Elections Are Also About Issues, by Robert Gore

There would be a certain justice if Hillary Clinton won the election. In its unprincipled arrogance and lust for domination, the kleptocratic class to which she has ascended, and which so fulsomely supports her candidacy, has erected an unsustainable, teetering edifice. Built as it is on an inherently flawed foundation—belief in US government omnipotence—the structure must fall. Nothing would be more fitting than its collapse during her prospective tenure as president, which would expose not just her felonious personality and policies, but the criminality of her class.

That possibility has led some commentators, notably Brandon Smith at alt-market.com, to conclude that the fix is in and Trump will win the election. Trump and his supporters, who have virtually no responsibility for the parlous state of the world and who have in many cases resisted, to the best of their abilities, those who are responsible, will be the scapegoats for the impending collapse. Opposition to kleptocracy discredited and the masses crying out for someone to do something (always interpreted as a clarion call for more government), the malevolent cabal and its supranational organizations will attempt to assume control of the planet.

PRIME DECEIT

prime-deceit-final-cover

COMING SOON

Trump may well win, but the risks are enormous. Teetering edifices eventually fall. It would be more surprising than not if this one stood for the next four years. Effecting collapse is probably well within the power of the cabal. If central banks take their thumbs off the interest rate scales and allow their balance sheets to shrink, pop goes history’s greatest financial bubble. Nominal heads of the world’s governments will be blamed unfairly for that bubble—blown over decades—and for failures stemming from centuries of philosophical muddle. Fairness will be the last thing on the minds of those blaming Trump.

Enormous as the risks of scapegoating are for Trump, they are outweighed by the risks of a Clinton victory. The dangers of Clinton’s hawkish record and views have been extensively reviewed (see “The Most Dangerous Candidate,” SLL), but several considerations bear repeating.

She has been a full-throated supporter of US interventionism and cannot escape blame for the Libya, Syria, and Ukraine fiascos. More importantly, the US-Russian relationship deteriorated dangerously during her tenure. Fomenting rebellion and making an issue of Russian doorstep Ukraine, labelling Vladimir Putin a “Hitler,” proposing a no-fly zone in Syria, which would put the US in direct combat with Russia, and blaming Russia for email disclosures without a shred of proof are rank idiocies. Trump’s willingness to engage and negotiate with the leader of the second most militarily powerful nation is rational; Clinton’s adversarial posture is not. Nuclear war being the ultimate downside of that posture, the difference is sufficient reason to vote for Trump.

Not to be overlooked, however, are the other substantial reasons. The Clintons have defenestrated impartial justice and the rule of law. FBI Director Comey’s decision to recommend against prosecuting Hillary for her emails was the latest in a long line of scandals whereby Clintons are granted a more lenient legal standard than everyone else. Reopening the investigation had to have been in part motivated by recognition that his concession to Hillary was indefensible. It had subjected him and the FBI to an unprecedented barrage of justified criticism, and the newly discovered emails give him a do-over.

In a Trump presidency, that might serve as the first step back to impartial justice and the rule of law. During the second debate, he vowed to appoint a special prosecutor. Who knows where a vigorous investigation of Hillary Clinton might lead? There is never just one cockroach, and nobody can predict which cockroaches skedaddle upon exposure or give up their fellow vermin to avoid prosecution and jail. The powers that be can accommodate themselves to a superficial squirt of pesticide, but if Trump attacks the infestation no holds barred, it could upend a very comfortable status quo. Nothing would be better for America and its government. Beneficiaries of the present corruption will fight Trump with everything they’ve got.

Trump appears to be less beholden to the existing power structure than any major party presidential candidate in the last fifty years. He has his own money and has been refreshingly fearless in his public utterances. One can make fun of some of those utterances, but even without the threat of investigations, a man who can’t be bought and says what he thinks may be a man capable of resisting Washington’s army of interest groups, lobbyists, contractors, and captive media. No surprise that he’s received almost no support from them.

Filling the open Supreme Court vacancy is more momentous than usual because of the current ideological cleft in the court. There may be more than one vacancy. The next appointees will hold the deciding votes on a variety of key issues, including the interpretation of the Second Amendment. Justin Antonin Scalia’s caustic dissent in the King v. Burwell Obamacare case ensures his place in the pantheon of great justices. Trump admires Scalia and has promised to pick jurists in that mold.

Importantly, Trump appears to believe, with Scalia, that words, especially the words found in the Constitution, mean what they say. The Constitution is not a perfect document, but it specifies its own amendment process. That process does not involve judges inventing new rights. Nor does it involve judicially disregarding the clearly specified rights of the people and the constraints put on government. (The only good thing that can be said about the idiocy known as the income tax is that the people inflicted it on themselves via the amendment process.)

The latest round of Obamacare premium increases are upon us. Fulfilling a campaign pledge and repealing that odious legislation will have a place on Trump’s to do list. So too will immigration reform, and not the “reform” that is Washington-speak for virtually open borders, amnesty, non-assimilation, and a Democratic registration drive. Trump has mortified the elite, insisting that the US has a right to control its own borders, who gains admittance to it, and on what terms. They were dismissive until Trump defeated their Washington-speak candidates. Supporters grasped easy truths that the elite had sought to make politically unmentionable: the welfare state and open borders are incompatible; hand-out and criminal immigrants adversely affect America’s quality of life. Throw in the Muslim tide washing over Europe and many Americans are quite receptive to either rolling up the Welcome mat or putting it out much more selectively.

