An Open Letter to the NeverTrumpers from a Sympathizer

 

I am not here to condemn the NeverTrumpers. I share their instincts. Donald Trump is — I will not put a fine point on it — a swine. I followed him in the tabloids haphazardly in the mid-1990s when I was a visiting professor at Yale and took coffee each morning at a Lesbian-operated place in New Haven where the tabloids were always lying around. He was then and is now a man who revels in adultery. I was not surprised about his conversation with Billy Bush. I would even bet that he had similar conversations on the links with Hillary Clinton’s husband. He is seventy years old, and he is still engaged in the kind of banter typical of eighth-grade male hot dogs. Put simply, like Charming Billy, he never really grew up. But, unlike the Big Dawg, he has almost no impulse control. If you attack him for anything, you will set him off, and you will get schoolboy taunts in return. The man is desperately insecure.

He is also no conservative. He has no understanding of the road that we are on fiscally. As a businessman, he borrowed and borrowed and borrowed, and his lawyers arranged things so that, when his enterprises went bankrupt, someone else was left holding the bag. If he becomes President, that someone else is apt to be you and I.

He has no knowledge of foreign affairs, no sense of the fragility of the international order. He has instincts, not ideas. He is understandably annoyed that our allies contribute little to the common defense. But he does not appreciate the degree to which our well-being in the long run is tied up with our alliances. In office, if unrestrained, he could do great damage. He could take us back to the isolationism of the 1920s and the 1930s. Plenty of people on both the left and the right already long for that. The generation that now commands the stage has no memory of World War II and its origins, much less the Cold War.

But, I would suggest to the NeverTrumpers, you should hold your nose and vote for the slimeball anyway. I offer you two reasons: Hillary Clinton & the Democratic Party.

The second may be the more important. For, let’s face it. The lady is not well. Her doctors are lying to us. And she is not apt to last more than eighteen months — which means that, if she is elected, we are apt to have Tim Kaine, an admirer of liberation theology, for our president.

More to the point, however, whether she lives on and on or not, hers will be Barack Obama’s third term. Obamacare will be fully institutionalized and any reforms that are made will put us further on the slippery slope to a single-payer system. Think about it: you can have medical care as good as that which the federal government provides to veterans. To be sure, Trump has blathered nonsense about this at one time or another. But he is running for President today as an opponent of Obamacare.

That is not, however, the most important matter at stake. The real issue is whether in the future we will have open discussion of political issues and free elections. Think about what we have now — a federal bureaucracy that is fiercely partisan. An IRS that tries to regulate speech by denying on a partisan basis tax-exempt status to conservative organizations. A Department of State that hides the fact that its head is not observing the rules to which everyone else is held concerning security of communications and that colludes with a Presidential campaign to prevent the release of embarrassing information. A Department of Justice that ought to be renamed as the Department of Injustice, which does its level best to suppress investigations that might embarrass the likely nominee of the Democratic Party. An assistant attorney general that gives a “heads up” to that lady’s campaign. An Attorney General who meets on the sly with her husband shortly before the decision is made whether she is to be indicted. A federal department that promotes racial strife and hostility to the police in the interests of solidifying for the Democrats the African-American vote.

Think about what else we have now — a press corps that colludes with a campaign, allowing figures in the Clinton campaign to edit what they publish. Television reporters who send the questions apt to be asked at the presidential debates to one campaign. A media that is totally in the tank for one party, downplaying or suppressing news that might make trouble for that party, inventing false stories about the candidates nominated by the other party, managing the news, manipulating the public, promoting in the party not favored the nomination of a clown, protecting the utterly corrupt nominee of the other party from scrutiny.

Let’s add to this the fact that the Democratic Party is intent on opening our borders and on signing up illegal aliens to vote. If you do not believe me, read what Wikileaks has revealed about the intentions of Tony Podesta. Barack Obama promised to “fundamentally change America.” He called his administration “The New Foundation.” Well, all that you have to do to achieve this is to alter the population.

