All kidding aside, I completely understand the anger than many Trump voters feel about the economy. Globalization has not been beneficial to many blue-collar workers. Unfortunately, globalization was inevitable because of what other countries were doing. Mexico, for example, has been impoverished for a very long time, so they had nothing to lose by signing forty free trade agreements with other countries. But their free trade agreements impacted the United States, because now we had companies like GM, etc. building factories in Mexico because the labor was cheap and they didn't pay tariffs to ship their products overseas. They were willing to overlook the uneducated workforce and greater government corruption/thievery because it made financial sense for them.
The only way the US could respond was by forming their own free trade agreements to try to recapture some of that lost trade. And, naturally, that led to wage competition between the US and cheaper countries which depressed blue-collar workers' earnings. There is simply no way around the problem.
At the same time, technology has ended huge sectors of employment. Most low-wage work is now accomplished more efficiently by computers or robots. Digital media and the cloud have erased many other jobs. Green energy is making coal production unprofitable, so places like Kentucky and West Virginia are SOL. There's really no way around this problem either.
Trump appeals to these desperate people by making grandiose promises of bringing back the "good old days", when he's really just lying to them to get their votes. Hillary Clinton has been much more honest about this stuff -- although she's promised to do what she can to bring "new economy" jobs to economically depressed areas -- and she's being pilloried for it.
My heart really does go out to the workers who are suffering under the 21st century economy. It must be really hard for them to see any hope for the future.