I like both Huckabee and Romney. But I wouldn't vote for Huckabee, and I'm unsure of Romney. On
Charlie Rose on PBS, I saw N Y Times writer David Brooks give a nice perspective on all the candidates, post-Iowa.
Regarding a debate exchange, he related Huckabee said to Romney:
"I look like the guy people work with, you look like the guy who lays them off."I thought that was a terrific line.
Despite his flaws, Huckabee definitely appeals to the blue-collar lower-middle-class working man, and that line contrasted well himself with the (perceived) relatively distant and well-monied Romney.
i notice that here, with no liberals, playing on class differences isn't an evil act to bring down America.
Yeah. If Hillary had said that, you'd read 10 paragraphs of Wonder Boy showing how the evil liberal has fooled the minorities and the poor to hate the rich white man.
There's a huge difference between demonizing all rich people, as you do, and simply pointing out the demographics of what audience (rich/poor, white/black/hispanic, under 40/over 40, etc...) is voting for a particular candidate, and analyzing their appeal to that demographic group.
If you want to make it a big issue, why don't you argue with the pundits on Meet the Press, PBS News Hour, and the McLaughlin Group, all of whom, and many more probably, have raised the issue that I simply cited above.