To this, I can add something else. Freedom of speech is under attack. Forty-four Senators, all of them Democrats, voted not long ago for an amendment to the Constitution that would hem in the First Amendment. Ostensibly aimed at corporate speech, this would open the doors to the regulation of all speech. The Democratic members of the Federal Election Commission have pressed for regulating the internet — for treating blogposts as political contributions and restricting them. Members of the Civil Rights Commission have argued that freedom of speech and religious freedom must give way to social justice. There is an almost universal move on our college campuses to shut down dissent — among students, who must be afforded “safe spaces,” and, of course, in the classroom as well. There, academic freedom is a dead letter; and, in practice, despite the courts, in our public universities, the First Amendment does not apply.

We entered on a slippery slope some time ago when the legislatures passed and courts accepted laws against so-called “hate crimes” — that punished not only the deed but added further penalties for the thought. Now we are told that “hate speech” cannot be tolerated — which sounds fine until one realizes that what they have in mind rules out any discussion of subjects such as the propriety of same-sex marriage, sluttishness, and abortion; of the damage done African-American communities by irresponsible behavior on the part of fathers; and of the manner in which Islam, insofar as it is a religion of holy law, may be incompatible with liberal democracy. If you do not think that a discussion of these matters is off limits, you are, as the Democratic nominee put it not long ago, “racist, sexist, homophobic, xenophobic, Islamaphobic.” You are “deplorable and irredeemable.” You are, as she said this week, “negative, dark, and divisive with a dangerous vision.” It is a short distance from demonization to suppression. And, let’s face it, the suppression has begun — in our newspapers, on television, on our campuses, on Facebook, on Reddit, in Google searches.

One more point. The courts are now partisan. Thanks to Barack Obama’s appointees, in many parts of the country, the circuit courts have ruled out expecting people to present picture IDs when they vote. Elsewhere — for example, in Michigan — the circuit courts have ruled out eliminating straight-line party voting. All of this is aimed at partisan advantage — at making voter fraud easy and at encouraging straight-line voting on the part of those not literate in English. Who knows what the courts will do if the Democrats can get a commanding majority on the Supreme Court? We have already had all sorts of madness shoved down our throats by those who legislate from the bench. If you think that it has gone about as far as it goes, you do not know today’s Democratic Party. I doubt very much whether the Democrats will really try to shove through a constitutional amendment in effect revoking the protections extended to speech and religion in the First Amendment. That would be too controversial. They will do it, as they have done many other things, through the courts. Can we tolerate “racist, sexist, homophobic, xenophobic, Islamaphobic” speech — speech that is “deplorable and irredeemable,” that is “negative, dark, and divisive with a dangerous vision?” Surely, surely not. And this would be easy. If we can punish the “hate” in “hate crimes,” why not punish it or outlaw it in speech? All that you have to do is to “reinterpret” the First Amendment.

We live, moreover, in a world of rampant prosecutorial indiscretion — where a Clinton, guilty of something that would have put anyone else in jail, gets off without an indictment and a Bob McDonnell, who has done nothing illegal, is prosecuted to the hilt. We live in a world in which colleges and universities are pressed to use kangaroo-court procedures in adjudicating the love-life of randy undergraduates and in which only the man can be held responsible for the tomfoolery that both are engaged in.

Need I go on? If Trump is elected President, this is apt to end. The man has been burned. This campaign has been an education for him. If Hillary is elected President, this will not only go on. It will deepen. That is a certainty.

As for Hillary herself, what should I say. She worked for the investigation that nailed Richard Nixon, and she was fired for lying. She put her cronies from Arkansas in charge of the White House Travel Office, driving out nonpartisan folks who had been serving everyone well for thirty years, and to cover her indecent behavior, she sicced the FBI on these hapless folks. At her behest, the head of the office was tried for malfeasance and, of course, ruined financially — though he was found not guilty. Think about what she did: she destroyed the lives of ordinary, innocent folk for her own convenience.

I will not go on about what she did to the women foolish enough to fall prey to the allure of her husband — though that, too, says much about her willingness to damage others for her own convenience.

