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Much, Much More Than Trump, by Robert Gore

Posted by straightlinelogic 1 year ago to Politics
32 comments | Share | Flag

As el gato malo recently observed, there are two types of Trump Derangement Syndrome, or TDS. One afflicts a subset of those who don’t like him; one afflicts a subset of those who do. Among the afflicted, mere mention of his name evokes either foaming-at-the-mouth rage or enraptured paroxysms.

Trump is the vessel for a lot of hopes and dreams, most of which won’t come true. Should he win, he would again be taking on a multi-trillion dollar totalitarian monstrosity (the term “Blob” is too benign), its remit every important aspect of life within the United States and around the world. Those trillions support millions of government employees, contractors, and beneficiaries. The monstrosity resists any challenge, even if that challenge is only rhetorical. Trump’s challenge the first time was exclusively rhetorical. The monstrosity was bigger, more powerful, more indebted, and more monstrous at the end of his term than at the beginning.

This is an excerpt. For the complete article, please click the above link.


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  • 13
    Posted by $ allosaur 1 year ago in reply to this comment.
    "A vote for Trump is a vote against them."
    Precisely why the dino will vote for the sadly flawed and imperfect yet highly respected Mr. Trump.
    Should he beat the cheat and win he will only have four more years to dig us out of a pile of China Joe's (actually his Marxist handlers) heaped-on Schiff.
    What gives me the creeps is what awaits us after that?!?!?!
    Think it will likely be what will happen if a rigged election can beat the anticipated landslide.
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  • Posted by $ Thoritsu 1 year ago
    I DO NOT LOVE Donald Trump. He is a childish megalomaniac.

    He is NOT remotely as loathsome as those infected with TDS assert, and more importantly, the smooth talking politicians they support are simply that: smooth talking versions of things far more loathsome.

    Trump is overwhelmingly the best option we have presently.

    ANY HERE (this means EWE, with Rand-reading homework assignments, and droning babble) that publicly argue against reelecting Trump are either deranged, spiteful idiots, or clearly lying about any Objectivist or Libertarian views.
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  • 11
    Posted by Lucky 1 year ago
    Tucker Carlson on Donald Trump (slightly cut)

    Millions of Americans sincerely love Donald Trump

    They love him in spite of everything they’ve heard. They love him in spite of himself. They love Donald Trump because no one else loves them. The country they built, the country their ancestors fought for over hundreds of years, has left them to die in unfashionable little towns, mocked and despised by the sneering half-wits with finance degrees but no actual skills, who seem to run everything.

    Whatever Donald Trump’s faults, he is better than the rest of the people in charge. Trump is a living indictment of the people who run this country. That was true when Trump came out of nowhere to win the presidency, and it’s true right now. Trump rose because they failed.

    If the people in charge had done a halfway decent job with the country they inherited, if they’d cared about anything other than themselves, Donald Trump would still be hosting Celebrity Apprentice. But they didn’t. Instead, they were incompetent and narcissistic and cruel and relentlessly dishonest. They wrecked what they didn’t build.

    They lied about it. They hurt anyone who told the truth about what they were doing. We watched.

    America is still a great country, the best in the world, but our ruling class is disgusting.

    A vote for Trump is a vote against them.
    ------------
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  • Posted by $ Abaco 1 year ago
    Funny you mention "foaming at the mouth rage". A few years ago my wife and I invited a family we knew over for a swim party. Wife is beautiful. Three cute kids. The husband was suffering from TDS. I think he assumed that I was a MAGA guy and, at one point started yelling so aggressively that I swear I saw some foam. I put up my hands and said, "Travis! Travis! I didn't vote for him." He was like a guy recovering from getting knocked out. A glazed look came over his face, with a blank stare at the ground. "Oh...I know, I know", he said, and quieted down. Not long after that he demonstrated his insanity by leaving his beautiful family. A lot to unwrap there...
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  • Posted by freedomforall 1 year ago in reply to this comment.
    And the American people will suffer while wall st and the banking cartel get wealthier.
    The only way out for a free people isn't peaceful.
    I agree with the points in your article with the exception of blaming any generation
    of Americans for the actions of a few power mongers in D.C.
    All generations of Americans have been trying to raise their families and hoping to
    be left alone by all the governments and banksters trying to steal from them.
    Eventually the people must respond or be enslaved.
    D.C. NIFO
    Reply | Permalink  
  • Posted by freedomforall 1 year ago
    Reforming the fedgov would be extremely painful economically, if even possible.
    It would have to be done quickly and irreversibly or the politicians will reverse course as soon as there is any irrational excuse.
    Up to 4 million unproductive fedgov employees (per 2022 census) would be unemployed and most unemployable by any profit
    seeking business, not to mention all the 'consultants' and military 'industry' employees. (The largest number - 11 million - of
    government employees are teachers working for local/state governments.)
    Fedgov workers are even more worthless than the current crop of indebted college graduates with 'degrees' but can't do simple math.

    Same for social security 'reform'. About 59 million are receiving ss 'benefits' totaling about $108 billion a year - about $1,800
    per month per recipient. Cutting those payments would likely have a 10 fold effect on the economy since the money gets spent
    repeatedly for goods and services.
    Economically painful doesn't come close to describing the effects.
    Of course, it must be done since the effect of doing nothing is disaster, but politicians will never make it happen. Never happen.
    If reform is to happen, it will take millions of people willing to remove themselves and their families from the current slavery,
    risking their lives, fortunes, and sacred honor.
    Reply | Permalink  

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