Posted on 08/01/2016 4:39:18 AM PDT by Kaslin
The primaries are over and Trump is the nominee, and instead of whining about it like a Millennial faced with having to get a job we need to step back and ask ourselves if we have learned anything from this bizarre turn of events. The GOP our GOP has nominated someone who is not a traditional conservative. Hes not even an untraditional conservative. Hell, theres probably not even a c or a v in whatever he is. So we can either try to figure out what happened or keep rending our clothes and gnashing our teeth about how our own voter base took one look at us and rejected us like any sober, sighted guy in a bar at 7 p.m. would reject Lena Dunham.
What have we learned from this? We cant answer that unless we get beyond the natural tendency to assume that the problem is that everyone else is wrong: Gosh, if the voters werent so stupid they would have totally fallen in line with our commands and right now wed be watching Jeb Bush being fitted for a gimp suit by Hillary instead of seeing Trump [checks current polls] uh, cleaning her clock. Wait, what?
Did we ever actually listen to our people? I mean all our people, not just the people who went to the same colleges as us and who hang with us at the same awesome restaurants and read National Review. I mean the actual voters out there in wherever actual GOP voters live. Did we pay attention to them and their concerns? Did we listen to them about illegal immigration, about the impact of free trade, about the wars we supported? And did we fight? I dont mean just give lip service to how bad and unwashed liberals are, but really get in there and stand up to these flag-hating, gender-inventing, God-booing jerks? Or did we look down on the very people we were depending on at election time?
In short, did we completely screw up? Nah, its clearly everyone else whos wrong. Theyre just too stupid to understand that they need to obediently fall in line. After all, their real interests are actually and super conveniently our interests.
Seriously is that where we are at? Because Im hearing a lot of such nonsense from people horrified at Trump and, by extension, the GOP voters who nominated him fair and square. Can we really blame them for voting for the one guy who actually paid attention to what they were saying?
Did we listen about illegal immigration? Heck, illegal immigration is just wonderful for us. We get cheaper restaurant food, cheaper houses, cheaper maids, and if we own companies we get cheaper workers. So whats not to love, right? Except maybe you didnt go to a university and wanted to work with your hands and found that you cant get a job because all the companies are hiring cheap illegal alien workers. Or your truck got hit by an uninsured illegal. Or your daughter got killed by an illegal who should have been deported. Well, if you have concerns about these things, clearly youre a racist.
And our response to their massive law breaking is Well, we cant possibly enforce the law! [clutches pearls tightly] Why, that would be mean! Do you think that when some red state Republican voter breaks the law he gets a pass? You think the IRS isnt going to empty his bank account to pay overdue taxes because he carries a sign reading I didnt cross the tax code; the tax code crossed me! We cant deport an illegal because his family, that shouldnt even be here, might be sad, but do you think anyone working for Uncle Sucker gives a half damn about an Americans family if he steps out of line? Our response to the legitimate grievances of the people we counted on in this election was to call them stupid and racist and people are surprised they flocked to the one guy who listened to them?
We love fair trade. But what about the guy whose job that he support his family with gets outsourced because of NAFTA? What are we supposed to tell him? That in aggregate fair trade is beneficial? Yeah, but what if youre not in the aggregate? I dont know the answer, but I do know that so far we've been telling him Suck it up cuz youre obsolete. Go retrain on computers, dummy. Yet were stunned that our voters have failed to embrace our innovative two-prong approach of ignoring their grievances while heaping abuse upon them?
And let's talk about wars. Generally, its our base that fights wars and we havent won one on the ground since Desert Storm. Our base doesnt mind fighting for a cause, but if we're not as dedicated as they are, if we can't even commit to win when they commit to doing the dying, why are we shocked when instead of answering the call for the umpteenth time they let it go to voicemail? And the stuff about NATO and Trump you know, our voters are not blind. If our allies were doing their fair share, his criticisms wouldn't resonate.
And did we listen when our base asked the establishment to show some fighting spirit? Or are we driven to effectively vote for Hillary because somebody scandalized out tender sensibilities by using the verb schlonged? Our base demanded someone who wouldnt be intimidated, who would fight. Instead, the establishment was dead set on dumping a steaming pile of Jeb on our collective lawn, the same durrwood you can watch on YouTube hanging a medal around Hillary Clinton's wrinkled neck. That pompous geebo cant even take his own damn side in a fight; why is anyone shocked that our voters saw he would never take theirs?
So what have we learned about ourselves? Maybe that many of us are snobs. There's a lot of class warfare going on here, a lot of backroom snark, with a lot of conservatives who want to believe that the only people who could ever support Donald Trump are knuckle-dragging morons who can't cut it when it comes to anything besides digging ditches. Too many of us choose cultural solidarity with the liberals we live among over political solidarity with the people we expected to vote with us.
