Posted on 03/01/2016 5:52:50 PM PST by The_Harlequin
As the Donald Trump bandwagon continues to steamroll over the politically correct landscape, Trump has the Washington establishment chattering like a troop of confused monkeys whose cage has been disturbed by a kid poking a stick. The Donald phenomenon has also baffled the media who are obligated to provide us with explanations, even when they have none. This hasnt prevented the public from contributing their own answers to the mix. Its reminiscent of the old parable of the blind men trying to describe an elephant. As the old story goes, each observer, with only their sense of touch to guide them, tries to describe an animal they cant see. Each one comes up with a different description based on the particular part of the elephant theyve examined. As the fable reaches its conclusion, the reader is advised that while each of them was partially right, all of them were completely wrong.
Just like the blind men and their elephant, political observers have taken a particular feature of Trumps persona and used it to define the entire candidate. Yet he continues to befuddle the political experts. With the primaries in full throttle, Trumps popularity and support remain strong, and it seems that were no closer to a real consensus.
Theres no shortage of explanations. Libertarian and former congressman Bob Barr compared Trump to a third world strongman. Columnist Jonah Goldberg concluded that Trump has no chance of winning, yet offered no substantial reason why. John McCain shrugged off Trump as someone who had merely fired up the crazies. Pullitzer prize winning commentator Paul Greenberg referred to Trump as an ugly American and compared his candidacy to the Know Nothing party of 1860. Theres a common thread that runs through just about every theory: an arrogance that implies that Trump supporters just arent thinking rationally if theyre thinking at all.
One of the best examples of this elitist attitude comes from Thomas Sowell, columnist and senior fellow of the Hoover Institution. Sowell thinks that much of the Trump support is purely an emotional response to the current political scene. He considers Trump little more than a crowd pleaser and demagogue not unlike Hitler or Juan Peron. Comparing todays American politics to Germany of the 1930s or Argentina of the 40s and 50s is a nonsense comparison. And its also a poor take on history. Sowell is smarter than that and should know better. GOP consultant Rick Wilson has been more direct, though just as off-base. Referring to GOP primary voters as low information voters Wilson has described Trump as a mere showman with a juvenile put-down machine more suited to an 8th grade locker room than a presidential candidate. No wonder Trump supporters are responding emotionally.
If these know-it-all critics would listen carefully to their own words, they might gain some insight into a phenomenon they have so much trouble grasping. In all of their criticism, the pundits and commentators have shown little regard for the public they profess to be informing. The politicians are no better. Theyve dismissed Trumps supporters as a rabble of low-browed riff-raff whove abandoned the niceties of sensible politics. And then they wonder whats causing all the animosity. Throughout the primaries, Trump supporters have had to endure derision, disdain, and mockerya lot of it coming from the GOP. Belittling your party constituents cant possibly be a good campaign strategy.
When the Trump campaign continued to gain momentum, the experts had little choice but to adjust their analyses. Even so, pundits remained convinced that Trumps demise was just around the corner. Wishful thinking, perhaps, but it never happened. Only recently have a few Republican leaders acknowledged that Trumps popularity might mean that he could win. Yet they still struggle for an explanation of how and why. It might be time to fire your consultants.
Trump is singularly unique among all the candidates in that he hasnt used any particular ideology to further his message. He's driven by results. You may disagree with the result, or the means by which he wants to achieve it, but no ideology has been consulted. It's one of the things that makes him so popular. Americans have gotten tired of politicians preaching their political philosophies, especially when nothing ever seems to change.
Many Trump supporters share his apparent disregard for ideology. They want real solutions to real problems. If your house is on fire, you dont care if the Fire Department sends you a response unit of strict constitutionalists or judicial activists, just as long as they put out the blaze. The anti-Trump constituency has interpreted this lack of a philosophical foundation as a lack of intelligence. Perhaps its the political establishment that needs to examine their own thinking.
