How Donald Trump United America
The most vulgar, embarrassing campaign of the century is teaching us that underneath it all, we’re actually a decent people. By Jack Shafer December 09, 2015
Even though Thanksgiving Day is two weeks past, I hope it's not too late to express my gratitude for Donald Trump's campaign for president. His new jibber-jabber about banning Muslims from entering the United States has awakened the animal spirits harbored by some of our nativist brothers and sisters. Yes, that’s a bad thing. But the good thing is his proposal is reviving the American consensus view about the value of religious tolerance and free speech. It’s uniting voices across the political spectrum. Donald Trump, amazingly, is inspiring America to sing “Kumbaya.”
Rebuking Trump for his comment were conservatives Sen. John McCain, House Speaker Paul Ryan and Jeb Bush, who tweeted that Trump is “unhinged.” Joining hands at least metaphorically with the conservatives was liberal Hillary Clinton, who called Trump's proposal “reprehensible, prejudiced and divisive.” The equally liberal Martin O'Malley spent his campaign's entire rhetorical budget to tag Trump a “fascist demagogue.” And a White House spokesman declared that Trump's speech “disqualifies” him from serving as president. Meanwhile, pundits Bill Kristol and Dana Milbank have attacked Trump from the right and left, likening him to a John Bircher and Mussolini, respectively. Even Tom Brokaw dusted off his teleprompter yesterday to editorialize against Trump on NBC Nightly News.
Trump has achieved the seemingly impossible with his bigotry: He has brought the two most popular strains of political thought together and reminded us that, for all our faults, Americans are pretty decent folk who, when called upon, can extend respect and civility to cultures that are different than our own. Without Trump's provocation against Muslims, it's hard to imagine Speaker Ryan standing before the press corps’ video cameras to disassociate himself, his party and the country from Trump’s hysteria. “This is not conservatism,” Ryan said emphatically.
“I have a temperament where I bring people together,” Trump agreed in September. He was talking about his skill at filling auditoriums with cheering supporters, of course, but it turns out he has an even greater skill at uniting practically everybody else from both parties against him. Trump’s cheering supporters are actually few, relatively speaking. He pulls from 25 percent to 35 percent in polls of Republican and Republican-leaning voters, but as Nate Silver wrote recently in FiveThirtyEight, this translates into “something like 6 to 8 percent of the electorate overall, or about the same share of people who think the Apollo moon landings were faked.” In October, when the Washington Post’s Philip Bump took his own yardstick to the polls, he estimated that Bernie Sanders commands more supporters than does Donald Trump.
Early in the summer, as Trump launched his candidacy and started his rise in the polls, many speculated that he was a double agent dispatched by the Democrats (namely, his wedding guest Hillary Clinton) to sabotage the Republicans with a presidential campaign that barnstormed the country like a parody of a Tea Party rally (a Mad Hatter’s Tea Party, perhaps). As John Fund wrote in National Review, what do you make of a “Republican” who “sees links between autism and pharmaceutical companies,” “revived ‘birtherism’ in 2011,” espouses crony capitalism and embraced the idea of Oprah Winfrey as his running mate? I never bought the idea that Trump was a plant deployed to destroy the Republican Party. But now that he's gone completely loopy, I'm beginning to think that he's actually doing the GOP a favor. He's ensuring that whichever candidate comes out of the Republican National Convention as the nominee will look mainstream, sane and electable compared to Trump.
In recent years, the pundit class has embraced the concept of the “Overton Window” to analyze the competition among policy initiatives. It also helps explain why the Trump candidacy is not likely to triumph. According to the Overton Window theory, only a narrow range of policies can be considered in the political arena at any given time, so politicians tend to avoid discussing ideas that might be considered “unthinkable” or “radical” by the public and instead pursue “sensible,” “popular” and “acceptable” notions that have a better chance of succeeding. But from time to time, politicians attempt to move or expand the Overton Window, so what once seemed “unthinkable” or “radical” grabs some daylight, and appears in the “acceptable” part of the window. Suddenly, it’s a policy that could happen.
Earlier this year, Trump tested the edge of the Overton Window by proposing the mass deportation of 11 million undocumented immigrants, something most regard as technically impossible, if not unthinkable. Now comes his Muslim ban, which is equally unthinkable and possibly even unconstitutional. The speed with which Trump's opponents in both parties have denounced him and his “unthinkable” proposals have all but removed them from consideration, and that's a good thing. To sustain interest in his campaign, Trump will have to find another unthinkable proposition to loft. Now that right-wingers and left-wingers are united in opposition to his ugly decrees, the window will be slammed shut on him even faster the next time he pitches.