Gosh, we tell ourselves. These people cant even see whats in their own best interest. Except maybe they dont like what they see. Maybe its because they decided we arent worth listening to. Maybe they dont like us conservatives. And maybe we better figure out how to fix that instead of whining.
It will never blow over.
No matter what happens in November, things are not going back to the way they were.
If they try to force it back then the Party will melt away and a new Conservative party will take its place.
The new party should be called the Patriot Party.
Bernie Sanders should not have happened. He was (and more obviously so in retrospect) a foil placed to illuminate the "inevitable" candidate and when his campaign took off he was ill-equipped to deal with it and the party unwilling to help him. He did not come out of nowhere but his fans did.
Trump at least was more explicable at the outset from the ruling class perspective: a WWE-esque reality television star that would be a momentary passion of the unwashed more accustomed to Honey Boo Boo than to the intricacies of the Beltway Sport of Kings. Let the little people rave, the pros would soon be along to take the dangerous toys out of the kiddies' hands.
Yeb!'s campaign taking a nosedive into a rickety tumbrel full of poo should have been a warning. He too was "inevitable", a keeper of arcane insider spells necessary to keep this immense joke of a government tottering along. There are a lot of three thousand dollar suits and cushy slush funds and golden parachutes riding on the continuing willingness of the sheep to be fleeced for their betters. And it is here that the commentariat failed most signally: declaring that revolt was not an option is not the same as making it so.
Hence their current confusion. Schlichter gets it here, but nobody's listening. The ruling class packages a candidate A as a "conservative" who is not, a candidate B who is "liberal" but just as much a comfortable insider, frames the discussion, sets the terms, performs the customary media incantations and the magic just isn't happening. It's obviously somebody else's fault.
That the Republican Party sucked so much that it took frickin’ Donald Trump to make it viable again.
“Trump is also for trade protectionism which was the cornerstone of the Republican Party platform up to the time of the second WW.”
Trump understands these simple facts of life, and everyone else who condemns him for not being for free trade is just being ignorant (and, I believe, willfully so - they’re not that stupid, they just think that everyone else IS).
Odd no in school taught any of the vast down of free trade like de industrialization.
If all other admonitions fail, remember- ABC!
Anyone But Clinton!
“Odd no in school taught any of the vast down of free trade like de industrialization”
Nothing. I don’t get it.
You tell us. Maybe "traditional Republican candidate acceptable to conservatives" is a better way of putting it than "traditional conservative."
If you're saying they weren't all traditional Republican candidates or acceptable to conservatives, you could be right.
If you're saying that all of them weren't traditional Republican candidates acceptable to Republicans, that could be going too far.
Good article.
Your source please? Because this is what he wrote in 2008:
McCain for President
By Charles Krauthammer
Friday, October 24, 2008
Contrarian that I am, I’m voting for John McCain.
From http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/10/23/AR2008102302867.html
Yep
None of my family want to vote for him and we are conservative.One part of the family will vote against him because they think he will blow us up.
My point is that NONE of them are “traditional conservatives”. I take issue with the author’s suggestion that the recent run of Republican candidates come anywhere close to that standard.
Your description “traditional Republican candidate acceptable to conservatives” is almost there. I would say “marginally acceptable” instead. That would perfectly describe those candidates.
Implied in my comment is the obvious lack of electoral success experienced by the people I mentioned (Bush II barely made it in, and Bush I couldn’t make it on his own). I forgot to include Dole, he belongs there as well.
In this day and age, “traditional Republicans marginally acceptable to conservatives” aren’t likely to ever become president.
I had high hopes that Cruz was going to be the traditional conservative who is also electable, but he succeeded only in driving people away from him, in stark contrast to the Reagan phenomenon.
Trump is neither a traditional Republican nor is he a traditional conservative.
But he has other things going for him that put him far ahead of his Republican rivals, and hopefully will allow him to forever erase the Clinton/Obama stain on our country.
What else is he going to say publicly? He wanted to keep his Fox job. Sarah Palin was just too icky for him to support. Jerk.
I provided a source about Krauthammer, in his own words, voting for McCain in 2008. Since you didn’t provide a source, I can only surmise you don’t have one.
So you think his dislike of Palin (who was only going to be a mere vice president) was enough for him to vote for a man he despised to become president with all the power that entails and then to lie about it? That doesn’t even make sense.
Well said. If Trump could hammer at the horrible Hillary/Obama economy, and leave these side issues alone, I believe he could - will win!
Yes, just as I believe he’ll either go for Hillary or probably sit home. I don’t like him, I don’t trust him, and By Golly, I’m standing by my opinion!
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