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The Trump Card — Ace of Anger Affirmation Legitimate Concerns v Trumped-Up Rhetoric
The Patriot Post ^ | Jul. 29, 2015 | Mark Alexander

Posted on 07/29/2015 3:12:26 PM PDT by TNMOUTH

“Guard against the impostures of pretended patriotism.” —George Washington (1796)

(Publisher’s Note: Trump supporters, before sending hate email, see the disclaimer posted below this column.)

Given that his celebrity name recognition and contentious remarks have landed billionaire Donald Trump at the top of pop-presidential polls, I’m now being asked by some grassroots leaders across the nation, “What about Trump?”

First, his support reflects very little about his qualifications, but a lot about how dissatisfied a growing number of disenfranchised grassroots conservatives are with Republican “leadership.” Speaker John Boehner and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell have, in effect, underwritten Trump’s rising stardom. Despite greatly increasing the numbers of conservatives in the House and Senate in the historic “Republican Wave” elections nationwide in both 2010 and 2014, the much-loathed “establishment types” still hold the reins. They continue to marginalize or ignore the concerns of the Republican base — grassroots conservatives — and we are rightly outraged.

Second, Trump can be brash, and he brings some much-needed debate, humor and levity to an otherwise distinguished but dry quadrennial Republican presidential field. Of course, he takes himself much more seriously than I take him.

And third, he has the potential of being a spoiler in 2016 if his campaign lasts beyond 2015, because Trump, like the current White House occupant, is a textbook pathological narcissist. He will, predictably, generate a lot of damaging fratricidal attacks against genuine Republicans and conservatives, rather than focus on Democrats.

As noted by George Will, “If Donald Trump were a Democratic mole placed in the Republican Party to disrupt things, how would his behavior be different? I don’t think it would be.”

Unlike Barack Obama however, if Trump makes it to the 2016 primary, he will rate low single-digits because, unlike Democrats, most Republicans still have the aptitude and acuity for discernment and can distinguish between a charlatan and a genuine conservative presidential candidate. However, post-primary, this egomaniacal celebrity might refuse to throw his residual support behind the party nominee. In a close election, that could hand the presidency to Hillary Clinton, assuming that enough low-information Democrat voters make this loathsome liar their nominee.

That is precisely what happened the last time a Republican billionaire entered the race when another lying Clinton was on the Democrat ticket.1

Can the nation survive four more years of Obama’s failed domestic and foreign policies?

You're fired So who is Trump?

In the words of Samuel Adams, “The public cannot be too curious concerning the characters of public men.”

Let’s take a look at this public man’s character.

The 69-year-old was born into wealth just after World War II, the son of New York real estate mogul Fred Trump and his Scottish immigrant wife, Mary Anne. Trump attended the finest schools, though he was expelled from high school for “disciplinary violations.” Like his contemporary, Bill Clinton, Trump dodged the draft with college student deferments, graduating from the University of Pennsylvania in 1968 and then receiving a medical draft deferment.

“I had a minor medical deferment for feet, for a bone spur of the foot, which was minor,” said Trump. Minor indeed, given that he can’t even recall which foot: “You’ll have to look it up.”

He was handed the keys to his father’s company in 1971 and renamed it The Trump Organization, amassing enormous wealth in real estate assets in the ensuing years. His worth is estimated at $4 billion today, with annual income of $250 million (Mitt Romney’s entire net worth).

Trump presided over the failure of two marriages prior to his current administration.

In 1977 he married Czech immigrant Ivana Zelníčková, and they had three children. They were divorced in 1992 after Ivana discovered his affair with celebrity actress Marla Maples. He married Maples in 1993, and they had one child. They were divorced in 1999, and in 2005 he married Slovenian immigrant Melania Knauss. They have one child.

In 2003, he became host of the hit show “The Apprentice,” where his fame reached new heights for yelling “You’re Fired!” at contestants who fail. He even filed a trademark application for the term.

But Trump himself has presided over four major failures — Chapter 11 bankruptcies at his Taj Mahal casino (1991), Trump Plaza Hotel (1992), Trump Hotels and Casino Resorts (2004), and Trump Entertainment Resorts (2009). (Note that the latter two came after his Apprentice fame. One wonders why he didn’t fire himself.) Trump International Hotel and Tower in Chicago was also a financial disaster, but he was able to walk away from that one. Of those failures, Trump says, “I’ve used the laws of this country to pare debt. … We’ll have the company. We’ll throw it into a chapter. We’ll negotiate with the banks. We’ll make a fantastic deal. You know, it’s like on ‘The Apprentice.’ It’s not personal. It’s just business.”

Unless, of course, you are one of his creditors or have your pension or savings invested in one of those businesses.