The overwhelming response from both parties to Trump's demagoguery reminds us of our basic American decency. I don’t mean to suggest that we should fear and denounce every unthinkable idea proposed, or that the parties should join hands in a bipartisan fashion to destroy anything outside our usual comfort zone. For example, gay marriage and marijuana legalization—long considered unthinkable—were ultimately embraced after a long and substantive debate, and we’re better for it. But our rational response to the short-fingered vulgarian’s latest stunt shows that we are, in the end, the masters of our animal spirits. To that I can say only one thing: Thanks, Trump!
(I don't think he realizes what he is saying. His contempt for the people who are Trump Voters just drips off the page. They are racists. Morons. Who have unacceptable ideas. At least according to the media, the Democrats and the Republicans who suck up to them. You know the Duopoly.The people who make crooked deals for the big money guys and spread the welfare around for the brothers so they can buy their votes. Normal hard working Americans are just bitter clingers hanging on to their guns and their religion. Do don't understand that the Muslims are good. There is no problem. That they will only kill what 30 to 100 people this year. I mean once every year they will get lucky and kill 3000 but you have to give them one once in a while. I mean it is nowhere near the number of babies that are killed every year so what is the big deal. We need to import more low wage workers to take the jobs of Americans and to degrade our culture with their ways. We need to increase our immigration and import more Muslim "refugees" from Syria. Not Christians of course. We have plenty of those already. To many actually. They are the problem. Not the peace loving Muslims and the Law Abiding Mexicans and all the rest that are pouring into our country and our welfare rolls. The more the merrier.
This is the voice from the belly of the beast. His smug condescension is overwhelming.
The only thing he forgot to do is complain that Trump was a former reality star. That is the liberals favorite jibe.)
20 comments:
To be fair, you guys are kinda acting like lemmings. There is absolutely nothing the guy can say or do that you won't find wonderful, and exactly what we need.
Like this:
"... he told CNN in 2007, adding that he thought Clinton would surround herself with good people to negotiate a deal with Iran. A year later, Trump wondered publicly why Clinton wasn’t chosen as President Obama’s running-mate.
"In 2012, as Obama was running for re-election, Trump called Clinton “terrific” again in an interview with Fox News, saying she performed well as Secretary of State."
“Hillary Clinton I think is a terrific woman,” ... I really like her and her husband both a lot. I think she really works hard. ... and I think she does a good job. I like her."
Now, who in here ever agreed with any of that? Now your guy says exactly the opposite thing. Still, somehow that's wonderful too, because of course what he says now to get your vote is the truth, and he would never let you down at some later date. That's something only the other guys do.
Hey I remember when I thought this woman and her husband were terrific people. Smart and funny and perceptive. I congratulated them on their wedding and supported their endeavors. But then I got to know them better and realized what horrible worthless people they really are.
I changed my mind. Donald Trump changed his mind. Maybe Hillary's performance as Secretary of State had something to do with that.
Do you ever change you mind bags?
The people who are lemmings are the ones who join on the liberal pile on and put everything that Trump says as something beyond the pale.
The Republicans and the Democrat duopoly joined together to attack someone who is not beholden to them. Even simple common sense solutions are shouted down as racist and sexist and beyond the bounds of discussion.
A perfect example is when Trump said that there are no-go areas in France and England where the Police can not go because the Muslim extremists do not permit it. The politicans in England went batshit. Even Scotland Yard got into the fray and said it was a lie.
Of course several cops came forward to say it was true. That they couldn't even wear their uniforms on the way to work because they might offend someone and might get attacked.
That is what Obama and Hillary are setting up for us here in places like Baltimore and Chicago. Of course it is just not Muslim extremists. It is Mexican cartel gangs. And your garden variety black criminals like Michael Brown and Freddie Grey. That is their plan.
Of course you can't talk about that because it is out of the realm of rational discourse.
Bad, bad Trump. Bad, bad Trump supporters. Sit down and shut and listen to your betters.
They have been doing such a great job.
I don't hate anyone, but why should we be importing Muslims? Or anyone else except people who are needed to solve some labor shortage?
Plus, I think 320 million Americans are enough. I don't want to live in a USA with a billion people. If i did, I'd move to India.
That makes me a "nativist" - just like Ike, Hoover, FDR, TR, and the founding fathers.
They have to import somebody to fill you job at half the pay rc. Then they will stop.
I understand that some people are bigs fans of doddering drunken alcoholic bitches. Hell they will even leave their family to pursue them and get a meal ticket in the bargain.
But that is a small segment of the population. Small and very very stupid. So I think her potential for growth is quite small.
