George Will: If Trump Is Nominated, The GOP Must Keep Him Out Of The White House
Moderate Republican For Trump: Only Trump Can Restore GOP Sanity... By A Landslide Loss
"Are Republicans Insane?" Best Pax Posts
Moderate Republican For Trump: Only Trump Can Restore GOP Sanity... By A Landslide Loss
"Are Republicans Insane?" Best Pax Posts
Mark Twain, Adolf Hitler And The Dunning-Kruger Effect
New York Times Interviews David Dunning, Co-Author Of The Dunning-Kruger Effect
Mark Twain, Adolf Hitler And The Dunning-Kruger Effect
New York Times Interviews David Dunning, Co-Author Of The Dunning-Kruger Effect
David Brooks: "Trump Is Spewing Insanity On A Daily Basis"
McArthur Wheeler: Patron Saint Of American "Conservatism"
McArthur Wheeler: Patron Saint Of American "Conservatism"
Clinton Is "More Conservative Choice": Longtime Republican Crosses Party Lines (NPR)
Clinton Is "More Conservative Choice": Longtime Republican Crosses Party Lines (NPR)
Republican Lawmaker From Nevada Sends Christmas Card Featuring Fully Armed Family
Renowned Republican Consultant Frank Luntz Says GOP Process Is "Poisonous," Fears Violence
http://paxonbothhouses. blogspot.com/2016/03/renowned- republican-consultant-frank. html
Renowned Republican Consultant Frank Luntz Says GOP Process Is "Poisonous," Fears Violence
http://paxonbothhouses. blogspot.com/2016/03/renowned- republican-consultant-frank. html
http://paxonbothhouses.
"Republicans For Hitler," By Conservative Talk Show Host And Columnist Erick Erickson
Excerpt: "Conservative columnist Ross Douthat wrote that “[i]t would be possible to justify support for Trump if he merely promised a period of chaos for conservatism. But to support Trump for the presidency is to invite chaos upon the republic and the world. No policy goal, no court appointment, can justify such recklessness.”"
SATURDAY, MAY 28, 2016
This is an American tragedy: Republicans must step up and defeat Donald Trump
It's time for honest Republicans to speak out against this dangerous, unprincipled vulgarian. Who has the courage?
As a Democrat, part of me delights in the opportunities provided by the coming elections. With Trump at the top of the Republican ticket, Democrats might – just might – find themselves not only with the presidency, but in control of the Senate. But the state of our politics is so grave that it’s difficult to derive much joy out of the situation. Like others on both sides of the aisle, I already feel tainted by Trump’s rank tribalism and childish tantrums. But if he drags all of us into his petulant winner-takes-all mentality, he might, even in defeat, achieve a kind of victory. This may do him little good personally, but it does our politics considerable harm. Even a sound, publicly partisan Democratic victory may normalize his cheap sexism and fragile insecurity, his Know-Nothing nativism and racism, and his easy toleration of violence in the campaign and in the world.
Trump is not merely a Republican dilemma, but an American tragedy. Ideally, conservatives would acknowledge their role in enabling his candidacy, in moving the boundaries of acceptable rhetoric so far from reason that he can lie indiscriminately without fear of correction by journalists anxious for their next story. But more immediately, Republicans must find ways to defend their principles without capitulation to a vulgarian seemingly without principles of any sort. Trump deserves more than defeat by my party. He and his enthusiasts and enablers must be publicly, popularly shamed by all citizens who see him as a political cancer.
Admittedly, this will almost certainly require acceptance of a Clinton victory. This is no small price for life-long Republicans who oppose her. But only a crushing loss might wash away the Trump-shaped stain on the Republican Party, on the body politic, and on our international reputation. Honest conservatives appreciate the real differences between Clinton and Trump. As conservative writer PJ O’Rourke said on NPR, “Clinton is the second-worst thing that can happen to this country, but she’s way behind in second place. She’s wrong about absolutely everything, but she’s wrong within normal parameters.” As he suggests, Trump is something else, something relatively new to American politics, and something to be feared. At stake is both the soul of the GOP and the collective civility of American political discourse.
While O’Rourke said he was voting for Hillary, he’d presumably split his vote: he’d vote for Clinton as President and Republicans on the rest of the ballot. Others might not vote for her, but accept her in the short term, not least to limit any collateral political damage that Trump might bring. Deeply critical of Trump’s conservative credentials, columnist George Will wrote that this was “a time for prudence, which demands the prevention of a Trump presidency.” Against this outcome,
conservatives would have two tasks. One would be to help him lose 50 states — condign punishment for his comprehensive disdain for conservative essentials, including the manners and grace that should lubricate the nation’s civic life. Second, conservatives can try to save from the anti-Trump undertow as many senators, representatives, governors and state legislators as possible.