On his religious views, Trump says: “I’m a religious person. I go to church. Do I do things that are wrong? I guess so. [Seriously, he said "I guess so.”] If I do something wrong, I try to do something right. I don’t bring God into that picture. … When we go in church and I drink the little wine … and I eat the little cracker — I guess that’s a form of asking forgiveness.“

So what exactly is the Trump appeal?

Well, as noted, it’s celebrity, demagoguery and the fact he’s clearly not from the Republican mold and brand.

But when announcing his candidacy, Trump hit this note on an issue that is a concern for millions of grassroots Americans: "The U.S. has become a dumping ground for everybody else’s problems. Thank you. It’s true, and these are the best and the finest. When Mexico sends its people, they’re not sending their best. They’re not sending you. They’re sending people that have lots of problems, and they’re bringing those problems [to] us. They’re bringing drugs. They’re bringing crime. They’re rapists. And some, I assume, are good people.”

While most of the Republican field appear equivocal on the illegal immigration issue, as do Republican congressional “leaders,” Trump is clear on his objections, which resonates with a lot of Americans.

Of the estimated 11.3 million illegals in our country, 8.1 million hold jobs. At the same time, there were an average of 9.6 million unemployed Americans in 2014. It’s easy to understand the grassroots groundswell this issue generates for Trump.

And the recent murder of California native Kate Steinle on a pier in the “sanctuary city” of San Francisco by an illegal immigrant released once again after seven felony convictions and five deportations, rightly has stirred outrage across the nation. Her murderer is among more than a million illegal aliens who have committed crimes, some 690,000 of whom were charged with serious crimes but are today on the loose.

This, understandably, has kept Trump’s immigration platform front and center.

McCain: POW in Hanoi On the other hand, in his unmitigated arrogance, Trump has succeeded in alienating the handful of grassroots military Patriots who supported him.

Apparently forgetting that he himself was a draft dodger, Trump challenged the notion that Sen. John McCain deserves any recognition for his service in Vietnam. According to Trump, “He’s not a war hero. He’s a war hero because he was captured. I like people that weren’t captured.”

Recall that as a naval aviator, McCain, the son and grandson of Navy admirals, asked for additional combat missions over Vietnam. After being shot down, a badly injured McCain refused his captors' propagandistic offers to leave his fellow POWs and return home — meaning he was a target for additional torture.

McCain responded brilliantly: “I think [Mr. Trump] may owe an apology to the families of those who have sacrificed in conflict and those who have undergone the prison experience in serving our country. … In the case of many of our veterans, when Mr. Trump said that he prefers to be with people who are not captured, well, the great honor of my life was to serve in the company of heroes. I’m not a hero. But those who were my senior ranking officers … those that have inspired us to do things that we otherwise wouldn’t have been capable of doing, those are the people that I think he owes an apology to.”

Trump’s callous remarks fall into the “Hanoi Jane” Fonda category of slandering American POWs, and the rest of the Republican field rightly condemned Trump’s remarks.

A Wall Street Journal editorial opined, “It came slightly ahead of schedule, but Donald Trump’s inevitable self-immolation arrived on the weekend when he assailed John McCain’s war record.”

But as the inimitable humorist Mark Twain once quipped, “The report of my death was an exaggeration.” And so it may be with Trump’s campaign, as it continues to gain traction.

The real significance of Trump’s campaign is that it’s a barometer of just how deeply disgusted grassroots conservatives are with the Republican Party, and a litmus test of what issues motivate grassroots conservatives.

Historian Victor Davis Hanson concludes, “Trump is a transitory vehicle of the fed-up crowd, a current expression of their distaste for both Democratic and Republican politics, but not an end in and of himself. The fed-up crowd is tired of being demagogued to death by progressives, who brag of ‘working across the aisle’ and ‘bipartisanship’ as they ram through agendas with executive orders, court decisions, and public ridicule. So the fed-ups want other conservative candidates to emulate Trump’s verve, energy, fearlessness of the media and the PC police, and no-holds-barred Lee Atwater style — without otherwise being Trump.

Trump to Republicans But the hard, cold fact is, Trump is all about Trump, and his record of public policy support is that of a big-government tax and spend liberal, who is far to the left of those much-maligned establishment Republicans, including his support for ObamaCare, raising taxes and a plethora of social issues abhorred by grassroots conservatives.

But the real test of Trump’s legitimacy as a Republican is how he measures up against the Gold Standard of 20th century presidents, Ronald Reagan. Unlike the rest of the large Republican field, Trump doesn’t even register on the Reagan scale.

On August 3, the nation would have gotten its first look at Trump on stage with genuine conservatives at the Voter’s First Forum in New Hampshire. However, after one of the event sponsors, the New Hampshire Union Leader, appropriately eviscerated Trump for his absurd remarks about John McCain, Trump backed out.

