Let's not delude ourselves with misleading maps. Here's one that actually reflects House seats correctly, one equal-sized color symbol for one seat, for 2020.
Yes, that's a better map. Most of those very red counties have barely any people, after all. However, I still think it's useful to use the county map to highlight the fact that even small cities still vote majority Republican.
Furthermore, my state (North Dakota), although it rarely has voted Democrat for the president, as recently as 2009 had 2 Democratic senators, and 1 Democratic house rep. They're all Republican now, I really doubt any of them will be Democratic again for the rest of my life. The Democrats sure could use 2 more senators in the senate, and 1 more rep in the house, couldn't they?
Anyone who thinks the Democrats are "elitist" is regurgitating Republican propaganda, if perhaps second-hand.
Really? You don't understand how the likes of:
Bill "NAFTA" Clinton
Barack "Go to school!" Obama
Hillary "$12 is enough" Clinton
Joe "Stop striking!" Biden
could be seen as elitist?
The Southern Strategy explains why the Democrats went from an overwhelming domination of US politics, for about 40 years, to having to struggle (but still, let's remember, winning the popular vote in 7 of the last 8 elections).
But the president isn't determined by the popular vote! This is like saying after a basketball game: "If there was no three point line, we would've won." Sure, that may be true, but you knew the rules before/during the game, so if you care about winning (and you should) you should've tailored your strategy to the rules that are actually being used. (As an addendum, the electoral college should be abolished, but how are the Democrats gonna ever do that if they don't win according to the current set of rules!?)
When you talk about FDR as a "progressive" you seem to be unaware of what progressive meant at the time, what the base of the Democratic Party was then and now, why things changed.
Establishing a minimum wage and Social Security isn't progressive? ... Yes, I'm very aware that the democratic base of the time was full of many hardcore racists. My point isn't that all the racists nowdays can be dissuaded from voting Republican, or that a great majority of workers vote Republican, but that a critical amount of workers vote Republican to swing many elections.
And about five minutes Googling produced this critique of Frank's thesis. The actual working class is not moving away from the Democrats.
And five more minutes of searching produces Frank's critique of the critique:
https://tcfrank.com/wp-content/uploads/ ... d_2005.pdf
Well, it would be if it wasn't made up.
And yet you say:
I'd rather understand why things are, and that means looking at what a wide variety of people actually do and think, not ranting about how they're not just like me.
Blue collar workers and professionals may be forced to share the same party now, but that doesn't mean that they always have the same interests, or that they'll always share a party. So, no, I'm not going to just "trust the plan" or whatever professionals are calling it these days.