Politics

My Favorite Quotes About Donald Trump

Presidential elections are the epitome of spectator sports. We chose sides, wear our colors and try to latch onto the winner (I mean who wants to admit they voted for a loser).

So, now at the front of the GOP we have the Reality-TV version of Ronald Reagan — Donald Trump. Trump, a marketing genius with a well-crafted message for those who believe he is on their side, is steamrolling through the Primary process. And, in the same way Reagan mastered the medium of TV and created quote-worthy sound-bites (Government is the problem — as Reagan added more than 300,000 positions to the federal payroll), Trump has mastered the 140-character world of Twitter and social media. He has said a lot. His non-stop blathering has definitely kept his name front and center, leaving in his wake a long list of GOP casualties, but what has been said about Trump is just as good.

Here are some of my favorite quotes about the man who calls himself — the Uniter.

  1. He’s a clown — literally, he could be in the circus. When comparing intellects, Trump falls to the bottom of the pile compared to Noam Chomsky. Chomsky, unlike Trump, actually knows a thing or two about America’s history and political structure — and has extensively written about it.
  2. Trump was born on third, but imagines he hit a triple. Although economic columnist Paul Krugman does not take credit for the quote, he uses it in a recent column. The succinct, Twitter-worthy remarks sums up all you need to know about Trump, but Krugman continues: He (Trump) inherited a fortune, and it’s far from clear that he has expanded that fortune any more than he would have if he had simply parked the money in an index fund.
  3. What kind of a man roots for people to get thrown out of their house?” Few modern politicians have a true connection to the working class, but Elizabeth Warren does, and she has sparred repeatedly with Trump via social media. Warren, whose father was a Sears salesman and her mother a teacher, wasn’t born on third, she actually had to face the pitcher. She did, and hit her way onto base through her own efforts. Now, she fights for the ‘common man.’
  4. Make Donald Drumpf Again. Few people have the biting wit and comedic stamina of John Oliver, but in his nearly 20-minute rant on The Donald, he ends with a plea to return The Donald to his original family surname since, Oliver believes, surely no one would ever vote for a man named Drumpf.

But the best quote may be from Trump himself. As he notes in his About Me section on his website,

Donald Trump is the very definition of the American success story.

That definition of success flies in the face of those who have succeeded — like these 15 billionaires who were born ‘dirt’ poor and had to get a hit on their own. But Trump’s self-delusion is catching on — some people just love a ‘winner’ — regardless of how he plays them or the game.

Categories: Politics

Does Your Vote Count — Or Are You Being ‘Played’?

playedThe Sunday edition of Parade has an excellent short article about the Electoral College (Does Your Vote Count) that sheds some light on one of the more confusing aspects of the American political system. It details the pros and cons of the system and even explains what happens if there is a electoral tie.

If there’s a tie on Jan. 6 (the day electoral votes are counted), the newly elected Congress immediately holds a “contingent election” in which the House of Representatives elects the president and the Senate elects the vice president.

The twist: Every state gets the same number of votes, regardless of population.

The possibility of a tie, however remote, is part of the Season 4 story line of Veep — a HBO comedy that highlights the inefficiencies of our political system. A political insider ranked the comedy as the number one political TV show.

Veep captures the asinine essence of the mad scramble for power; the regular, utter, and complete disregard for higher purpose; and the pettiness in which most politicians and their staffs engage for so much of the time.

Veep was indirectly responsible for my interest in American politics.

Two Parties, One Mindset

I stumbled upon a YouTube video featuring the main character, Selena Meyer (Julia Louis-Dreyfus), hanging out with vice president Joe Biden. Since Biden is a Democrat, I was not surprised to see him in the sketch, nor was I surprised to see Nancy Pelosi another Democrat, but when I saw my former Congressman Republican John Boehner in his 5-10 second cameo I was taken back. I was quite certain his constituents would not approve of the show if, for no other reason, than its bawdy language.

It made me wonder if Ron Paul’s assertion of ‘two Parties, one mindset,’ was accurate. Was it possible that a political class was running the show and that all the screaming and positioning by us ‘commoners’ was simply rearranging chairs on a sinking ship?

Short-Term Political Junkie

I headed down a two-year long quest to better understand the system — and to move beyond the ‘liberal vs. conservative’ argument. The more I read, the more that argument felt like another one from my childhood — Which truck is better, Ford or Chevy?

After reading and researching I compiled my thoughts in Played: How The U.S. Political System Controls & Steals Your Vote. In the eBook I look at everything from the way gerrymandering is upsetting the national balance of power to social media’s role in dumbing down the political conversation. I conclude we’ve all been played and have little say in who our leaders are.

In the end, even in a tumultuous election season like the 2016 presidential campaign, less than six people were ever serious contenders – and you had no say in who they were. A small, powerful group of insiders decide your presidential options and their interest rarely line up with yours.

I also discovered that one of our greatest weaknesses as voters is our predictability. Despite convincing ourselves that we vote as we see fit, marketers and politicians see us as reliable subgroups. They deliver messages that we gobble up. We react and respond to the messages — and then vote as predicted.

A Change Of Position

During this quest, I stumbled across books like What’s The Matter With Kansas and The Mass Marketing of Politics: Democracy in an Age of Manufactured Images – and these books impacted my thinking. I became astounded at how people really do vote against their own interest. I also came to understand that images and keywords can sway people. It also became apparent that politicians want to keep voters yelling — and not talking. The divide and conquer technique keeps them in power.

