*side eye*
The man has absolutely no business talking politics. He moronically claimed Donald Trump would be better than Hilary Clinton as president. A Hilary Clinton beholden to Wall Street interests (she never was) would be sooooooo much better than current shit show thats in the white house now.
If you understood where Jimmy was coming from, it was likely highlighting that neoliberalism does not work for the public, and hasn't for decades. Clinton would do nothing to stop this. At worst, Trump is so bad he's an oil tanker going right into the burning house. And in the eyes of some, obliterating the operating system is the only way to cure the virus. Of course, he's far more likely to just make a bad, insoluble system evermore corroded and disruptive, not delivering even an inch of what we could even label as a "solution."
To use the burning house metaphor, he's not going to wait to get people out of the home as the tanker drives right for it. The problem is in this climate, the house is on fire. Period. Neither candidate would extinguish the flames, and this doesn't mean "both parties are the same" but that the problem is decades deep and requires far more than partisan approaches. We had a choice between neonationalism as a response to neoliberalism in Trump, which solves nothing, or a direct continuation of neoliberalism in Clinton. Nobody actually wins other than those already winning at the top. This is why those on the decline jumped for the orange con man: a change, however reasonably violent and ill-advised as we can astutely showcase, is better than the precarity that's been normalized in rural America. I have a hard time condemning the depravity to lead one to reason this way, as we've done a really bad job as a society in being accountable and humane to the people who live in it. GAF is even home to a good deal of "let them suffer" which of course is only a continuation of similar problematic themes.
Mark Blyth covers this issue far more deeply than Dore, and
I know Dore has used clips of Blyth in the past covering his prescient arguments. Blyth has made similar arguments in the past, but he's far more quantitative on the issue than Dore is.
I cannot speak for TYT, though. I like Dore's work, but don't watch TYT anymore. I know TYT pulled the binary "if you voted against Hillary you're objectively bad" card a few times, which is quite annoying, for it ignores the precarity and desperation people have that actually normalizes a fucking orange sociopathic liar. That depravity needed to be gutted, because that's what allowed a literal con man to be President of the United States.
Trump is explicitly a result of neoliberalism, a war on the public, and a system that focused on a few winners and socializing the losses to the masses. Let us never forget this.