Author Topic: Stop Looking for Scapegoats, Trump Fans (NR)  (Read 792 times)

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Online corbe

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Stop Looking for Scapegoats, Trump Fans (NR)
« on: September 28, 2016, 12:42:39 am »
by Jim Geraghty September 27, 2016 9:34 AM

  Donald Trump and his fans can complain about Never Trump and recalcitrant Republicans all they like. But last night, starting at 9 p.m. Eastern, in front of tens of millions of people, perhaps a hundred million viewers, nothing else mattered but the candidates. The ads, the surrogates, the rallies, the ground game — all of that fades away, and for an hour and a half, it’s just Trump, Hillary Clinton, and questions from Lester Holt. There are no other outside factors, no distractions. Winning the race is all on him, and it’s perhaps the single biggest moment of the campaign, his single best opportunity to lay out the case for himself and the case against Clinton.


 If you’re a Trump fan, and you feel like he did a great job, then great, you have nothing to worry about. If you’re a Trump fan and feel he missed a lot of opportunities . . . that’s on him. That’s not the fault of Ben Sasse. That’s not the fault of Jeb Bush or Mitt Romney or anybody who’s refusing to support him.

  There has been this inane argument that one or two senators, a couple of retired GOP figures, and some writers and bloggers and folks on Twitter are going to cost Trump the presidency by refusing to jump on the bandwagon. That’s nonsense. That’s scapegoat-shopping. We’ll see if last night’s debate changes the numbers in this race. It’s been enough of a topsy-turvy year where it’s quite possible Trump enjoys a surge; particularly for the first half-hour, he came across as a figure you could picture in the Oval Office. But there seems to be pretty broad consensus that she got a lot of attacks in, mentioned a lot of the unsavory or controversial parts of Trump’s record, and made him spend a lot of time on the defensive. He never got around to mentioning some of her weakest spots — the Clinton Foundation, allegations of favor-trading, Benghazi, her support for arming the rebels in Syria. He barely mentioned Libya. The word “e-mail” came up four times in ninety minutes.

  This morning he’s blaming the microphone. Last night on CNN, Corey Lewandowski blamed Lester Holt. But the person who has more control over Donald Trump’s debate performance than anyone else is . . . Donald Trump. No one else can go up there and make his argument for him. If his fans are disappointed this morning, they should be disappointed with him. And if they’re mad, they should be mad at him.

  Other thoughts . . . Did the Republican presidential nominee just endorse stop-and-frisk on a national scale? Sort of: “Now, whether or not in a place like Chicago you do stop and frisk, which worked very well, Mayor Giuliani is here, worked very well in New York. It brought the crime rate way down. But you take the gun away from criminals that shouldn’t be having it.”

Did Trump contend that Iran was “ready to fall” — referring to the 2009 protests, I suppose — and that now it was on the verge of being a major power? But you look at the Middle East, you started the Iran deal, that’s another beauty where you have a country that was ready to fall, I mean, they were doing so badly. They were choking on the sanctions. And now they’re going to be actually probably a major power at some point pretty soon, the way they’re going. Aren’t they a major power now? Isn’t one of the core arguments against Obama’s record that he’s let Iran become the dominant power player in the Middle East?

More than ninety minutes of debate, and one fleeting mention of Syria?

snip

As I concluded last night . . . the first debate was a terrible night for Trump, so he’ll probably surge in the polls. Hillary Clinton began oddly, with a lame knock on “Trumped-up trickle-down”, and claiming Trump’s main focus was to help the rich. (Is the “basket of deplorables” rich?) This is the exact same playbook she would have run against Ted Cruz, or Marco Rubio, or Jeb Bush or any other Republican. Of course, Trump is really different from a traditional Republican. But after the first 15 minutes or so, she shifted to steadily working her way through the anti-Trump briefing book. She clearly had memorized a whole briefing encyclopedia on Trump’s controversial statements, scandals, lawsuits, and worked in most of them over the course of 90 minutes.

   I think if you look at Trump’s face immediately after the debate, he knew he didn’t have a good night. One could argue the topic selection played against him: a whole section on birtherism, extended discussion of his unreleased tax returns, whether he stiffed former contractors. The debate included nothing on immigration (!), border security (!), Benghazi, or the Clinton Foundation. The discussion of Hillary’s e-mails was brief. One of Clinton’s key strengths of the night was keeping her cool as Trump bulldozed over moderator Lester Holt and brought his traditional relentless, jabbing, unstoppable style. A lot of Trump’s GOP candidates never quite figured out how to deal with this human hurricane who doesn’t care at all about time limits, what question he was asked, interrupting the opponent, and so on. Then again, none of Trump’s primary rivals had the advantage of a one-on-one matchup.

 Read more at: http://www.nationalreview.com/morning-jolt/440449/donald-trumps-debate-performance-was-disappointing

 
No government in the 12,000 years of modern mankind history has led its people into anything but the history books with a simple lesson, don't let this happen to you.

Offline Suppressed

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Re: Stop Looking for Scapegoats, Trump Fans (NR)
« Reply #1 on: September 28, 2016, 01:03:59 am »
a whole briefing encyclopedia on Trump’s controversial statements, scandals, lawsuits, and worked in most of them over the course of 90 minutes.

Uh, not even close.  There are plenty more where those came from!
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Offline Night Hides Not

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Re: Stop Looking for Scapegoats, Trump Fans (NR)
« Reply #2 on: September 28, 2016, 03:06:54 pm »
Good news for Trump supporters: the debate was watched by only 84 million viewers, 16 million less than expected.
You can avoid reality, but you cannot avoid the consequences of avoiding reality.

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Offline Idaho_Cowboy

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Re: Stop Looking for Scapegoats, Trump Fans (NR)
« Reply #3 on: September 28, 2016, 04:13:26 pm »
Trump buttered his bread, he can sleep in it.
“The way I see it, every time a man gets up in the morning he starts his life over. Sure, the bills are there to pay, and the job is there to do, but you don't have to stay in a pattern. You can always start over, saddle a fresh horse and take another trail.” ― Louis L'Amour