14 hours ago, alnite said:You are saying as if we had other choices to choose from.
Yes, there was another choice, the other choice was the one who wasn't obviously a racist who hadn't espoused obviously terrible policies.
14 hours ago, alnite said:We were presented with two choices that neither was good.
Neither was good is true, but one was clearly much worse than the other.
14 hours ago, alnite said:Hillary and Clinton Foundation with her history of receiving illegal political contributions, corruption, and being huge allies of the media. Bernie Sanders, which I thought should have won the Democratic primary, got burned by the DNC-Clinton-MSM mafia real good.
Let me equally preface this by saying I'm NOT a Democrat. I'm NOT a Republican either. I identify liberal, but beyond that I have no party association. If your point is that Hillary was a shady and unpopular candidate, we've already established that. The DNC did not like Bernie Sanders. Not surprising, for a variety of reasons, but this was fairly well known.
No, Hillary was not popular. No, Hillary was not a paragon of virtue. She had many scandals. But beyond a point, many of the stories about corruption proved to be false. The whole fever pitch about the emails, the BS uranium deal, etc. But yea, Hillary had many scandals, a lot of baggage, etc., I won't deny that. I myself think Bernie may have made a better candidate.
The DNC did not project a good candidate and did indeed have internal corruption (Donna Brazille, etc.), nor did they prefer a good candidate, but I'm really tired of hearing about the whole "MSM". The "mafia". The whole "conspiracy". This has been pushed repeatedly by Trump, with little evidence of it being true.
We can sit here all day arguing about Hillary vs Trump on the basis of who seems more corrupt but it's ultimately irrelevant as to 'who's the more corrupt candidate', because of the following.
14 hours ago, alnite said:Why are you presenting the election like it was black and white?
One was clearly espousing dangerous, racist, xenophobic rhetoric that essentially worked on demagoguery. The other wasn't. This is a black and white choice because of that fact alone. Only one candidate claimed that Mexicans are criminals and rapists. Only one candidate advocated for a Muslim ban and a Muslim registry. Only one candidate repeatedly and regularly attacked the free press and critics. Only one candidate continually pushed the racist notion that Obama was not an American. Only one candidate showed authoritarian tendencies. Only one candidate. Just one. Not two, not three, just one. That candidate was Donald Trump. Not Hillary Clinton, not Bernie Sanders, not John Kasich, not Jeb Bush, only Donald Trump.
Then there's more on policies. A border wall was and still is idiotic. Tariffs were and still are absolutely idiotic. Notice that I haven't even touched Republican core platform ideals here. I don't even need to comment on Trump's really checkered history with all sorts of financial inconsistencies and corruption, nor the ACA repeal, nor the tax cut to paint this as a black and white choice as you keep claiming it wasn't.
Hillary's policies did not even begin to reach this level. I don't even need to talk about who's corrupt and who isn't to posit this fact. This alone should damned well be enough. Yes I keep presenting this as black and white because of that clear distinction alone.
14 hours ago, alnite said:Many people didn't like both Trump and Clinton. Even the Republicans were surprised Trump could win their primary. I listened to the local Republican talk show during the primary (disclaimer: I am NOT a Republican), and whenever they got people calling in, they would ask them who they would vote for. Some say Kasich, some say Ted, and very very few would admit they'd vote for Trump, which was received with snickers and laughters like it was a joke. This was among the Republicans. He was never popular to begin with.
This isn't about liking or loving Trump (which some people definitely did and do, but certainly not all): it's about the fact that somehow people were ok with voting for someone who is a racist, as @ChaosEngine put it.
There isn't name calling going on here (in this thread at least from myself and others), there isn't any demeaning going on here, it's just us pointing out this simple fact and it's something that many of us find difficult to get past.
14 hours ago, alnite said:Now that he won, the party just had to shrug it up and back him up. Kinda like having that dumb colleague in your office who happens to be the CEO's son, who keeps writing bad code and badmouth everyone. You sat there, sigh, and fix his crap. In a company, you can just quit, but you can't just quit your political party because you too got way too many friends in the party. I feel like that's the state of the Republican party right now.
No, that's a false equivalency. You can absolutely quit a party. I'd argue that quitting a company is somewhat more difficult because your livelihood depends on it. If so many people didn't like Trump when he got nominated, why stay in the party? But ok, let's leave the party bit aside, since a strong argument can be made that other alternatives do not exist that are viable. But why vote for him then, if he's so reprehensible? The fact that he got nominated certainly seems to posit that at least some people did support him, and the fact that he got votes of those who "didn't like him" is a show of tacit support.
If your point is simply to say that not all Trump voters are racist, again, as I stated above my point is simply that, they did vote for one, and yes, I have a problem with that. I don't need to get into whether or not Trump voters are racist, and I will say that most of them probably are not racist, but electing a racist is a very big issue for many of us.
Yea, as @grumpyOldDude pointed out, two parties are idiotic to begin with, and it's a large problem. Your point is that these people voted on policies, not Trump the candidate. That does't change the fact that they voted for Trump in spite of his rhetoric and his obvious problems. The ends don't justify the means.
14 hours ago, alnite said:If anything, the DNC's witch hunt, accusation, Russian collusion (which really was an oversight by Obama because he was underestimating Trump)
Really? You don't think that every single person on the Trump train wouldn't have been screaming from DC to San Francisco about how Obama is trying to undermine the election if he had come out in public about the whole Russian interference thing?
As for behind the scenes, sure, Obama probably could've done more. It's unclear what went down, but again, that's besides the point really. Trump is doing next to nothing about it right now, and if anything, seems to be really close to Putin.
And, how, might I ask, is this the DNC's witch hunt? If anything, it's the FBI's witch hunt now, isn't it? Moreover, the intelligence services that all concluded that yes, the Russians did indeed interfere and did prefer Trump? And all the guilty pleas accumulated so far, all the information we've already received (the Trump tower meeting, the George Papadaouplous indictment, etc.) are all a witch hunt?
14 hours ago, alnite said:calling Trump voters racists, insults, antifa, all of these behaviors are making them closer to Trump even though they didn't like him in the first place. The Democrats are more obsessed about Trump than the Republicans! Why can't they just suck it up, and vote better next time?
Trump hasn't proved himself to be a paragon of virtue either, nor has his leadership been anything worth spitting on. Sucking it up with a leader like Trump is really difficult for anyone who didn't vote for him.
I'm sure there are people who call Trump voters racist. There are fringe movements that are radical on the Liberal side of the spectrum. I don't endorse name calling nor insulting people. Many people don't endorse it. The whole notion though of 'you made me do it!' is a fairly weak argument at the end of the day for why you continue to support Trump and proclaim to not be a racist. If you voted for Trump, but don't support his open racism, simply don't support Trump and don't vote for anyone who does and that'll be the end of the story. That continued support in spite of that is absolutely an issue and people will point out that "you are supporting a racist".
Trump's election has made it such that even less contentious issues from before have become more contentious, that is absolutely true, however, on the flip side of the coin.