Well let’s just put it this way. Hillary Clinton says we’re going to shut you down. Bernie Sanders says the same thing. Then you got Donald Trump says we’re going to put you back to work. We’re going to save your jobs. I mean that means a whole lot to us. Whether it’s true or not, the man is the first one who says we’re going to put you back to work. So I’m going to support him. I mean if he goes back on his word, then we got another election in four years, we’ll vote him out.
natsb88 wrote:Since Cruz and Kasich dropped out, "outsider non-politician" Trump has announced or hinted at "the federal government can't allow states to legalize marijuana" Chris Christie for Attorney General and 9/11 broken record and "we should spy on every citizen and carpet bomb the middle east" Rudy Giuliani for Secretary of Homeland Security. He also changed his mind about raising the minimum wage and hired 17-year Goldman Sachs partner, former George Soros employee, and current hedge fund CEO/manager Steven Mnuchin as his national finance chairman for his fundraising operations (remember how he so often criticized Cruz for being married to a Goldman exec?). His top foreign policy advisor is former Blackwater executive Joseph Schmitz, who was forced out of his DoD Inspector General position amid allegations of protecting high-level pentagon officials in the Bush administration and turning a blind eye to Rumsfeld's shenanigans. Some libertarians are still trying to convince themselves that everything else about Trump can be ignored because he appears to offer a foreign policy of peace, but don't forget his response to Ron Paul's call for a foreign policy of nonintervention: "He should be ignored: @RonPaul's foreign policy is a dream come true for our enemies." Despite convincing a big chunk of the American population of the contrary, Trump is as much or more a politician than any other candidate, and is surrounding himself with status quo big government advisors.
natsb88 wrote:Oh, and Trump would lose to Hillary anyway.
end rant
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Thogey wrote:Your libertarian dream will never come true. Our president will always be politically and big business connected. It's the way of the world.
Thogey wrote:natsb88 wrote:Oh, and Trump would lose to Hillary anyway.
end rant
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Wanna put $100 on it?
Thogey wrote:Slightly less bad
natsb88 wrote:Trump and Hillary both want more progressive income taxes. Trump also wants huge tariffs on imports from China to "bring back jobs." It may boost some domestic manufacturing, but only because it would artificially increase prices by 50%. We're talking consumables, household goods, electronics... this hurts the lower and middle class more than a relatively small number of new jobs will offset. All that new government revenue from tariffs would be paid by the end consumer, not China.
natsb88 wrote:Thogey wrote:Slightly less bad
You can laugh all you want, but it's true.
Trump and Hillary both want an "assault weapons" ban and a federally mandated waiting period for gun purchases. (Hillary of course wants a lot more).
Trump and Hillary both want government-run universal healthcare. Think about that. Obamacare was designed by Democrats to fail after a few years so Democrats could say "we tried to work with insurance companies and hospitals but they're just too greedy, we need the government to take over" and try to push universal healthcare. Now we have a presumptive GOP nominee who supports government-run healthcare anyway. Might as well just hand it over.
Trump and Hillary both want more progressive income taxes. Trump also wants huge tariffs on imports from China to "bring back jobs." It may boost some domestic manufacturing, but only because it would artificially increase prices by 50%. We're talking consumables, household goods, electronics... this hurts the lower and middle class more than a relatively small number of new jobs will offset. All that new government revenue from tariffs would be paid by the end consumer, not China. Tariffs would hurt the same segment that Hillary's higher minimum wage would (and Trump put a higher minimum wage back on the table after previously opposing it).
Trump and Hillary both support domestic spying and warrantless surveillance and data collection. Trump has called for increased government control over the internet, including the ability to censor/block websites the government considers "dangerous" and having the ability to shut down internet access (the proverbial "internet killswitch"). Trump and Hillary both support aggressive law enforcement and militarization of local police. Trump's deportation dreams would require a "halt and show your papers" approach.
Trump and Hillary both support torture and indefinite detention at Guantanamo. Trump said he would send Americans there if they were suspected of supporting Isis. Who needs due process?
Trump and Hillary are both crony capitalists. Hillary sells influence for huge speaking fees and donations to the Clinton foundation. Trump's family money came from building housing for the government and he's been greasing palms for almost 50 years. In the 70s he used political connections to get a 40-year tax abatement on the Grand Hyatt Hotel in Manhattan (boils down to getting tens of millions in tax subsidies). In 1985 he circumvented campaign finance laws (making donations from many separate Trump companies) to give $30k to Andrew Stein, a member of the board that makes zoning and land use decisions in Manhattan. In the 90s Trump tried to get the city of Bridgeport, CT to become "partners" with one of his companies so they could use their power of condemnation to take property from five existing businesses where he wanted to build a new amusement park. Also in the 90s he tried to use eminent domain to force a widow out of her house in Atlantic City after she refused to sell. He wanted to build a parking lot. Trump celebrated the 2005 SCOTUS ruling that determined eminent domain could be used for private development. He spent a decade in NY courts arguing that gambling would ruin the state because he didn't want any competition for his NJ casinos. Just a few examples...
Don't forget that prior to this election cycle Trump was very close with Bill and Hillary, saying "Hillary would have made a great president," and their daughters are friends. He has given lots of money to Democrats (including the Clintons). Trump has switched parties several times. He was a Democrat from 2001-2009, Republican 2009-2011, Independent in 2011, then switched back to Republican for this election cycle. I don't put much weight in party affiliation, but he's certainly not a consistent conservative.
I sympathize with the view that Trump is the lesser of two evils. I can't stomach the idea of actually cheering him on. He is "slightly less bad," at best.
rsk1963 wrote:popular vote can do all it wants with regards to voting for trump (or not)... if you think electoral college (those jags that actually determine the president) will seriously vote trump into office you have another thing comin...
blackrabbit wrote:Hey Thogey, I'll take the 100 dollar Hillary bet if you are willing to do it with me. I can't stand her, but agree generally with Nate about Trump. I do think that Hillary is the chosen one, so when when it gets in and I feel sick at least I will be 100 bucks richer. It will be like a little Pepto-Bismol for my wrenching guts. If I lose I will consider it the price for the entertainment that will follow. It will be mostly tragedy and farce no matter who gets the role, but Trump is better at comedy.
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