She is also inept. In her husband’s administration, she pushed single-payer and nearly brought Charming Billy down. In the Obama administration, she pushed an intervention in Libya that soon turned quite sour. And when the ambassador who had begged for more security lost his life, she deflected responsibility from herself by blaming it all on a hapless Egyptian Copt who had made a short film that nobody had hitherto noticed, and she and her colleagues in the Obama administration saw to his imprisonment.

As Secretary of State — in conjunction with the Clinton Global Initiative and what Doug Band calls “Bill Clinton, Inc.” — she ran a shakedown operation aimed at enriching her family and illegally raising money from foreign donors to pay for her Presidential campaign in waiting. To get around the Freedom of Information Act, she did all of her business by email on a server kept in her home that the world’s intelligence agencies could and did hack. In short, she is both corrupt and irresponsible.

Is Donald Trump unfit to be President? I fear so. Is Hillary Clinton unfit to be President? As Nancy Pelosi would say, “Are you kidding? Are you kidding?”

So we must choose. I suggest that we swallow our pride and pick the lesser evil.

Is it not obvious when you think through everything which of the two is the lesser evil? Both will do damage. Both will do serious damage. Neither is admirable. But Donald Trump is apt to do less damage.

I realize that what I have said is not reassuring. But we should not succumb to wishful thinking.

Nonetheless, for all of his failings, Trump will do some very good things. And, in his way, he has already done some good — by forcing Americans to think about issues that we are forbidden to discuss.

We are in for a bad four years. But there is nonetheless bad and there is worse. Unpleasant though it may be, it is better to pick bad. I will not tell you that a vote for Gary Johnson, Jill Stein, or Egg McMuffin is a vote for Hillary. That it is not. But it might allow her to squeak into office — and, if she wins, there will be hell to pay.

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  1. Casey Inactive
    Casey
    @Casey

    billy: BTW, why are you #NeverTrumpers such a prickly bunch?

    Perhaps you can tell  us why you think Trump is the next Reagan. You seem quite sure of that position.

    • #241
  2. billy Inactive
    billy
    @billy

    Casey:

    billy: BTW, why are you #NeverTrumpers such a prickly bunch?

    Perhaps you can tell us why you think Trump is the next Reagan. You seem quite sure of that position.

    He is certainly not the next Reagan, I am certain of that position. My position, and that of professor Rahe- if I understand him correctly, is that for all his shortcomings, Trump is not nearly as bad as Hillary. Furthermore, throwing your vote away on a third party candidate is to essentially help Hillary become President, which would be disasterous for the conservative movement.

    For that I am called a liar by one of your brethren on this this thread, and by you, called a mouth-breathing, Breitbart-loving, Trumpkin.

    Metamucil, my friend, it will clear the self-righteousness right out of you.

    @casey

    • #242
  3. Casey Inactive
    Casey
    @Casey

    billy: He is certainly not the next Reagan, I am certain of that position.

    You do think he is. Defend it.

    • #243
  4. HVTs Inactive
    HVTs
    @HVTs

    Casey:

    billy: BTW, why are you #NeverTrumpers such a prickly bunch?

    Perhaps you can tell us why you think Trump is the next Reagan. You seem quite sure of that position.

    What a ludicrous thing to say.  Can you cite even one credible person—not some loony tunes website trolling for the Democrats—that makes the argument Trump is the new Gipper?

    Even if you could find that person, so what?  Trump only has to be better than Hillary to be the logical choice for anyone on a center-right website who isn’t a troll.  With Hillary the bar is so low Trump has no problem scampering over it.

    Oh, this doesn’t please you? You want better choices? Tough caca. [redacted] You have the choice you have—if you can’t see that the probability of  conservative  outcomes is higher with Trump than Hillary [redacted]

    • #244
  5. Casey Inactive
    Casey
    @Casey

    Geez, you Trumpers are getting awful prickly.

    Does that help you understand?

    • #245
  6. David Carroll Thatcher
    David Carroll
    @DavidCarroll

    TomDPerkins:

    billy:

    You do realize that the primaries are over?

    There are three options:

    Vote for Trump

    Vote for Hillary

    Sit the election out

    No, you can write in someone who’s fit for the office. What you have said is literally untrue. What is it with Trump! and his supporters that he and you lie so easily?

