polite_gandalf wrote on Nov 2
nd, 2016 at 1:15pm:
greggerypeccary wrote on Nov 2
nd, 2016 at 12:59pm:
He would achieve nothing.
As will Hillary.
The US is effectively a one-party state - the repugs and the dems are merely two factions of the one party. In fact there is a bigger ideological divide within the republican party than there is between repugs and dems. You only need to look at the way establishment repugs are clambering over to the dems after Trump became their candidate. They prefer Hillary because she is Mrs establishment - establishment meaning the ruling elite that rule America - by and for big business. Yet even if Trump wins it won't be a big deal. He'll end up playing the establishment role just like every other President. In any case, they've never been able to do much anyway - outside starting wars. And that will probably be the key difference between a Clinton and Trump Presidency - we'll likely see more wars under Hillary.
But of course. Just look at how the first black president, originally the "hope" candidate, has been restrained by the system.
US intervention in foreign countries, using drones - escalated.
Guantanamo Bay - maintained.
US foreign surveillance and spying on friendly heads of state - exposed.
Universal health care - compromised.
The appointment of Supreme Court judges - prevented.
And when every policy or appointment is blocked in congress, it's the president's fault for being weak.
If the Republicans get a majority in either house, watch them go for Hillary. They will reject all her policies simply because of who's proposing them. They'll play hard-ball with Supply, ultimately screwing government workers, just as they did in Obama's first term. They'll oppose everything they can because, in their words, the election of Hillary will be illegitimate.
Republican tactics have become more extreme and less in the interest of American citizens as they've welded themselves onto their lobbyists and corporate donors. In doing so, the business of government has been seriously compromised. Food safety standards, universal health care, environmental protection, a living minimum wage - all have been neutralized in the interests of the lobbyists.
Politicians slide between the corporate and public sectors. Running for office is now a big business career move. Do what you're told in the senate or congress and be rewarded with a multi-million dollar CEO or corporate-consultancy job.
Public service - working for the people who voted for you - is no longer an end in itself. Through the untendered contracts, the appointment of corporate lobbyists as the heads of public boards, and private industry representatives writing actual laws, US governance has been effectively outsourced.
The system is rigged, not because of any actual corruption or illegality, but because corporate Amerika pays its politicians to get elected and pays them off with lucrative jobs when they decide to retire. In the last administration, Cheney, Rumsfeld and even Bush himself, went seamlessly from the corporate sector into government and back to the corporate sector again.
Trump knows the process well - he used to pay Hillary. He's given millions to politicians, a tactic he learned from his father. As Trump pointed out in a debate during the primaries, he'd given to every politician on the stage.
The business of Amerika is business. Unravelling this process will be next to impossible, but putting Trump in to do it is like putting the wolf in charge of the sheep. Obama was too much of an outsider to make any progress, and Hillary is too much of an insider to want to. But Trump, who still runs a business, and pays no taxes, and has a bigger conflict of interest than anyone who's stood for office to date, is already part of the system.
Voting for Trump to shake things up and make Amerika great again is the most ludicrous proposal ever made in a US election.
The strangest thing of all, of course, is that people actually buy it.