Through the process, I became more politically liberal (but my position would have been conservative in the era of Dwight D. Eisenhower or Theodore Roosevelt) — and a little more jaded.

But, I still believe a Two-Party system can work, if people are willing to compromise and work toward a common cause. The current approach is costing average Americans money — through ineffective government policies, low or lost wages and a decrepit infrastructure. When we degrade an opposing Party by engaging in grade-school tactics like name-calling, refusing to compromise or lumping everyone in one pile (well they are conservative or they are liberal) the approach is counterproductive. But mostly, it prolongs the dysfunction that exists in all levels of government.

America’s greatness has always been in her ability to solve major problems through the backs and brains of the many.

Political Dsyfunction

I’ll admit, though, that my disgust has grown toward those politicians who intentionally whip people up into a frenzy over perceived moral dilemmas, cleverly diverting attention from their own sins. Just this week, I was reminded at how far removed politicians are from the average American when I read a letter written by former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay.

DeLay felt the need to come to the defense of his former boss, Dennis Hastert. Hastert, who was Speaker of the House from 1999-2007, is embroiled in a legal case for illegally staging money withdrawals in violation of federal law. But, the real story is the money was allegedly ‘hush money’ being paid to a former student. The student alleges he was sexually molested by Hastert when Hastert was a teacher and coach, Although Hastert has never admitted guilt, he did issue a statement through his attorney saying,

“Mr. Hastert acknowledges that as a young man, he committed transgressions for which he is profoundly sorry,” Mr. Green said in the statement. “He earnestly apologizes to his former students, family, friends, previous constituents and all others affected by the harm his actions have caused.”

It seems to me, that if in fact, any of the allegations are true, then instead of DeLay writing a letter defending the character of Hastert, he would let the chips fall wherever they fell. Instead, though, DeLay wrote,

“We all have our flaws, but Dennis Hastert has very few. He is a good man that loves the lord. He gets his integrity and values from Him. He doesn’t deserve what he is going through. I ask that you consider the man that is before you and give him leniency where you can.”

It’s almost as if DeLay believes Hastert’s Christian beliefs are a get out of jail free card. In my experience, few average Americans express such leniency toward anyone who may have committed transgressions against a former student. But the letter is indicative of the dysfunction that exists inside the minds of our national politicians and leaders.

What I Believe

Anyway, I don’t really put a lot of faith in political leaders. I believe in America’s citizens and I believe the only way to upend our political dysfunction is for all of us to become well informed at how the political game is played. Because of the way Political Parties manipulate the system, we no longer live in a ‘one man, one vote,’ world.

I do still believe in one Americanism. I believe in the age-old dualism that defines our national character: a strong belief in self coupled with a strong sense of community.

And I know, when both elements are vibrant, we, the people, are sensible and indivisible.

Categories: American History, Politics | Tags: , , , ,

‘Right Went Wrong’ A Crash Course In GOP Philosophy

whyrightwentwrongIn Why the Right Went Wrong: Conservatism–From Goldwater to the Tea Party and Beyond. E.J. Dionne Jr, a Democrat writer and columnist, looks at how the conservative movement has shifted increasingly to the right since the 1950s.

Written in chronological order, the book starts with the failed 1964 presidential campaign of Barry Goldwater and ends in the 2015 segment of the 2016 presidential race. Interspersed throughout the book are observations from the 50s – specifically the presidency of Dwight D. Eisenhower, the McCarthy Red Scare era, and the work of William Buckley Jr. (the National Review) and even fringe groups like the John Burch Society.

As a columnist, Dionne, has spent decades covering the political arena and – besides knowing many of the political players on a professional basis — he has a wealth of knowledge of political theory and the inner workings of Washington D.C. But his most impressive skill is the ability to take the sometimes boring subject of political theory and political maneuvering and condensing it into writing that is enjoyable to read.

His second strongest skill is to present the information is a low-key tone – almost in a conversational way so that the reader does not feel like an opinion is being ‘shoved down their throat.’

Make no mistake though, he is a liberal and does not try to hide it. However, his approach as a dispassionate reporter should enable even the most conservative voter to read the book and at least walk away with a better understanding of how their movement has shifted to more radical viewpoints – and how this shift may very well cost the Party its power.

For a casual reader, who may view politics as a necessary evil to be endured in American society, the book offers clever insights and backstories of the various political figures they watch on the news. Politicians like Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush, George W. Bush, Mitt Romney and even Donald Trump. These readers will understand more completely how each of these figures positively or negatively impacted the Party’s future.

For me, some of the most interesting content centered on Ronald Reagan, a disciple of William Buckley Jr., and the conservative movement’s shining star. Although, I was not old enough to vote when Reagan defeated president Jimmy Carter, I remember vividly how it was an electoral landslide – which I presumed meant it was a popular vote landslide as well. It turns out I was wrong; Reagan captured 50.8 percent of the popular vote. As Dionne, points out,

Reagan was elected not because he turned the whole country conservative, but because he persuaded enough swing voters frustrated over stagflation, the Iranian hostage crisis, and the seemingly (and misleading) rising power of the Soviet Union that he was not the conservative ideologue of old. Reagan played down his more right-wing positions – deflecting for example, Carter’s attack on his past opposition to Medicare with the most memorable line of their only debate: “There you go again.”

Rated 5 out of 5. The book is well organized, non-combatant in tone and will elevate the political knowledge of any American. Filled with stories, stats and opinions, Why the Right went Wrong will educate anyone who desires to become a more knowledgeable voter.

Categories: Books I have read, Politics