Quote from Ricter:
Good essay. I disagree with this:
"Trump has what so many other Republicans are so painfully lacking: the ability and the willingness to articulate arguments clearly, forcefully, and in plain English."
I do not believe Reps lack the ability to make their arguments clear. Their problem is that the public thinks they represent the rich, and most folks don't want to hear supporting arguments for the rich right now, no matter how clear. It may be that Obama is just as much a capitalist as the rest of the one-percenters in government, but at least he talks as if he cares about labor. Enough so that he's gotten the label "socialist", and been accused of stoking class warfare.
I have never heard so much class consciousness in the American mediasphere as I have since the Great Recession started. Odds are it will fade away as it has in those times before mine. Still, it does indicate a possible reason for the "rise of the left", growing income inequality. You can hide it more unequal societies than our own, the true dictatorships, by censoring the media, but you can't do that here.
Funny, but I thought that was the best part of his essay. Grassroots republicans are sick of timid, apologetic leaders who run on a platform of "We suck but not as bad as they do" and whose main goal when on Tv is to get across the message that "we're not as bad as you think."
Either a party's principles are worth defending or they're not. Give obama credit, he is out there doing his best to argue the democrats' core principle of stealing money from those who earned it and giving it to his supporters.
Trump is the first republican of any note who has had the stones to actually criticize obama and call him a terrible president. John McCain fired presidential staffers who called obama a radical socialist, which he clearly is. Trump may bring a lot of problems with him, but he is a breath of fresh air.
