Posted on 06/22/2015 5:08:15 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
After Donald Trumps bizarre announcement last week that he was running for president, it occurred to me that many observers are misreading Trump.
Many consider him a joke. Not true. Trump knows when he is being outrageous and acts that way consciously to build his brand. Some consider him a menace, pointing out polls that show he would do well if he abandoned the GOP after the primaries and ran as an independent. But Trump is too smart to waste money on a futile effort to capture 270 electoral votes. He will conclude like Michael Bloomberg, another billionaire that American politics is a two-party duopoly.
But just maybe Trump is a double agent for the Left. He is nearly a cartoon version of what a comedian such as Stephen Colbert considers a conservative the kind of conservative Colbert played on Comedy Central until this year. He reinforces all the Lefts negative stereotypes of conservatives as ignorant blowhards. During his announcement speech last week, Trump said of Mexican immigrants: Theyre bringing drugs. Theyre bringing crime. Theyre rapists, and some, I assume, are good people. Offered a chance to expand on his remarks on MSNBC, Trump said:
Theyre sending us not their finest people. And its people from countries other than Mexico also. We have drug dealers coming across, we have rapists, we have killers, we have murderers. I mean its common sense what, do you think theyre going to send us their best people, their finest people? The answer is no.
Trumps comments led the news in the Spanish-language media, prompting Jonathan Capehart of the Washington Post to observe that Trump might singlehandedly keep the Republican Party out of the White House.
Donald Trump seems eager to alienate sane voters by embracing conspiracy theories wherever he can find them.
Indeed, Donald Trump seems eager to alienate sane voters by embracing conspiracy theories wherever he can find them. He sees links between autism and pharmaceutical companies. He revived birtherism in 2011 when he declared he didnt believe Barack Obama had been born in the U.S. The birther movement, lets recall, was originally driven by some of Hillary Clintons liberal supporters. Britains Daily Telegraph reported that in April 2008, an anonymous email circulated by supporters of Mrs Clinton, Mr Obamas main rival for the partys nomination, thrust a new allegation into the national spotlight that he had not been born in Hawaii. The first lawsuit to make birther claims was filed by Phil Berg, a Democratic attorney and a Hillary Clinton supporter. When Trump revved up birtherism again in 2011, it distracted attention from real Obama scandals and made conservatives who bought into it look ridiculous.
RELATED: The Art of the Con, by Donald Trump
Trumps flights of fancy go far beyond birtherism, though. He has on several occasions said his preferred vice-presidential running mate would be Oprah Winfrey, telling ABC News this month: I think Oprah would be great. Id love to have Oprah. I think wed win easily, actually.
In reality, Donald Trump simply flies his own flag of convenience as the head of the Opportunist Party. As a businessman seeking political access, he could be excused for making occasional contributions such as the ones he made to former Obama chief of staff Rahm Emanuel and Senate Democratic leader Harry Reid. But through the last presidential election, a majority of his political contributions went to Democrats. And then there is Trumps decision to declare himself a registered Democrat from 2001 to 2009. He explained to the New York Daily News that he did so because he didnt like George W. Bush and because most of the politicians I know are Democrats.
Indeed, all that hanging around Democrats really rubbed off on him. In a 2000 book, he declared we must have universal health care and said it should look a lot like Canadas system: Doctors might be paid less than they are now, as is the case in Canada, but they would be able to treat more patients because of the reduction in their paperwork. As recently as last year, Trump was still praising single-payer medical systems overseas.
RELATED: Witless Ape Rides Elevator: Donald Trump Is in the Race
At the same time that he was plumping for single-payer health care in 2000, Trump called for a one-time 14.25 percent net-worth tax on individuals and trusts with a net worth of over $10 million. He has also called for a 20 percent tax on importing goods. All this has led talk-show host Glenn Beck to declare: Donald Trump is a progressive. Hes not a conservative.
Trump is also one of Americas premier crony capitalists. In 2005, Trump was asked his opinion of the Supreme Courts controversial Kelo decision, which allowed public authorities to seize private land and turn it over to private interests for economic development. He told Fox News: I happen to agree with [the decision] 100 percent.
Small wonder. In one of many notorious examples of eminent-domain abuse, in the 1990s Trump fixed his sights on the home of Vera Coking, an elderly homeowner whose tiny house in Atlantic City stood in the way of a planned limousine parking lot next to a Trump casino. John Stossel, who interviewed Trump about the Coking case for ABC News, told me: Trump blathered on about how roads and public hospitals would never be built without eminent domain, but he was stumped when I pointed out he was seizing buildings for private business use. He simply didnt understand the difference. When Stossel accused Trump of being a bully to Coking, he was told by the billionaire off-camera, Nobody talks to me that way! But, Stossel concluded, someone should.
