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Trump and the GOP's Election Cycle Talking Points
Townhall.com ^ | September 5, 2015 | Jack Kerwick

Posted on 09/05/2015 8:06:47 AM PDT by Kaslin

During every presidential election cycle, both Democratic and Republican talking heads trot out the same tired conventionalities that they predictably use to promote their preferred candidates and undermine those whom they dislike.

Given the Big Bang that is Donald Trump’s candidacy, the political props posing as species of reason have been particularly visible this time around. Let’s look at some of them, and how they’ve been used in connection with Trump.

Candidate X lacks the experience to be President.

The old argument from experience (or inexperience) is patently disingenuous. And notice, it’s always and only the other guy’s candidate who allegedly suffers from a deficit of experience in regard to the office of the presidency.

Yet the cold hard truth is that no one who hasn’t already been President of the United States has the requisite experience for this office.

To be more exact: That an individual has been the CEO of a company; established a business empire; served in the military; or served as a US Senator or Congressman does not in the least qualify that person for the presidency.

However, neither does the fact that a candidate has years of experience governing a state bestow eligibility.

That’s right: There is no parity between governing a state of 8 million residents, say, and governing a country of well over 300 million.

None of this, of course, is meant to imply that such backgrounds are disqualifiers. What it does mean is that the only way to acquire the requisite experience for the presidency is by being the President.

The presidency is not unlike any and every other activity in this regard: Knowledge and skill—i.e. experience—comes from practice.

There is one other fact that exposes this phony argument for what it is. The argument from experience would have us think that the President is like the Wizard of Oz, a lone individual who spins ideas from his own noggin and effortlessly imposes them upon the world.

But no one knows better than those who tirelessly appeal to this argument that nothing could be further from the truth, for the truth is that every president is surrounded by an army of advisers.

Candidate X is “too extreme.”

“Extremism” is one of those catch-all charges that mean nothing other than that the accuser dislikes the person against whom he hurls it.

When some version or other of it is used against Trump—as it is leveled against him incessantly—it is particularly perplexing. And it is even more preposterous when his Republican opponents brand their party’s presidential frontrunner with this label.

Notice, because of, say, his remarks on illegal Mexican immigrants, the Mexican government, and his desire to build a wall along the southern border for which he’ll make Mexico pay, Trump’s GOP critics treat him as “divisive,” as too immoderate—too “extreme.”

This is rich for more than one reason.

For starters, Trump’s popularity continues to soar precisely because large numbers of Americans agree with him. In stark contrast, over the last decade, Republicans suffered dramatic reversals of fortunes exactly because large numbers of Americans have disagreed, and disagreed vehemently, with them over their party’s positions on, among other issues (including immigration), the Iraq War.

Yet Trump is the “extremist,” the “polarizer,” the “divider.”

Trump’s critics blast him for comments that he’s made about some brown people—even though Trump never so much as laid a finger on anyone. At the same time, his Republican (and Democrat) objectors are responsible for launching a war on false premises that, besides costing Americans trillions of dollars and the lives of thousands of her children and thousands more crippled, has resulted in the deaths of tens of thousands of brown people—men, women, and children—throughout the Middle East and the destruction of their communities.

Incidentally, this catastrophic foreign policy decision Trump opposed.

But Trump neither harms nor, much less, kills anyone, yet it is he, and not his critics, who isthe “extremist” of sorts, the “racist,” the “polarizer,” the “divider.”

Candidate X is not really a Republican or “conservative”

Obviously, this accusation has been leveled at Trump with all of the fury with which his critics have charged him with being an “extremist.” And for more than one reason, there can be no question that this allegation is just as bogus and just as hypocritical coming from them as is the latter.

First, when Trump’s Republican critics claim that he’s not a “conservative,” they mean to imply both that they are conservatives and that Trump is really a “liberal” Democrat.

