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Delays & Closings
Jim Surber
, HCP Columnist
Tuesday, June 28, 2016
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Comments (2)
Nothing new under the sun
I write this piece in response to a recent request from a reader. She asked that I write about a figure that has certainly received the lion’s share of national attention this year.
It is impossible to relate anything new about Donald Trump. I do believe that his rise, given past and current events, is not inexplicable.
Mr. Trump’s rise in spite of his bombastic, unapologetic, rhetoric can only be the result of his resonating with American voters. Some 13 million voted for him in the primary season, as 12 million did for Sen. Bernie Sanders. Both were marginal figures before this year, and their messages would formerly have been considered well out of the mainstream.
No matter how offensive Trump’s rhetoric is to some, primary election results indicate that he is saying what many Americans are thinking.
Recently, 64 percent of those American voters polled indicated that Trump is not qualified. Unless these respondents included few Republicans, how does this square since he beat a large crowd of well-qualified challengers?
He is certainly over 35 years of age and is a natural-born U.S. citizen, which is more than can be said for his runner-up in the primaries.
Currently, there are two presumptive, presidential nominees who will likely face heavy opposition or drastic change to their current intentions at their respective conventions.
Here are some observations about the current presumptive nominees: Aside from the obvious potentials for either the first woman president, or the first president to have never held elective office, here are two more.
A Clinton victory would confirm that two U.S. presidents have, in fact, slept together. A Trump victory would certainly be the first time that a billionaire ever moved into government housing being vacated by a minority family.
Probably the most interesting aspect of this year’s ordeal is that some $5 billion will be spent to select, and then choose between, the two most unpopular figures in the nation.
Do either or both presumptive candidates represent the worst tendencies of the American people? If they do, is that irrelevant if our leaders are to be selected by the voters?
As I write this, it is announced that Mr. Trump is 11 percent behind his assumed opponent, but these things always have the potential to turn on the proverbial dime. I find myself asking, “Will this election be a referendum on decency, or will it be a referendum on our indecent political system?”
It is reported that 469 out of 535 congressional seats are up for election in 2016. In spite of historically low public approval ratings, probably 90-95 percent of the incumbents will be re-elected. People believe the problems with Congress rest with all others but their own representative.
There is great discontent, unrest and skepticism exhibited by the American people toward the government and the political system in general. I find that few can describe what they abhor, but only offer general comments like “They don’t listen to the people.”
But the people’s disgust is real, even if their reasons are not explained. Many people say they want change, but few would want to even barely change.
Aside from the dissatisfaction (probably way too mild of a word) in our nation, there are signs of citizen unrest with political systems all over the world. Like these, the rise of Donald Trump appears to spring from a type of right-wing populism. Is the often-heard contempt over an unholy alliance between big government, big business, and big media justified? Do they all benefit by billions of dollars from this partnership, and is it in all of their interests to protect one another? Does this relationship make everyone filthy rich, except the American people? Are establishment politicians all puppets owned by big money?
Donald Trump says he does not need anyone’s help. That would seem to mean he does not care what the media or the corporate elites say or think. If a candidate wins the presidency with the help of PAC money, is that less a victory and more of a purchase?
Can Donald Trump, or any candidate, be believed, or are they simply playing a role until after the election?
After Friday’s “Brexit” vote in Britain, and during this crazy presidential campaign, things certainly seem in turmoil. However, it could also describe global sentiment in the 1930s, which increasingly looks like the best parallel to today’s environment.
The political furor of the 1930s led to cataclysmic consequences, of course, and there’s little reason to think that’s where things are heading today. Still, the similarities are close enough to suggest that nobody should be surprised when a sustained period of economic anxiety and anger leads to flirtation with unorthodox, radical, political experiments.
The lesson may be that the wounds and resentments from a deep recession that began in 2007 and the financial collapse of 2008 remain painful enough that they have compelled voters across the industrialized world to make choices that once would have seemed implausible.
While we cannot know now if President Trump will take office in 2017, we should recognize what created the climate that just might get him there.
Jim Surber is the Darke County engineer. He is a graduate of The Ohio State University and a columnist for The Highland County Press.
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The final report on Bengazi is out and the end result is essentially nothing except this statement from the Ambassadors family spokesperson (his sister) "I do not blame Hillary Clinton or Leon Panetta. They were balancing security efforts at embassies and missions around the world. And their staffs were doing their best to provide what they could with the resources they had. The Benghazi Mission was understaffed...It would be much more useful for Congress to focus on providing resources for security for all State Department facilities around the world—for increasing personnel, language capabilities, for increasing staff to build relationships, particularly in North Africa and the Middle East" On the flip side, we have a candidate whose campaign is actively soliciting funding in foreign countries (Canada, Australia, United Kingdom, Iceland, etc.) The response from Natalie McGarry, MP from Scotland is representative of most replies. "“Quite why you think it appropriate to write emails to U.K. parliamentarians with a begging bowl for your father’s repugnant campaign is completely beyond me... Given his rhetoric on migrants, refugees, and immigration, it seems quite extraordinary that he would be asking for money; especially people who view his dangerous divisiveness with horror." We have a clear violation of U.S. election laws and yet the response from the same people that spent two years and 7 million dollars investigating Bengazi? "Crickets..." Coverage on Fox News so far? Zilch. http://uscode.house.gov/view.xhtml?req=granuleid:USC-prelim-title52-section30121&num=0&edition=prelim Personally, I think truth should shape peoples politics instead of politics shaping what people say is true.
This comment has been hidden due to low approval.
John T
6/30/2016 7:46:00 AM
Great column. While I dislike the trade deals that are in place now, I am worried about overreaction and going too far toward protectionism. That happened in the 1890's and the 1920's with disastrous results. We have a trade disaster now, but it would be terrible if we trade one disaster for another.
This comment has been hidden due to low approval.
Jim Thompson
6/28/2016 9:33:00 AM
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