River Dog wrote:We need to analyze some of the things in Trump's platform from an economic standpoint. First, his nationalism/isolationism might be great to attract votes from people who see China as an existential threat, but his plan to raise tariffs is going to bring back inflation. He keeps talking about the jobs that go overseas while not recognizing the fact that we have far many more job openings than we do unemployed. If China can make lawn chairs cheaper than we can here, let them sell them here. Besides, having a solid economic relationship with them will reduce the likelihood of a military conflict.
His anti-immigration rhetoric will do the same thing. Love them or hate them, immigrants, including illegal immigrants, are for the most part wage earners who contribute to our work force while not taking a whole lot in benefits as they tend to be younger than native born Americans. That, too, is going to be inflationary as it will further constrict the labor market and cause wages to rise.
Even if I sat aside his personality, I could not accept his politics.
You and I got no one to vote for worth a damn. So I'm not even thinking about that. I might vote for a Vance if he wasn't with Trump, but I got no interest in any ticket with Trump.
This is less of a discussion of support of his platform and a discussion of what his platform is and who he is trying to appeal to. It's very strange to me given I haven't spent much time actually listening to Trump. I mainly don't care for the man's narcissism or the way he views the voter as simps to be sold to because he can. I don't view him as a threat to America or Democracy or any of that trash the Democratic Party is selling or their lemmings are buying into. He's not a Russian plant or any of that trash. He's a rich, narcissistic man who decided he wanted to run for president because he can. He's doing this so he can brag about it and he loves the worship. He doesn't even believe the stuff coming out of his mouth. He's more the guy that says something to his friends like, "I bet I can sell this idiot the Brooklyn Bridge or I can get this hot blonde in my bed" and then does whatever he has to do to win the sale to show his friends he's the man. He doesn't give a flying crap about what he's saying, just that it's helping him win and get his goal. That's what I don't like about Trump.
I'm looking at his messaging and his political platform resonates with a huge number of working class people, which is not the normal Republican base. He is appealing to usual Democratic voters while maintaining his Republican base. I believe this messaging if he had Reagan's affability would lead to a Reagan like landslide win. But Trump doesn't have that affability and certainly not Reagan's cross party appeal.
The messaging is very different from the normal Republican messaging. It's an almost 60s style Democratic messaging. Anti-war, pro worker, pro-union, pro-America. That is exceptionally different from the free trade, we must maintain our place in the world, business first talking points of Reagan-Bush Era Republicans.
It's very strange to see a Republican president push this type of populist messaging. I guess I should have watched his speeches and platform sooner to understand why he is able to win the Rust Belt states as a Republican.
Regardless, it's strong platform messaging.
The Democrats are likely screwed. Pushing up some other candidate this late in the game and trying to build their national profile is an almost no win situation. They can't even run on any Biden successes as without Biden, no one will buy it. It's going to be a new candidate trying to convince voters they are better for the nation with their unknowns than Trump with his clearly knowns and his new, young VP candidate from the working class who served in the military who built himself up from nothing with a Yale Law degree. Vance is one of their own who made it big. Raised by his grandma and preaching to his people that he has risen up to become Trump's VP so he can help his fellow working class folks regain the American dream.
That was a damn smart pick. I want to see how the Democrats counter it. I'm curious how you counter a Republican ticket appealing to working class voters with anti-war messaging.
Who do they pull out? Someone from the Squad with their anti-Israel, socialist bias? Newsome from California where criminals go to prosper and even millionaires and billionaires are fleeing from the insane taxes? Try to push Kamala to tout Biden successes and see if her bland public speaking abilities can compete against Trump's salesmanship? Where do you go? What messaging do the Democrats have other than "Trump a bad man. We must stop him. Please don't try to assassinate him again as that just makes him look better." What's their messaging?