Their rhetoric notwithstanding, the first implication is patently false: Trump’s GOP rivals and detractors are most decidedly not conservative. The Republican Party is every bit as much a champion of Big Government and the Politically Correct ideology that it’s been used to promote as is its counterpart (To anyone who takes issue with this judgment, I pose one simple challenge: I defy you to identify a single government program, let alone an agency or department, that Republicans have cut. I’ll even be generous and allow you to go all the way back to the Reagan years. I guarantee that you can’t do it).

And as I’ve shown, Trump’s detractors among his rivals in the presidential contest are hardly conservatives. On most, virtually all, issues—immigration, social engineering (both here and abroad), war, affirmative action, tax increases, government spending, socialized medicine, the criminalization of drugs, NSA spying, etc.—their talk aside, they have proven themselves to be indistinguishable from Democrats.

Second, Trump certainly has a checkered record that lends itself to the charge that he’s more of a “liberal” Democrat than anything else. But as I’ve just noted, the histories of his Republican opponents are at least as checkered on this score and, truth be told, probably worse in some respects.

At any rate, Trump hasn’t spent years and decades manipulating voters into thinking that he was a “conservative” only to repeatedly betray those voters upon getting elected and reelected.

Finally, and most tellingly, Republican “experts” and commentators are forever preaching to the hayseeds that compose the base of their party that only those candidates that can appeal to “moderates” stand a chance of being elected to the presidency. Though they never say as much, what this means is that only “moderates,” or those who are perceived as “moderates,” can get elected.

And what this in turn means is that only “liberal” Republicans, or those who are perceived as “liberal” Republicans, can get elected.

Take note: By Trump’s Republican critics’ own lights, the objection that Trump is really a “liberal” Republican contradicts their objection that he is an “extremist,” for if he really is a “liberal” Republican, then, by their reasoning, he is the “moderate,” the one politician who can “reach across the aisle!”

If they’re not careful, in their desperation to discredit Trump, his Republican critics will only discredit themselves—if they haven’t already.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Politics/Elections
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1 posted on 09/05/2015 8:06:47 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

Trump is still the headliner.

Even on FR, some 2 out of 5 threads have Trump in the headline.

==

“There is only one thing in the world worse than being talked about, and that is not being talked about.” — Oscar Wilde

Most of the 17 can attest to that: Perry, Graham, Santorum, Huckabee, Pataki, Christie, Paul ...

They try ankle-biting Trump just to get a mention by the press.


2 posted on 09/05/2015 8:15:14 AM PDT by TomGuy
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To: Kaslin

Then there is this one:

‘No candidate is perfect, but my candidate is the most near perfect.’


3 posted on 09/05/2015 8:16:47 AM PDT by TomGuy
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To: TomGuy
Perry, Graham, Santorum, Huckabee, Pataki, Christie, Paul
try ankle-biting Trump just to get a mention by the
press..... to know whether they're still alive politically.
4 posted on 09/05/2015 8:25:07 AM PDT by Liz
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To: Liz
Trump will speak on US foreign policy aboard the USS Iowa.

Jeb is responding in-kind....will speak to the crowd gathered at Chipotle's takeout counter.

5 posted on 09/05/2015 8:27:35 AM PDT by Liz
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To: Liz

Perry: “I’m still in. I haven’t dropped out — yet.”

==

Oh. And still, no one notices.


6 posted on 09/05/2015 8:28:44 AM PDT by TomGuy
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To: Kaslin
None of this, of course, is meant to imply that such backgrounds are disqualifiers. What it does mean is that the only way to acquire the requisite experience for the presidency is by being the President. The presidency is not unlike any and every other activity in this regard: Knowledge and skill—i.e. experience—comes from practice.

I don't care about all that nonsense. We are under an invasion and we will loose our freedoms and culture as a result. I am going to back whomever takes this 3rd world civilian invasion more serious. We need to save our country first, then we can do the rest.

I have never been a single issue before, but this invasion is moving me into that category.

