Stereotyping a whole state? That’s what an opinion piece in the New York Times today seems to do with Florida voters. Writer Darlena Cunha is writing about what’s happening in her neighborhood and that very well could be select neighborhoods throughout the United States (not just the Sunshine State). Her central view is that no matter what, some Donald Trump supporters won’t ever back impeachment. Cunha writes:

Working-class Republicans in Alachua County see Donald Trump as a white businessman who made a lot of money. They like to think that could be them. The only thing standing in the way of achieving that dream, they tell me, are policies that elevate people of color, immigrants and poor people without health care. My neighbors misidentify what is holding them back, but they don’t want to correctly identify the actual problem — corporations, billionaires, white privilege, late-stage capitalism — because they hope to be part of that world someday. They think they have rightfully earned it.

A major theme with some of those Cunha talked with is hypocrisy:

Out at dinner last month with my husband, we had a discussion with a group of Trump-supporting women. Three of them had abortions in their younger years and admitted that without that service, their current lives would have been unattainable. But they continue to support the president because they feel their cases were different from the women needing these services today.

The writer also mentions talking with a man who had major dental issues but said he couldn’t afford to have his teeth fixed. She says, “The conversation took an unexpected turn when he went on to rail against universal health care.”

He didn’t want to pay for other people to get help. He didn’t have health insurance and told me he once duct-taped a cut on his arm because he couldn’t afford stitches.

“I’d rather take care of my own self with tape than be stuck in a system where I pay for everyone else,” he said.