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The Cognitive Dissident

A blog by Ronald P. Thompson, Ph.D.

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Election 2016

The Choice in November

So it is down to a choice between The Donald and Hillary.

As I wrote back in the fall, Trump is not fit to be a small town mayor, let alone president of the United States. His actions since then have only reinforced the fact that he is driven by vindictive, narcissistic, capriciousness; but he seems to have not the slightest regard for the damage his words have.  Just as bad, he doesn’t seem to have a clue about the complexities of the issues.  He has taken the Obama template of “Hope and Change” from eight years ago and simply changed the words to “Make America Great Again.”   Neither campaign actually said anything about real policy. Sadly Americans seem to like vague catch phrases over real plans.  Time and time again I’ve listened to him speak at length only to ask myself “Do any of his supporters actually listen to what he is saying?”  I recall his daughter in an interview point out that her father says what he thinks his audience wants to hear. This is what a good salesman does, and Donald Trump is simply a big dollar salesman.  With this in mind, no one should be surprised that he never seems to feel bound by what he says.  Be sure those Republicans who are now supporting their party’s candidate have no idea what Trump will actually do if he is elected.

Now the line I’m hearing from die hard Republicans is that he is better than Hillary.  I ask if you took away your tribal loyalty would you come to that conclusion.   Yes, Hillary is corrupt in the classical sense. Yes she gave favors to people who gave her foundation money.  Yes, even before she took the Secretary of State’s office she began the process of creating a private network to evade the Freedom of Information laws. In her approach and personality she seems to be Richard Nixon come back to life.  Significantly the laws she worked to evade were mostly created by Democrats in response to Nixon.  She is very far from the kind of person I think should be president. I still think John Kasich was the best candidate, in either party, in the race.

To me the choice is clear: the center-left Hillary Clinton would be far less likely to do the country catastrophic damage than Donald Trump who doesn’t seem to have any guiding principles. Yes, she will have ethics problems. Perhaps she will, like Nixon, self-destruct. Yet, compared with Donald Trump’s utter lack of suitability to be Commander-In-Chief or the spokesman for the nation, I can do nothing else.

If we look at the history of our country morality is not necessarily the hallmark of an effective president.  Both Jimmy Carter and George W. Bush are good moral people, but neither was a particularly effective president.   Certainly this year we no longer have a choice of voting for a good moral person in the fall.  What we have to choose between are two different brands of self-serving amoral people.  And choose we (as a nation) must.  Wishing for the perfect candidate and not voting at all is the cowards way out. Following tribal party loyalty is the sheep’s path.  I for one will not be a coward or a sheep.  Though I have never voted for a Democrat in a presidential election before, with eyes wide open to her faults and failings, I will vote for Hillary in the fall.

Of Opportunity

I recall a visit I made a couple of years ago to the home of a low income family with whom I had spent over two full years assisting as a social worker.  I was delivering a donated computer so that the family, which included a bright sixteen year old high school student, a struggling seven year old and their semi-literate mother, could get internet access.  I had promised them a computer because I found that even grade school teachers make the middle class assumption that there is a computer in the home, and high school teachers regularly give homework assignments to be done via the internet; yet, this family, like many with whom I worked, did not have internet nor even a computer.  I had recently received word that the younger child would be retained due to a lack of academic progress.

As I spoke I found myself, not for the first time, putting the burden of the younger child’s success on her older sister. I did not like doing that but the older sister was the only one in the home capable of providing the daily assistance the seven year old needed if she were to have any chance of academic success.  I had, by that point, been pressing this child to help her younger sister for two years.  It wasn’t fair, I didn’t like putting that responsibility on a teenager, but I saw no other hope for her little sister.   I knew full well that it was her mother’s responsibility to provide such assistance, but in this case, a single mother who is low functioning and semi-literate was simply not up to the task.

It is a trite cliché, but true none the less: life isn’t’ fair. Continue reading “Of Opportunity”

No, Trump is not another Hitler

 

Not only is Trump not like Hitler, he is not even George Wallace and likely isn’t even a racist.   I know this goes against the popular media refrain, but I do not see there is evidence to make these very serious charges. While it is easy to fall into this lazy habit of hyperbole, in the end the hype never lives up to the words. When that happens, the overall argument falls flat. We saw this when Al Gore’s movie promised Hurricane Katrina’s every year due to global warming. When it didn’t happen, many American’s wrote off climate change as a hoax.   So too with Trump. When we advance to the general election this summer, Trump will abandon some of the radical rhetoric and move to a more palatable form of populism. When he does this, many Americans will see the over the top warnings about Trump as unfounded. We have already seen a preview of his playbook for the general election. A few weeks ago he told the NY Times that the whole “build a wall” business is no more than a negotiating strategy.

Let’s make an honest contrast of Hitler’s rise and Trump’s. By the time Hitler began his rise to power, not only did he have a private army (the SA or brown shirts), he had a track record of using violence to achieve political goals and he had a detailed plan for a movement based on a long history of anti-Semitism. Adolph Hitler was building a movement, Donald Trump is only promoting Donald Trump.   Yes, one can draw superficial parallels, but to do so runs the risk of being discredited. Continue reading “No, Trump is not another Hitler”

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