Here’s an idea: A couple of folks from each HRC campaign office, go to their local Trump campaign office bringing a couple dozen Krispy Kreme doughnuts or similar comfort-food snack, and seeking peace. Not from a stance of victory or from fear of violence breaking out, but just as peers and equals and fellow Americans.
Tell them something like this: “Congratulations on a spirited campaign and fighting the good fight. Y’all really did help bring the plight of many Americans to the forefront this year. At the start of the day we all salute the same flag, and at the end of the day we all pray to the same God*, so let’s all work together to help the country we love be the best it can be.”
As a principled matter, it’s always good to be kind to a defeated opponent. After the war is over, we’re no longer enemies fighting, we’re fellow humans living together in the same country, on the same planet. In WW2 that frame of reference helped immeasurably with the postwar reconstruction.
As a tactical matter, it might help defuse some tensions and some of the anger on their side that might otherwise provide fertile ground for violent intentions.
It might even prevent a random hate crime or terrorist attack.
.
One way or another we all have to get along. We don’t want to turn low-information voters into raging Nazis (or let Trump do that) when we can offer them some kind words and a tasty snack instead, and possibly open up channels of communication.
These folks, like the dispossessed family farmers of the 1980s, are essentially fellow workers who have been screwed by the system. Hate Radio jocks captured the dispossessed farmers etc. back then, while lefties were busy wanking to critical theory porn and deconstructionist porn and so on. We can’t make that mistake a second time (or a third, I lost count).
At some point we have to be willing to reach people where they are. As a principled matter, because they’re fellow humans facing a lot of anxiety and real economic insecurity. As a pragmatic matter, because we don’t want a permanent Trumpist movement with a terrorist element.
There’s a bit of “do unto others” in the mix here, though of course we still have battles to fight in Congress and so on. But on the ground with our fellow Americans, we should be making peace, peace, blessed peace all the way, as far as we possibly can.
We can be the change. We can live in “this new world of ours.”
===
*Atheists may not be comfortable with theological references and can omit that item, but the main thing is to appeal to the shared rituals that express the meaning of one nation indivisible. OTOH that's not an occasion to go offering them what Aldous Huxley called “Moksha medicine.” One step at a time;-)