While we can't ask every white, non-college-educated man whom they're voting for and why, we can get an idea of how strongly they feel about the three issues Pelosi pointed out. So let's do that.

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Do working-class white men feel more strongly about ...

Guns: Yes

They do indeed like their guns more than other Americans do.

They're more likely than the rest of the country to want the next president to oppose stricter gun control laws, according to this month's Washington Post-ABC News poll — 6 in 10 compared with fewer than 4 in 10 of those in the country as a whole.

Gays: Not really

At the GOP convention in Cleveland, several big-name Republican speakers went out of their way to mention LGBT rights, including Trump — despite the fact their party platform didn't support legalizing same-sex marriage.

It was an interesting dynamic given a 2015 Pew Research poll that suggested 59 percent of Republicans would be "upset" if their child was gay or lesbian (including 30 percent very upset).

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But take away the partisan lens and you'll find that white, working-class men don't seem to feel much differently about same-sex marriage than the rest of the population does. In fact, a majority of them support it.

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An April 2015 Washington Post-ABC News poll found 61 percent of Americans support same-sex marriage. So do 57 percent of white, non-college-educated men.

Notable: College-educated white Americans are more likely to support same-sex marriage (70 percent) than white Americans without a college degree (58 percent).

God (or, abortion): Not really

Here we don't see a major difference either between non-college-educated men and the rest of the population, either.