"Do you ever change you mind bags?'
I haven't made it up yet. If he says something stupid, I'll say so and explain why, and if he says something right I can also say so, but if he joined ISIS and blew up Trump Tower, you'd probably call it a brilliant maneuver that shows the kind of real leadership we need.
Seriously, tell me something he could do or say that would make you drop the pom poms, and support someone else.
I don't say Trump is a racist, I don't say he offends me, I didn't even say his ideas were unconstitutional. I love when he pokes the media in the eye. I criticized what I saw as just plain dumb moves that may give Hillary the Presidency, weaken our foreign policy options, and damage our future strategy against the Jihadis. I think he said these things for cheap political points with the lemmings who he knows will swallow anything. I find that irresponsible. You find it refreshing. I suppose it's both, but I don't need refreshment at that price. I wish he would stop playing you guys for cheap applause at the nation's expense. It's like a Bill Mahr, or Daily Show audience sometimes.
I seriously want him to stop it. I want him to start being smart and serious, to think things through before opening his mouth and having to walk back mistakes he will be stuck with anyway. I would support him then, and want him to win, but it's slipping away now, and he's affirming my fears about him: that he's doing this for his own glory and he's too self-absorbed to put that second to the interests of the nation.
what's astounding about liberal is they never change their minds. Really. Immigration is good. Let in terrorists to kill say 10,000 Americans - OK with them. Immigration is good.Turn the USA into India with a billion people. OK with them. Immigration is good.
Literally, there is no argument that will get off their stated position. Occasionally, a liberal will get mugged and become slightly more conservative, or they'll get replaced at work by a H-1b, but most of them don't.
I'll give you a fantastic alternative to Trump, and yes it would be the perfect candidate:
Donald Trump with serious ideas worked through with advisors, then carefully and intelligently delivered with details that prove he's not just saying whatever shit is gonna get him on the news today. Trump with a chance of getting the people he needs to cross over and vote for him, because he's sending a lot of people to Hillary now, and giving them motivation to beat him, which they did not have before.
We could get that candidate if the lemming herd would demand him, instead of settling for Kabuki theater.
I'd be very happy with a President Cruz. Problem is Cruz doesn't seem to get the electorate excited. And that's part of winning. Trump has that, in spades. He's sending a lot of people to Hillary now? He's also gathering a lot of the people who used to be called Reagan Democrats behind him. To repeat, Cruz just doesn't seem to have the ability to catch fire with us peasants. And without that.....
I think Cruz is unfortunately unelectable because of the 19th Amendment.
For example, my lady and her daughter are both low info lifelong liberals who never voted Republican. They both like Trump, but would never vote for Cruz. He creeps them out.
Now you guys are gonna be sorry:
Loring Wirbel, board member of the American Civil Liberties Union’s Colorado chapter and co-chair of the ACLU’s Colorado Springs chapter, called for supporters of GOP presidential hopeful Donald Trump to be shot before they vote for the billionaire businessman.
Comparing Trump to Nazi propagandist Joseph Goebbels, Wirbel wrote in his Facebook page:
The thing is, we have to really reach out to those who might consider voting for Trump and say, “This is Goebbels. This is the final solution. If you are voting for him I will have to shoot you before election day.” They’re not going to listen to reason, so when justice is gone, there’s always force, as Laurie would say."
People who oppose guns, never shot one, and who don't understand anything about them are gonna come for you. I'm guessing ...spit balls?
Clearly that lady cares deeply about civil liberties.
And so much for Godwins Law. That law only applies to the right.
It's actually a guy, and he's the same idiot that blamed Sarah Palin's crosshair map for that shooting of Gabby Giffords, saying that people need to take responsibility for encouraging violence like that.
Wirbel means whirlwind or vortex in German. Could also mean a black, sucking eddy of despair.
For example, my lady and her daughter are both low info lifelong liberals who never voted Republican. They both like Trump, but would never vote for Cruz.
Reach out and hug a liberal for that.
I don't think Trump is a racist. When minorities want to insult white people, they don't call them honkies or gringos. They call them racists. Defining Trump as a racist, is kind of a racist thing to say.........That said, I think Trump is infantile in the way he insults his opponents. Carly Fiorina is pretty enough for public life. I wouldn't recommend a career in porn, but she's within normal limits for elected office. McCain qualifies as a genuine war hero. Trump was a low life for insulting his war record.......If it came down to it, I would definitely vote for him over Hillary, but I'm not at all sure that he would win. Just as people would turn out in droves to vote for him, so would people turn out to vote against him. Deceased felons in Chicago are particularly against his candidacy and would shift the election against him.
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