He doesn't support single payer, by the way, but there's no point in getting into it with you since you use a scorecard definition of conservatism to determine who to vote for. That kind of thinking is what got us Bush, Bush, Dole, Bush, Bush, McCain, Romney. It's like the canon of a religion, where Republican candidates and establishment leaders repeat, in rote fashion, that they believe this and they believe that. And then they go to DC, and they work with the Democrats, and always, the needle moves left. When the peasants back home get restless, they give us a show vote. And then get back to what they were doing.
The foundation that supports the entire DC structure must be blown up, imploded, blasted to smithereens. Then conservatives who actually believe the canonical principles, and don't merely recite them, might stand a chance. Until then, it's all mental self-gratification.
“He doesn’t support single payer, by the way, but there’s no point in getting into it with you ...”
Oh, so he was for single-payer, universal health insurance before he was against it? Trump said at one point that Canada and Great Britain have health-care systems that should be a model for the U.S. Having lived in England briefly 15 years ago, I can assure you that we do not want the UK health-care system here.
http://www.newsmax.com/Headline/trump-heart-healthcare-everybody/2016/01/31/id/712069/