RELATED: Donald Trumps Yuuge Hypocrisy
The Institute for Justice, a public-interest law firm that successfully staved off Trumps efforts to seize Cokings home, explained the Trump MO:
Unlike most developers, Donald Trump doesnt have to negotiate with a private owner when he wants to buy a piece of property, because a governmental agency the Casino Reinvestment Development Authority or CRDA will get it for him at a fraction of the market value, even if the current owner refuses to sell.
Actually, I dont believe Trump is a double agent acting in the interests of liberals to discredit conservatism. But (to borrow some phrasing from Trumps conspiracy vocabulary), he is playing the useful idiot for the Left. He might as well be doing it on purpose.
John Fund is national-affairs columnist for National Review Online.
I voted for Perot, but let me say there is at least one issue on which Perot is (much) different from Trump:
Perot ran a third-party challenge.
Trump is running for the GOP nomination.
“Sometimes a person is crazy like a fox, and other times they’re just crazy.”
****
And if they have billions, they’re just “eccentric” or perhaps trans-sane.
I’m not pledging to vote for him, but what he says is music to my ears. Plus, he pisses off all the right people. Sorry if you don’t like that.
This article is a dumb, you don’t really believe the Oprah thing do you?
LOL, I'm stealing that.
What’s scary is how many in this forum that Trump has bamboozled. I like to think that the vast majority of people on this forum are pretty well informed conservatives. If he has this many bamboozled here, how about the rest of the conservatives out there who don’t follow politics as closely but will be voting in the primaries?
“Those are not opinions. Those are facts. You have been fooled.”
What makes you think that I am not aware of what you just posted. You can attach importance to statements, and diminish importance of actions, to fashion whatever you choose to believe.
If guilt by mere statements is what you look for, please consider this quote, and its implications:
Were in active discussion on TPA, said McConnell, adding, Its an enormous grant of power, obviously, from a Republican Congress to a Democratic president, but thats how much we believe in trade as an important part of Americas economy.
Huffingtonpost.com 1/07/2015
Ted Cruz voted for this. That is not a statement on theory. That is action. These new trade bills will make the United States just a co-equal state among other states, its sovereignty overruled by a foreign cabal. Which is more serious, the statements you point out about Trump or the FACT of the vote (action) cast by Cruz that enables this monstrosity (TPA/TPP).
Yes and I have said that for years.
This is not about Cruz. You are a little obsessed fan boi....you can’t look at ideas, let alone issues, you are totally immersed in personality. I pity you.
Read 7 and learn. Cruz is not relevant to this conversation. And FTR, you don’t understand squat about the trade deal(s) either.
Well, "Jeb, Jr." did get 70 percent plus of the vote in TX on November 4, 2014. Maybe that doesn't mean a thing, or maybe it means we can't trust Republican primary voters.
STRAW argument, false choice:
Lemme explain some thing to you, typing real slow so you can follow along. For those of us who are trying to educate the ignorant on this forum, his pissing off the wrong people is what we like about him the best. That's good. But when you look at what the man stands for, he's also stood for all the wrong things, all the wrong people, and his philosophy over the years can be generously called incoherent at best.
You, on the other hand, see he pisses off the wrong people, and you jump into the kool aid and shut down your brain.
Jeb Junior has stated he’s more like Cruz than any of his Bush family......so I don’t think what you cited means a damned thing frankly.
This is not about Fund. It is about Trump. Fund is not running. He’s not asking for your vote or your money. What you should do, if you want to join the adult table, is disregard Fund’s opinion if you want, but pay attention to the FACTS that he presents.
C. Edmund Wright was referring to Bush. He said no one was fooled by Bush and I have seen people on FR already stating they will vote for that Democrat in an R jersey.
I’m NEVER going to vote for Bush or any other cheap labor importer.
(even if Hillary thanks me)
And no one who Pauline Kael knew voted for Nixon, either.
My guess is that Freepers or people who pretty much think like Freepers comprise less than 40 percent of registered Republicans nationwide.
irrelevant analogy.
And my point was about FR, not the rest of the electorate, and no, it’s nowhere near 40% nationwide, of Republicans, who think like FR. At least, not what I call the bitter ole pharisee Freeper universe.
So my point stands, because my point was only about FR, which is where YOU posted the warning about Jeb.
Bamboozled, or a more modern term, punked.
At least as far as his effect on FR goes, I'm thinking of Howard Beale.
The type of person who would open a window at the least suggestion to scream, "I'M MAD AS HELL, AND I WON'T TAKE IT ANY MORE!!!" is the perfect Trump supporter.
Bush could sweep the primaries, and most of FR would be sitting around totally stuned, muttering, "How'd this happen?? None of US voted for him...."
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