It was none other than the far-left progressive Norman Lear who may have the most accurate and succinct analysis of the Donald phenomenon. He described Trump as the middle finger of the current political scene. Though he meant it as a criticism, Lear may have been closer to the truth than he knows. Let's not forget that "eff you" in some instances is the correct and appropriate response. When someone insults your intelligence by trying to pawn off a bogus bill of goods, you might be inclined to tell them exactly where to step off.
Every few decades our country experiences significant changes in politics, culture, technology, or some other aspect of society that turns out to be tectonic in magnitude. People who like to sound intelligent call it a paradigm shift. Whatever you want to call it, when such things happen, great change follows. And like other watershed moments in American history, theyre difficult to define or predict as theyre happening. Many Americans have gotten much of the Trump effect wrong. Although they acknowledge that there seems to be a significant shift in political attitudes, they wont likely know what hit them until its long over.
Politicians take note: Trump supporters are far from alone. Theirs is a dissatisfaction that spans the entire political spectrum. The age of ideological politics may be coming to an end. Today were living in a country where many voters have grown weary of holier-than-thou lectures from tone deaf politicians interested only in maintaining their elite fiefdoms. The political consultants would be well advised to take a hard honest look at a political landscape that may be changing before their eyes. To merely dismiss the Trump phenomenon as an aberration would be foolishly shortsighted. The evidence suggests there might a much larger picture in the making. One that even a blind man could see.
No more career politicians.
If Trump wins the general I think we’ll be seeing a lot more blue collar workers and small business owners running for office.
You guys take waxing hopeful to a whole new level.
Trump is an American. Born and Bred. Not a Canadian, not a Cuban.
For the media people who don’t get it, here’s the quick and dirty summary:
We The People are sick and f’ing tired of being lied to and used by the arrogant pricks in DC. Our special ire is reserved for the incredibly condescending, manipulative lying scumbag GOPe variety of pricks, whom we would generally like to see drawn and quartered after being toasted like marshmallows in boiling oil.
Is that clear enough?
Be careful of what you wish ...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ODig-EXEUPE&list=PL813690032BF2CE3C&index=45
If Trump wins, I think you will see the end of a lot of stuff. And most of them will begin with the words “freedom of...”
Trump is an American. Born and Bred. Not a Canadian, not a Cuban.
If Trump loses, I think you will see the end of a lot of stuff. And most of them will begin with the words freedom of...
Ted Bundy wasn’t running for president.
Exactly. I am so sick of politicians who won't work on solutions to problems, but instead use problems to promote their ideology. I don't want politicians who cling to party lines; I want politicians who study the problems, propose and weigh solutions, and go with the one deemed most likely to be effective with the fewest unintended consequences.
That’s nice. The other side is running a Communist loving Socialist and a corrupt insider.
And Donald Trump has said he can work with Schumer and Reid. Doesn’t sound like he would campaign to see their power diminished.
He won’t need to. Their power will simply be diminished by the fact that he will deftly manipulate or bludgeon them into working with him on his terms, or at least on reasonably mutual terms, instead of the cuckservative please-don’t-call-me-a-racist grovelling surrender of the current GOPe leadership.
("Senor Rubio, is that an Amnesty Bill in your pocket, or are you just happy to see illegal aliens?")
I agree. I think we are both right. It’s why I dont want him nominated.
Yep - there is a Cleansing coming, no matter what any person or persons do or don’t do.
And it will be Old Testament in scope and nature.
Yep
OT and Revelation.
Trump is neither.
“...Trump is neither...”
Sure he is! Whether you get democrat-trump or gop-trump depends on the crowd he’s pandering to at any particular moment.
Why, he’s already backpedaling on his immigration policy, “can’t deport them all” and the “big-beautiful” revolving door he’s putting in The Wall (tm) or all the folks that get to “touchback” to the nearest mexican embassy before he let’s them back in... You know, “the good one’s”...
See, it’s this sort of stuff that gets overlooked when you are voting emotionally out of anger, instead of using your head.
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