7 posted on 09/05/2015 8:29:59 AM PDT by GregoTX (Cruzader)
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To: TomGuy

Yawn.


8 posted on 09/05/2015 8:31:07 AM PDT by Liz
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To: Liz

All 3 outside tables will be full, so it will be standing room only when the other 4 people who show up.
9 posted on 09/05/2015 8:31:11 AM PDT by TomGuy
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To: TomGuy

Filled-up tables eh?

I guess word got out that Jebbie was coming to Chipotle’s


10 posted on 09/05/2015 8:33:05 AM PDT by Liz
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To: Kaslin
The Obama presidency should have taken the "experience" question off the table. There is no possible way we could have set the bar any lower than Obama, who apparently never even worked at a Dairy Queen as a teenager or sacked groceries at a supermarket. I don't think he even mowed somebody's lawn as a boy to get a dollar for penny candy.

His only jobs prior to being president was a "community organizer", which even to this day, nobody can explain what it does. And a mostly no-show legislator, elected to those posts only because of his skin color and his ability to read words off a teleprompter in a "smooth" and "statesmen-like" manner. I never observed Obama to be statesmen-like myself but others say they did and voted accordingly.

So I don't want to hear any more crap about this guy or that guy not being "qualified" for the presidency.

11 posted on 09/05/2015 8:33:17 AM PDT by SamAdams76 (We gave GOP the majority to take care of business and they let us down. Time for Trump/Cruz)
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To: Liz

Who are those people loudly clearing their throats over in the corner...oh, its Perry, Graham, Santorum, Huckabee, Pataki, Christie and Paul.
Okay, back to what Trump is doing hour by hour.


12 posted on 09/05/2015 8:38:38 AM PDT by Leep (Cut the crap!)
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To: Liz
Filled-up tables eh?

If they tighen up, they can seat 4 or maybe even 6 [thinner] people at each one.
13 posted on 09/05/2015 8:55:14 AM PDT by TomGuy
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To: TomGuy

I never saw a thin latino in my entire life.


14 posted on 09/05/2015 10:04:19 AM PDT by Liz
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To: Liz

Watch Univision, Telemundo. They come in all shapes and sizes.


15 posted on 09/05/2015 10:12:21 AM PDT by spintreebob
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To: spintreebob

Never ever will I watch those channels.


16 posted on 09/05/2015 10:23:31 AM PDT by Liz
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To: SamAdams76

If the teleprompter had never been invented a POS like Obastard could never have been elected.
Without the teleprompter.
Without a machine putting the words directly into his mouth, the IDIOT IN CHIEF can’t even put two coherent sentences together.


17 posted on 09/05/2015 10:26:51 AM PDT by 5th MEB (Progressives in the open; --- FIRE FOR EFFECT!!)
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To: 5th MEB

OOPS; screwed up, that was supposed to be only two sentences.
Kind of negates my post when even I commit an OSTUPIDISM.
Please ignore the (WITHOUT THE TELEPROMPTER); should have read, “If the teleprompter had never been invented a POS like Obastard could never have been elected. Without a machine putting the words directly into his mouth, the IDIOT IN CHIEF can’t even put two coherent sentences together.”.


18 posted on 09/05/2015 10:40:20 AM PDT by 5th MEB (Progressives in the open; --- FIRE FOR EFFECT!!)
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To: Kaslin
If they’re not careful, in their desperation to discredit Trump, his Republican critics will only discredit themselves—if they haven’t already.

They HAVE!

19 posted on 09/05/2015 11:01:17 AM PDT by painter ( Isaiah: “Woe to those who call evil good and good evil,")
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To: 5th MEB
Without a machine putting the words directly into his mouth, the IDIOT IN CHIEF can’t even put two coherent sentences together.

That is the truth!

20 posted on 09/05/2015 11:05:03 AM PDT by painter ( Isaiah: “Woe to those who call evil good and good evil,")
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