Indeed, as Michael Gerson concluded, after listing Trumps many vices, “[n]one of this requires a vote for Hillary Clinton. But it forbids a vote for Donald Trump.”
In fact, Republicans have a number of options that don’t require them to surrender their values, either to Trump or Clinton. Although there’s little time left for it, they can offer another candidate. Just this week, The National Review begged Mitt Romney to enter the race. They argued:
The American people need the chance to make a better choice. Given the stakes of the election, to simply leave the race to Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump is to guarantee a terrible presidency marked by incompetence and cronyism. There is just one hope — however slim — of avoiding this national disaster: America needs a third option.
Other names besides Romney have been floated. And Republicans, or some significant number of Republicans, could pledge temporary loyalty to a third party. This year, the Libertarian Party might field a ticket of two former two-term Republican Governors: Gary Johnson (New Mexico) and William Weld (Massachusetts). This could be a strong draw for those unsatisfied with Trump. Finally, they can refuse to fundraise or abstain from any active support, as the Bushes – the only surviving Republican ex-Presidents – appear to be doing. They can withdraw from the convention or set up a rival event, etc, etc.
And Democratic victories aren’t assured even for the presidency. We have our own, milder demagogue to deal with. Senator Sanders, only recently a party member, could still jeopardize our chances in the fall. In their zeal, his supporters have embraced 25 years of right-wing rant against the Clintons. Worse, too many have adopted the incivility, paranoia, and Manichean politics we’ve associated with the Tea Party. For them, middle ground is scorched earth. The Democratic Party is merely a vehicle for their program. And while Sanders paints himself as a populist fighting a rigged game, his actions show him to be neither a loyal Democrat nor particularly concerned with democracy. He might still grease the wheels of the Trump Train.
As immune to critique and truth as Trump is, the coming months promise an assault of a sort that he’s never seen before. His Republican opponents might have accomplished more if they had treated him more seriously early on. But they waited too long for their attacks to seem like anything more than sour grapes. True, Mitt Romney’s March intervention was scathing, but too late. The governor said that “Trump is a phony, a fraud. His promises are as worthless as a degree from Trump University. He’s playing the American public for suckers ….” As to his prescriptions,
His domestic policies would lead to recession. His foreign policies would make America and the world less safe. He has neither the temperament nor the judgment to be president. And his personal qualities would mean that America would cease to be a shining city on a hill.
While this suggested a renewed fight against Trump, the remaining candidates – Grumpy, Sleepy, and Dopey – were no match. The Donald had already established himself as a vague spokesmen for a vague discontent, not least the real, but ridiculous angst of white men who believe the country was being taken from them by a long list of shadowy others. And if the note differs slightly and the messenger is madder than most, Trump’s narrative is rooted in a long line of Republican dog-whistle politics.
The actual campaign will be different. Despite Clinton’s lack of Obamaesque charisma, she’s no Ted Cruz. And she’s tougher than Rubio, Jeb, Carson and Christie combined. She’ll have both more ideological room and intellectual resources with which to attack than Trump’s Republican opponents did.
Of course, she’ll have to be on her game. The Donald will say anything to win. AsDavid Brooks wrote two months ago, “Trump is perhaps the most dishonest person to run for high office in our lifetimes. All politicians stretch the truth, but Trump has a steady obliviousness to accuracy.”
The media’s failure to press him on this, the false equivalence of the two candidates, has exacerbated this flaw. It remains to be seen how Trump will square the vacuum of his values – empty even by political standards – with a party manifesto, talking points, and the fear that he will lead his new Party into the abyss. And for a man with a thin skin and tiny hands, it’ll be difficult for him not to Tweet angrily at every slight, real or perceived. Even John Miller will struggle to conceal, or comb over, Trump’s limitations.
But that we’ve arrived at this point at all is profoundly depressing. Most shameful may be the support that Trump has received from evangelicals. Significant sections of American conservatism are rooted in ideological, often religious, purity. The vacuity of Trump’s politics, the pantomime of religious sincerity, and the vulgarity of his very public private life should make him a pariah for them. But to these moralistic minions, intolerant of so much, his very visible sins are ignored.
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