Charles Krauthammer laments, "This is the strongest field of Republican candidates in 35 years … and instead all of our time is spent discussing this rodeo clown.”

Shame on Dr. K. for insulting rodeo clowns!

Oh, and the short answer when I’m asked about Donald: Remember the words of George Washington: “Guard against the impostures of pretended patriotism.” Don’t get Trumped. Tell him “You’re fired!”

Disclaimer: Two weeks ago, a column entitled “Jade Helm 15 and Conspiracy Theories” created some heartburn for those who have been sucked into the “alternate reality” occupied by frauds like Alex Jones. This week, my focus is on another alternate reality occupant, Donald Trump. Before sending hate mail, understand that I am challenging “the (faux) Donald” and not the legitimate contempt grassroots Americans hold for so-called “establishment Republicans.” My objective in both cases is to counsel thoughtful Patriots not to seek resolution for their legitimate grievances by drinking the snake oil of quack charlatans like Jones and Trump.

1 Recall if you will what happened after the last wealthy Republican billionaire, Ross Perot, threw his hat into the presidential ring back in 1992. Unlike Trump, Perot had far more statesmanlike attributes and qualifications — and, of course, charts. But the results of his third-party candidacy were disastrous for the country. In a three-way contest with Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton and sitting president George H.W. Bush (who had handily won his first presidential bid in 1988 against Massachusetts Governor Michael Dukakis, and was riding high on the success of Desert Storm), Perot took almost 19 percent of the popular vote, leaving Bush with 37.5 percent and a victorious Clinton with a mere 43 percent plurality. Some 60 percent of Perot’s support came from Ronald Reagan’s middle-class Democrats and moderates, whom Bush had betrayed by breaking his famous “read my lips: no new taxes” pledge and by committing other regulatory assaults on middle-income families and entrepreneurs. Make no mistake: Ross Perot handed the presidency to Bill Clinton. Let’s hope Donald Trump doesn’t hand it to Hillary.

Pro Deo et Constitutione — Libertas aut Mors Semper Vigilans Fortis Paratus et Fidelis


TOPICS: Politics/Elections
KEYWORDS: trump
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Good read. Trump supporters...read ALL of the way before flaming away.
1 posted on 07/29/2015 3:12:26 PM PDT by TNMOUTH
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To: TNMOUTH

I would love to vote for Ted Cruz. He would need to climb in the polls. The rest of them I really have no love for.


2 posted on 07/29/2015 3:19:03 PM PDT by dforest
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To: dforest

Before saying he needs to rise in the polls, look at the internals, fund raising, etc...

Cruz isn’t running as low as the polls suggest.


3 posted on 07/29/2015 3:19:53 PM PDT by TNMOUTH
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To: TNMOUTH

A lot of words with little or no predictive value.

People want plain speak. They want someone who will Tell t Like It Is, fallout be damned.

Trump is flipping off the eGOP out in the open. He is a breath of fresh air in a world where McConnell acts like a 5 year old because Cruz ALSO Told It Like It Is.

This new way of politics is here to stay. And so is Trump.


4 posted on 07/29/2015 3:20:04 PM PDT by freedumb2003 (When things are rightly ordered, man is steward of God's gifts and civil law enables him to do so.)
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To: freedumb2003
Go Trump!
Go Cruz!


5 posted on 07/29/2015 3:23:35 PM PDT by Bobalu (If we live to see 2017 we will be kissing the ground)
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To: TNMOUTH

Did this writer pull a Rip Van Winkle for the past two weeks? He spent a lot of words rehashing all the incidents and accusations that were supposed to finish Trump off according to many ‘wise’ pundits. But all that’s happened in that time is his poll numbers have increased 50% and more everywhere, even in the state of Florida.


6 posted on 07/29/2015 3:25:21 PM PDT by Will88
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To: TNMOUTH
Sounds more like the writings of the “Washington Cartel”

Donald Trump, as I have said before, is not perfect, neither am I, you, or the writer of this article...what makes the difference is Donald Trump is doing all the right things when everyone else is doing the Washington Cartel thing...

Ted Cruz is above all of the crap that Boehner and McConnell and the rest of the Cartel are...Rand Paul is trying to get there...

You see, we little ‘crazies’ as Master McCain so abruptly called us, we want ‘people talk’, not ‘politician speak’....

There's your difference....

7 posted on 07/29/2015 3:28:15 PM PDT by HarleyLady27 (Send 'slob boy of the oval office' back to Kenya ASAP, and save America...)
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To: TNMOUTH

I have not goiven up on him. Maybe the debates will help.


