Ray From Cleveland
Diamond Member
- Aug 16, 2015
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As Donald Trump joked during his first Presidential campaign, Americans would get tired of winning so much if he was elected. Was he prescient? 2017-18 should be looked upon by future historians as an American Golden Age of unprecedented economic growth and foreign policy successes. But was it too much and too soon?
Barely four years later, President Trump is remembered more for his "mean tweets" than for his tremendous accomplishments. Why is that? The MSM has been an essential part of Democrat political propaganda during this time, but has that been enough to erase people's memories of how prosperous and successful our nation was? Did fear of a "worldwide pandemic" result in an emotional overload that rendered many people incapable of rational thought? Or has it now become an excuse for electing the worst President in American history?
I think all of these are at play in the minds of the American public, which has been assaulted by politically correct doublespeak for many decades. When words and definitions cease to have meaning, people tend to retreat into intellectual safe spaces where conflict and controversy are not allowed. Can this trend ever be reversed?
The problem with our election system is people use the same criteria to vote for their representatives in that they used to vote their favorite American Idol contestant. A late friend of mine went to get gasoline a few months ago. While she was filling up she made a comment about the price to the lady getting gasoline next to her. Her response was "I don't care if it's ten dollars a gallon, as long as Trump isn't President anymore!"
These are the type of idiots we have voting. The only way to stop them is if we required a test before you vote. Multiple choice, very simple questions any voter should be able to answer. If you fail the test, you don't get to vote until the next election.
FLASHBACK: 16% of Biden voters would have voted differently if Hunter Biden laptop story was not suppressed by media, big tech
A poll previously put out by the Media Research Center showed that fully 16 percent of voters who were unaware of the Hunter Biden laptop scandal would have switched their minds and not voted for Joe Biden for president, had they known about it at the time.
thepostmillennial.com