Joe Bagadonuts
Well-Known Member
I did not choose that timeframe. It chose me. But the reality is that your core statement is incorrect. There are many prominent people who hated Trump 8 years ago, who like him now. Among those are RFK Jr, Joe Rogan, Elon Musk (until recently, but if you have read either of Elon's bios I doubt you are surprised by this behavior), and numerous others. Moving in the opposite direction are people like Mike Pence, Candace Owens and Bill Barr.Look at the timeframe you choose to use. 8 years. Its not amazing or surprising that the people who hated trump 8 years ago still hate him. It would be very very amazing if those who hated him actually liked him now. What has he done exactly in the lasts 8 years for anyone to think he is no longer a dishonest, immoral, corrupt, scandalous douchebag?
What is shocking is that as we as a nation (and world really) have learned in the last 8 years about more lies, scandals, corruption, and immorality that trump has in his closet and some people like him even more. Hard to understand that one.
All that aside, my point is not really built around Trump. I understand that some people are convinced that he is one of the worst humans in the history of humanity. The evidence, from my perspective, does not bear that out. That said, he has many weaknesses (he behaves like a 7th grade bully, he speaks and thinks in simplistic terms, he is a womanizer, etc.). To me it's a waste of breath trying to convince anyone to change their mind on the topic of Trump. Everyone is entrenched and polarized, and people on both sides make themselves willingly blind to evidence that points to anything other than the conclusion that they have previously committed themselves to.
I'm far more interested in the broad political agenda. Earlier this year I spent quite a while in Argentina. In fact, I was there when the last US election occurred. Trump only mattered to them, as far as I ever experienced, as a symbol for the same sort of anti-globalist movement that was occurring in their country under Milei. It was really amazing to experience the level of positive energy his government was generating in Argentina during my time there. This resonates with me because I am anti-globalist. I believe that the globalist agenda is driven by an elitist belief that the rules they are committed to imposing on the vast majority of the citizens of the world, should not apply to them. I could give many examples, but here is a very straightforward one. They purport climate change to be the greatest existential threat in the history of humanity. They constantly claim that we are on the brink of this disaster, and that we are on the verge of destroying earth because of our irresponsible use of fossil fuels. They prescribe all sorts of cumbersome measures that they believe that the public at large must take in order to avoid this calamity (don't allow your car to idle, replace beef with mealworms to prevent cow farts, and on and on) while completely ignoring the one individual carbon use choice that dwarfs all others, and this is obviously because that one thing would have a big impact on many of the leaders of the globalism movement, and very little impact upon most of the people they are pushing it on. What is this thing? Private jet travel. A private jet emits more CO2 in 4 hours than the average citizen of a western country emits in a year.