    I sympatize with you.  I really do.  Cruz was my choice as well.  However, if you live in a swing state (and Virginia may qualify this year), a write in vote will not help decide the election.  If you really think Trump is worse then Clinton, ok.  Neither is fit for the office.  That is a given.  The question to me is who is least unfit?  To me that is the corrupt Clinton.

    If you can’t bring yourself to pull the lever (or hit the button for either), then you sitting the election out.  Again, I sympathize with your choice, although I cannot agree with it.

    • #246
  7. billy Inactive
    billy
    @billy

    Casey:

    billy: He is certainly not the next Reagan, I am certain of that position.

    You do think he is. Defend it.

    Based on what evidence do you come to this conclusion?

    I was a big Walker supporter. Ultimately I voted for Cruz. My first Ricochet comment about him referred to Trump as a buffoon.

    My position now is that he is not nearly as bad as Hillary, and conservatives shouldn’t throw away their vote.

    On a completely unrelated topic, some people become very belligerent when they drink too much.

     

    • #247
  8. Casey Inactive
    Casey
    @Casey

    billy: On a completely unrelated topic, some people become very belligerent when they drink too much.

    So very, very prickly…

    • #248
  9. John Russell Coolidge
    John Russell
    @JohnRussell

    The King Prawn:Forgive the hyperbolic analogy, but if a gun were to my head and I was forced to choose between raping two women, I would not fetch about to determine which one would be damaged the least by my raping her. I would say my final prayers and prepare to meet my maker.

    As a sovereign citizen I will not delegate my authority to either of these two. I will have neither act in my name or with my approval. One or the other will surely be president barring divine intervention, but it will not be because I affirmatively made it happen.

    My view exactly.  I am surprised—and appalled—by the number of contributors to this thread who write contemptuously about the moral objection to delegating authority to a candidate with all the characteristics of a despot.  The fact that he has not served in elective office yet is no grounds for reassurance.

    • #249
  10. HVTs Inactive
    HVTs
    @HVTs

    Note:

    This is not the website for insults. Please play the ball, not the man.

    Casey:

    billy: On a completely unrelated topic, some people become very belligerent when they drink too much.

    So very, very prickly…

    [redacted]

    • #250
  11. John Russell Coolidge
    John Russell
    @JohnRussell

    HVTs:

    Casey: Giving the keys to the less drunk driver may be the better option but not with my car.

    Apparently you have not figured out that one or the other of these two is going to drive your car away regardless of how much you disapprove of them doing so. And you are going to be in the car with them.

    But not with my consent, and that makes all the difference.

    • #251
  12. John Russell Coolidge
    John Russell
    @JohnRussell

    Paul A. Rahe:

    Tom Meyer, Ed.:

    Quake Voter:Why conclude such a fine, hard piece which combines scholarship and political common sense and achieves a tough elegance with the “Egg McMuffin” dig?

    Sure, it’s somewhat funny and has some visual bite, but it really should be left for hack writers like me.

    I second this. It’s cheap.

    Would irreverent not be the better word?

    I don’t think anyone here expected reverence: only a level of civility commensurate with the rest of your work.

    • #252
  13. John Russell Coolidge
    John Russell
    @JohnRussell

    Paul A. Rahe:

    The King Prawn:

    HVTs:

    The King Prawn:Professor, does your calculation change when viewed through a moral rather than political lense?

    Are you asking if Hillary’s sins are ‘less immoral’?

    Since we are talking about holding public office—the highest in the land—I can’t see how venality and abusing the trust placed in you when previously serving in a high public office could possibly weigh less in comparison to personal piggery and private transgressions.

    No, I’m talking about the personal moral choice of how one delegates his authority to government. Neither candidate passes the bar of being a moral choice. If there is only a choice of two immoralities, which is a person to pick?

    We keep hearing about how this is a binary election, but the only binary I see is two zeros, no ones.

    You are confusing making a moral choice and making a political choice. In voting for Trump, you need not be endorsing him or praising him or embracing him. You would be choosing bad over worse.

