow the whistle on all of it." That may be a reason when people don't like him. She also asserted that he knew the content of the stolen (hacked) e-mails before wikileaks released them. That's stunning.There are lots of reasons for Americans to dislike Trump. The Daily Beast came up with another one yesterday, an Orwellian situation straight out of 1984: Chinese Cops Now Spying on American Soil. And that's more than icky. Start with as many as a million Uighursand other ethnic minorities-- maybe more-- held in concentration camps in northwest China.

As part of a massive campaign to monitor and intimidate its ethnic minorities no matter where they are, Chinese authorities are creating a global registry of Uighurs who live outside of China, threatening to detain their relatives if they do not provide personal and identifying information to Chinese police. This campaign is now reaching even Uighurs who live in the United States....At the same time, Beijing has been constructing an experimental high-tech totalitarian regime in Xinjiang. They’ve lined the streets with security cameras equipped with facial-recognition software, created a region-wide DNA database of all residents, and implemented a rating system encoded in every person’s ID card, categorizing the individual as “safe” or “not safe” based on criteria including how often the person prays.These technologies, first tested on Uighurs and other ethnic minority groups, are now being exported to countries like Pakistan as part of China’s “safe cities” project.As a result of the growing oppression, many Uighurs have tried to flee abroad. But Beijing has launched an unprecedented global campaign to get them back, or to monitor them where there are. China has used its geopolitical clout to repatriate, forcibly if necessary, Uighurs living or studying in countries from Thailand, Egypt, Turkey, and even the United States. Of those who returned to China, many immediately disappeared, presumably into one of the camps. China also recruits Uighurs living abroad, as detailed in a Buzzfeed report in July.Now, Beijing is seeking to create a detailed database of those who haven’t returned.“The reason that Uighurs are a canary in a coal mine,” explained Millward, “the reason that everyone should pay attention to this, even if they aren’t concerned about the fate of this ethnic group, is that these are tools of control that are now being employed by the CCP and are easily applied to other individuals as well.”“The totalization and securitization of information in China, and then the globalization of that reach, is most apparent with regard to the Uighurs but is by no means limited to Uighurs,” he said.The growing human rights crisis in Xinjiang, and China’s expanding campaign of control and harassment abroad, has attracted growing attention from U.S. lawmakers and human rights groups. On July 26, the Congressional-Executive Commission on China held a hearing on the crisis there, and lawyers and activists are pushing for the U.S. government to levy sanctions under the Global Magnitsky Act on the Chinese officials directly responsible for the concentration camps.For Uighurs living in the United States, demands from Chinese police thousands of miles away serve as an unwelcome reminder that nowhere, not even the United States, is free from the long arm of the Chinese state.