Wednesday, April 6, 2016

DONALD TRUMP: “HE’S A SCARY MAN, KAY…A VERY SCARY MAN.”

4/6/16

A lot of voters are terrified by the prospect of a Trump presidency.   Perhaps these voters are less afraid after Mr. Trump’s big defeat in Wisconsin last night, but they still remain at least unsettled by the idea that Mr. Trump still has a decent chance of becoming our president.

This is a justifiable fear.   I, too, though more amenable to Mr. Trump than most, am not entirely at ease with the idea that our next president may very well be a man who has displayed limited ability to restrain his impulses, some of which are quite base, who apparently has no time for introspection, and who considers mastering the details of governance more of an avoidable annoyance than as an inherent component of the description of the job to which he aspires.    I can certainly empathize with Mr. Trump; an old friend of mine told me when I was a young man that I could have been really big on Wall Street if only I didn’t feel the need to express every opinion I had the second I had it.   But I am not running for president and am quite confident that I never will aspire to an an office as lofty as, say, Naperville alderman, let alone the Oval Office.   I don’t completely dismiss the possibility (of the latter, not the former); however, my sense of realism should be a great source of comfort to citizens of the Republic.  But I digress.

So many of people’s fears about Mr. Trump, which apparently finally were expressed at the ballot box in Wisconsin last night, are justifiable.   But I am far more unsettled by at least two other developments in the 2016 campaign.

First, what really terrifies me is to hear the other Republican candidates, remaining and, for the most part, withdrawn, discuss foreign policy.   John Kasich wants to put ground troops in Libya…temporarily, of course.   Ted Cruz is obsessed with Vladimir Putin and what he considers Russian aggression, to the point at which he gleefully discusses aggressive actions he would take to counter Mr. Putin and the nation he leads.   One can easily see such actions leading to such unpleasantries as not entirely convivial confrontations between actual Russian and American troops, and we all know where that could lead.  One also suspects that Mr. Cruz’s problems with Mr. Putin have their origins in more than the typical GOP simple minded, knee-jerk “Russians bad, everyone else good” approach to foreign policy, but I digress.  Mr. Cruz also talks about making the sand, presumably in the Middle East, not in the Nevada desert, glow at night.   Both Messrs. Cruz and Kasich speak with regret about our “premature” withdrawal from Iraq and urge continuation of our Bushian nation building exercises (without, of course, using that terminology) both there and at other places in the Middle East.   Neither man seems to even faintly acknowledge that many of the problems they think they are addressing had their origins in outsiders poking at the geopolitical hornets’ nest that is the Middle East.   No, Messrs. Kasich and Cruz go merrily on, urging further pokes at that very hive and, indeed, finding other hornets’ nests to swat like Middle Eastern variations on piñatas.   Such talk is far scarier than some guy babbling like a hyper-pubescent teenager about reporters, opponents, and wives of opponents.


 Second, I listened to Bernie Sanders’ post-Wisconsin speech, delivered in Idaho, last night.   Yes, we all know that Bernie is a socialist, but people, even those who vehemently oppose just about everything for which he stands, look upon Mr. Sanders as some kind of crazy uncle who is, in the words of Group Captain Lionel Mandrake, “as mad as a bloody March hare,” but whose heart is in the right place.   But if one listened to that speech, one got a feel for the enormity of the plans this economic illiterate has for the transformation of this country.   Free college, free health care, mandatory paid family leave, $15 (or higher) minimum wages, forgiveness of student loans…it goes on and on and on.   Actually hearing this litany of what the government would do to (er, sorry, for) us if Bernie had his way tends to concentrate one’s mind, and trepidations.  But what really scared me was Mr. Sanders’ rationale for forgiveness of student loans.   He stated that we shouldn’t “punish” people for doing the right thing and getting an education.    Making people repay money they borrowed is punishing them?    In what world is making debtors repay their loans punishment?   Apparently, in Bernie Sanders’ bizarro world where the laws of economics, and human nature, need not apply.  And that is a very scary place.

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