    In World War II, we allied with Josef Stalin against Adolf Hitler. It was a nasty choice we had to make, and we chose the ally that posed the lesser threat to our well-being at the time.

    Churchill and Roosevelt did, indeed, opt to form an alliance with the despot, Stalin, against Hitler but I don’t think you can rationalize a vote for Trump by appeal to this precedent.

    There is a world of difference between sending Stalin planes, tanks, and trucks—and even sending one’s sailors to brave U-boat-infested waters to ferry war materiel to Archangel via the North Cape—on the one hand and elevating a despot to the office of chief executive of one’s own country on the other.

    Especially, in foreign affairs, we make such choices every day. This time, alas, we have to do so in the domestic political sphere.

    In foreign affairs, we do indeed make such choices every day.  As to whether “This time, alas, we have to do so in the domestic political sphere” I dispute the notion that conservatives have to do so voluntarily.  I seem to recall a saying beloved by Second Amendment advocates that include something about “prying it from my cold dead fingers.”  I would like to see more of that attitude around here.

     

    • #253
  14. Rick Poach Member
    Rick Poach
    @RickPoach

    Paul A. Rahe: when I was a visiting professor at Yale

    [Completely off topic]

    As someone who has lived the great majority of his life in the vicinity of New Haven, I have to ask: Pepe’s, Sally’s, or Modern (or The Spot, or even Bar)?

    • #254
  15. Ontheleftcoast Inactive
    Ontheleftcoast
    @Ontheleftcoast

    Paul A. Rahe: …we are apt to have Tim Kaine, an admirer of liberation theology, for our president.

    The problems with Kaine aren’t just a youthful flirtation with liberation theology.

    He supports Muslim Brotherhood front organizations, and appointed Esam Omeish, the president of Muslim American Society (a Brotherhood front,) to the Virginia Immigration Commission. See here, here, and here.

    Omeish is on record as telling Washington area Muslims “…you have learned the way, that you have known that the jihad way is the way to liberate your land,” and, speaking at a rally in front of the Israeli consulate, is seen congratulating Palestinians for giving up their lives for the sake of Allah.

    Omeish’s mosque, Dar al Hijra Islamic Center, has long standing jihadi ties. Kaine was a featured speaker at their 2010 fundraising banquet.

    Kaine is an enthusiastic supporter of the Iran nuclear weapons deal, to the extent that when Netanyahu spoke in opposition to the deal before a joint session of Congress, Kaine boycotted the speech.

    “He was also one the senators who in 2014 refused to sign a letter to President Obama warning of legislated legal constraints on funding the Palestinian [A]uthority after it struck its alliance with Hamas. The letter, led by Senators Susan Collins and Ben Cardin, was signed by 88 senators from both parties.”

    In addition, he is an advocate of the current fantasy “vetting” of immigrants.

    • #255
  16. Kevin Creighton Contributor
    Kevin Creighton
    @KevinCreighton

    Late to the party here, but yes, I agree with everything in the original post. I would prefer to vote my lawn furniture into the Oval Office over Trump, but he has never declared me to be the enemy he is most proud of.

    He many not be my friend, but is not calling me an enemy.

    • #256
  17. Frozen Chosen Inactive
    Frozen Chosen
    @FrozenChosen

    Egg McMuffin, Paul?  Very mature

    • #257
  18. Mike-K Member
    Mike-K
    @

    Quinn the Eskimo: they have spent most of the campaign season showing why they are worthy of that contempt.

    They have spent most of the past four years showing that. It was especially annoying after 2010 when they had both house of Congress and yet allowed Harry Reid’s strategy of “Continuing Resolutions” to continue so Obama could shut down the government by vetoing one bill. Ryan was chair of the Appropriations Committee and could have restored “Regular Order” with 12 appropriations bills debated and passed by both houses. Obama would have to veto 12 bills to accomplish what the “Continuing Resolution” permitted. Maybe he would but there was no effort to push the issue.

    • #258
  19. Boss Mongo Member
    Boss Mongo
    @BossMongo

    Sir,

    Concur.

    • #259
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