8 posted on 07/29/2015 3:31:03 PM PDT by dforest
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To: HarleyLady27

Yes, he had some RINO undertones...I will grant you that. But nothing he said was wrong either...

I know, you and others buy into the “people talk” of Trump...while failing to realize that he is flip flopping on these issues AND lying to you in the process.


9 posted on 07/29/2015 3:34:11 PM PDT by TNMOUTH
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To: TNMOUTH; Norm Lenhart; CA Conservative

Trump can take the presidency and i hope he does.
You keep trying to libel him and his supporters at every turn.
Why is that? Are u a troll?
Don’t bother pretending you support one of the 4% candidates. You are paid to post negative crap about Trump just like Norm Lenhart and Ca Conservative. IMHO.
GO TRUMP / CRUZ / PALIN!!!!


10 posted on 07/29/2015 3:36:11 PM PDT by Melinator (my 2 cents)
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To: TNMOUTH

I get it. I like Trump. I’m stupid.

Hear this crap all the time from the left.

What next? Gravitas?


11 posted on 07/29/2015 3:38:32 PM PDT by JmyBryan
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To: Melinator

LOL...

Wow, you really are in the tank for a closet Democrat. Go figure.

I am posting an article for background information...I was waiting for a post like yours...to prove how unhinged you are as a Trumper.

Tell me again, WHERE in this article, something was said that was wrong?

BTW, can you tell me what Trump has said about Planned Parenthood? No? Interesting...


12 posted on 07/29/2015 3:38:42 PM PDT by TNMOUTH
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To: JmyBryan

You can like Trump...

But you are being hoodwinked as well. That is my opinion.

And, yes, many of the Leftist articles (the rape on,e etc) are stupid.


13 posted on 07/29/2015 3:39:31 PM PDT by TNMOUTH
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To: freedumb2003

Trump’s achilles heel would be to be baited into a rage. He has an obsession that he must absolutely destroy someone who he thinks is making him look like a fool. To find himself head to head with, say, the ACLU would be popcorn worthy, but not presidential.

It’s possible that he could serve to raise awareness upon which a more reasonable figure like Cruz could ride, if he later fades out of the picture.

Let’s put our eyes back on the Lord and pray. The Lord is master of working volatile and chaotic situations into peace. Humans alone are not... they will likely worsen such situations.


14 posted on 07/29/2015 3:41:23 PM PDT by HiTech RedNeck (Embrace the Lion of Judah and He will roar for you and teach you to roar too. See my page.)
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To: TNMOUTH
I get it. support for The Donald is more a statement of discontent than a cerebral voice of reason. Lots of words to say, "Yeah we know you're right but, Come on all you Guys and Gals, just vote for the RINO."

Another Wimpy, MilqueToast RINO will LOSE in a landslide.

Either the Pubbies nominate a true Conservative, a Constitutional Warrior, who will fight, or Conservatives will stay home and split from the Republican party for good.

No More RINO's
15 posted on 07/29/2015 3:41:36 PM PDT by Macoozie (1) Win the Senate 2) Repeal Obamacare 3) Impeach Roberts)
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To: Melinator

Last time I checked, FR hadn’t officially endorsed anyone. Do you think it should be a Trump fan club, with no criticism allowed, and anyone who doesn’t gush or fawn over him labeled a troll?


16 posted on 07/29/2015 3:42:34 PM PDT by CatherineofAragon (("This is a Laztatorship. You don't like it, get a day's rations and get out of this office."))
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To: Melinator

GO TRUMP GO CRUZ GO PALIN!!!
NO FEAR!
Stop the uniparty lying scum!
And for all u Trolls who hate on them: go to hell!


17 posted on 07/29/2015 3:42:56 PM PDT by Melinator (my 2 cents)
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To: Melinator

Actually no. I’m stating actual facts you don’t like just as I did with Romney. You can either disprove then with something other than a foot stomping tantrum or not. your choice.

If you CANNOT disprove them with fact, I have to ask who is paying you to lie in public.


18 posted on 07/29/2015 3:44:16 PM PDT by Norm Lenhart
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To: TNMOUTH

Its ok that you don’t like Trump, you don’t have to, but there are a lot of us that do, so don’t try to speak for us, we can do that all by ourselves...


19 posted on 07/29/2015 3:44:21 PM PDT by HarleyLady27 (Send 'slob boy of the oval office' back to Kenya ASAP, and save America...)
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To: HiTech RedNeck

>>Humans alone are not... they will likely worsen such situations.<<

Just as in technology, humans are almost always the problem. I try to design my systems to minimize humans.


20 posted on 07/29/2015 3:44:31 PM PDT by freedumb2003 (When things are rightly ordered, man is steward of God's gifts and civil law enables him to do so.)
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