Trump can be an offensive, loudmouth blowhard, but he is not stupid. Much of the wailing about the candidates’ deficiencies and the “circus” election casts offensive, loudmouth, and blowhard as equivalent to incompetent and criminal. Whom does such equivalence benefit? Trump’s policies and personality offer Americans an opportunity to challenge the status quo. Many Trump supporters are animated by the middle-finger desire, but Trump would have been long forgotten political roadkill if he didn’t offer a clear-cut departure from the “way things are” and the powers that be.

YOU DON’T KNOW WHAT YOU’VE LOST

IF YOU DON’T KNOW WHAT YOU HAD

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AMAZON

KINDLE

NOOK

15 responses to “Elections Are Also About Issues, by Robert Gore

  1. Senatssekretär Freistaat Danzig

    Reblogged this on behindertvertriebentessarzblog.

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  2. Pingback: SLL: Elections Are Also About Issues | Western Rifle Shooters Association

  3. Bob, my comment yesterday didn’t have anything to do with the content of your article. It has everything to do with your style of writing. You craft sentences that are dense and difficult to wade through. As a result, I believe you alienate a lot of your potential audience, myself included. Maybe I’m not the smartest guy, but I know when someone is trying to write over me.

    “I notice that you use plain, simple language, short words and brief sentences. That is the way to write English―it is the modern way and the best way. Stick to it; don’t let fluff and flowers and verbosity creep in. When you catch an adjective, kill it. No, I don’t mean utterly, but kill most of them―then the rest will be valuable. They weaken when they are close together. They give strength when they are wide apart. An adjective habit, or a wordy, diffuse, flowery habit, once fastened upon a person, is as hard to get rid of as any other vice.” – Mark Twain

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    • To keep it brief: point well taken. Thank you.

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      • Apparently Orwell got it half-right. We have now sunk to a depth at which the first duty of intelligent men is not only restatement of the obvious, but to do so at a fourth-grade reading level. Frankly, Mr. Gore, I am not easily astonished, but seeing that anyone could consider your style “dense and difficult to wade through” put my jaw way too close to the floor for comfort.

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        • ikdr

          I had an interesting conversation recently with a good friend about writing style. I told him what I had written to my editor for Prime Deceit: I try to write in such a way that the words go straight from paper or screen into the reader’s mind, and the reader takes no notice of my writing style. That requires concision, clarity, and a clear understanding and command of what one is trying to say. Perhaps on the second or third pass the reader starts to notice my style, but the first time I want the reader to be thinking about what I’ve written, not how I’ve written it.

          Obviously I did not reach that goal with Mr. Jalbert. I’ve known him a long time. He’s a bright guy, far beyond the fourth-grade level. He took the trouble to highlight a sentence he didn’t like on Facebook (“Opposition to kleptocracy discredited and the masses crying out for someone to do something (always interpreted as a clarion call for more government), the malevolent cabal and its supranational organizations will attempt to assume control of the planet.”). He went to the further trouble of posting the above comment. Given that my stylistic goal is to have readers not notice my style, or if they do, to notice it in a positive way, I pay attention when I get contrary feedback. Absolute precision and clarity 100 percent of the time may be an unattainable goal, if only because what’s clear to one reader may not be clear to another, but I want to get as close to it as I can.

          Through the years I’ve received many criticisms about the substance of my writing and a handful about the style (other than pointing out typos and the like). As long as criticism is free from vitriol and personal attacks, I’m fine with it, although sometimes it stings. Ultimately, it makes me a better thinker and writer. Given the quality of your comments on SLL, I’m happy you don’t share Mr. Jalbert’s opinion of my writing style. Given that I’m always trying to improve my writing, I’m grateful he posted his comment.

          Bob

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          • Fair enough. And “fourth-grade” was likely excessive, but I was so honestly dumbfounded I felt I should err on the side of hyperbole. When I first started reading SLL, it took a while to fully appreciate the high quality of your content, but I immediately found the style exemplary both in clarity and ease of reading. Had I known either that Mr. Jalbert was a friend of yours, not just some random guy on the intertubz, or that his objection was specific, not general, I probably would have kept my mouth shut. Still, the cited sentence (“Opposition to kleptocracy . . .”) is, at worst, a mild and rare exception proving my initial judgment.

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            • You didn’t know, and like I said, I’ve received maybe a handful of criticisms of my writing style. I try very hard to craft sentences that are not dense or difficult to wade through, but the one cited is arguably an exception. As I replied above, point well taken, but I think most of my readers would, if asked, be more in your camp. Nevertheless, I take any criticisms seriously, and I’m sure I’ll be especially on the lookout for the dense and the difficult to wade through in my next few articles.

              Thanks.

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              • As IKDR said, I was reacting to a specific sentence, not your overall style of writing. I do find some of your content challenging to digest, but hey…a 4th grade education only gets one so far. At the end of the day, I do prefer being challenged.

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  4. I’ll be sure to check out your new novel. Best of luck!

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    • Thanks. Put up a review on Amazon if you don’t mind (some people don’t like doing so). Pro or con I’d be interested in what you have to say.

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  5. Pingback: Elections Are Also About Issues, by Robert Gore | STRAIGHT LINE LOGIC « Los Diablos Tejano

  6. Well, “reading” is soon to be as archaic as cursive writing, but words do matter, and rational thought does matter…….I think. We will know in 3 days about the rational part. The sElecting of Hilarity, following 8 years of Obamy will be “illuminating” for all of us………..A Stark Cold Reality…….
    to match my growing Cold Fury.

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  7. Pingback: Daily Reading #21 | thinkpatriot

  8. Pingback: Cold Fury » The case for voting Hillary

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