I was becoming uneasy with Democrats by about 2003, so I mostly hitched myself to the GOP. But by about the summer of 2008 I was becoming concerned with the Know-Nothing populism of Palin. I could mostly ignore it with McCain and Romney, but by 2014 I was getting a bit apprehensive. Still, I pressed on, as there was a lot I liked about Jeb, Rubio, though too Jeffersonian for my taste, was making some interesting strides with some domestic policy issues (e.g..child care). Of course I also liked Kasich.
I think I started to lose my cool after the first primary poll had the three Presidential candidates with ZERO political or military command experience having the majority of the GOP primary preference. I mean, this was after the legitimate problems with Obama's light national resume. So Trump, Carson, and Fiorina.
To me, before Trump said vulgar things, I thought the guy needed to be removed simply because he had NO experience. That was my rule. No experience= get the hell off the stage. Then he decided to crap on the Growth Opportunity Project report on top of that. I thought for sure he was done. But nope.
Now, I couldn't stand Cruz because he not only offered no substance and was seemingly antagonistic toward government just because, he was also too damn populist. But at least the dude was a first term Senator (not much worse than Obama at that point).
As this dragged on and on, as the debates became dumber and dumber, and Trump's numbers continued to rise despite being a hateful jackass who never offered a useful policy proposal beyond "It's going to be great," I prayed for Bush-Kasich-Rubio. Somebody, please, Christ.
It became clear that wasnt going to happen by mid-spring. I still hoped that I would see a convention revolt, but I knew it was unlikely, and at best, the convention takers were going to pick Trump's best friend Ted Cruz (anyone who remembers the early part of the primary ought to remember how utterly pitiful buddy-buddy Cruz was with Trump) to be the nominee.
Nope. They were all in.
I started hearing some conservatives say Trump was a liberal and would govern like a liberal. I thought, yeah right. He's got the red neck vote so tight he wouldn't dare do that, and he has to work with the GOP-led Congress. Then it was "on they will stand up to him!" I thought, yeah right, at best they see him as an empty suit to put their worst ideas on paper and sign, because they could afford to be drunk with power.
So as I watched his first months go by, I saw Congress do Jack to stand up to him or denounce his antics. Then I saw them do reconciliation bills that accomplished next to none of the supposed goals they had for improving healthcare. Then I saw them crap on existing GOP-led criminal justice reform and opioid crisis reform efforts going on across the country that were very sensible.
And the worst part was, state GOP leaders encouraged it, despite the fact this was only going to make their budget problems way, way worse and their human outcomes tank. "Sure, vote to repeal and replace the ACA while simultaneously gutting Medicaid--we won't mind paying up the ass for our corrections budgets or having our hospitals close down, or our opioid deaths skyrocket."
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