noggins wrote: ↑Mon Nov 18, 2024 11:29 am
IvanV wrote: ↑Sat Nov 16, 2024 11:09 am
There's a surprising number of Trump friends and supporters coming out and saying, you have to distinguish the rants, which predict nothing, from actual policy. So, for example, they think - hope - most of the terrible stuff is rant, not policy. Thus they justify, at least to their own conscience, that they did not vote for a fascist.
So what did they vote
for? Lower taxes?
I understand the casual Trump voter less than the MAGA loons. The latter sincerely believe in a semi-coherent worldview which appeals to recognisable prejudices and interests. But "Yeah, he tried a coup, he's airlocked by Putin and the Religious Right, but, but....
inflation"
Trump is rather like the bible, making many contradictory statements.* As with bible followers, Trump followers select out what they like, and ignore the rest. To them, the rest is just the rant.
So what they voted for varies according to who they are. Many people can find much to like, it would appear, among his numerous contradictions.
*An excellent source on just how contradictory the bible is, concentrating on just the New Testament, is
Jesus, Interrupted by Bart Ehrmann. Just about every NT author, it would appear, had their own quite distinctive and contradictory opinion on what Jesus thought, said and did. Indeed some NT biblical authors, like Trump, presented contradictions within their own works. But this is usually attributed to them being more than one author writing under the same name, or else having their work "revised" by later copyists. Curiously, preachers rarely draw their congregation's attention to these contradictions, although in any standard training course for holy orders, they would have had these contradictions drawn to their attention.