I want a chocolate sundae, but I don't want the ice cream, whipped cream or cherry. Just the chocolate and sprinkles.
I like ice cream sundaes, but I don't like the ice cream. That's what you just wrote sounds like.
I'm not quite sure what you mean, but I'll try again. I understand that you can't abide those of us who didn't like either major party candidate. Who reject the demand that we choose between two evils. There may have been millions of us overall, judging by the myriad examples of GOP Senate and House incumbents who drew more votes than Trump. Trump lost the popular vote by six million, twice as much as he did in 2016. I know that's irrelevant, but as some point Trumpsters are going to have to realize that they do not represent the entire party. Get off your high horse. It's trampling through mud and spattering us all.
I've come a long way toward Trump's positions these last four years. I am no longer a Kasich Republican, although I continue to support his career-long theme of keeping budgets under control, notwithstanding that that's the view of a dinosaur. No, I understand the value of orientating economic and immigration policy around what's best for American workers, of orientating regulatory policy around jobs and economic growth, of getting our soldiers the hell out of the Middle East, and the appointment of Constitutionalist judges.
We are all going to miss those policy victories when they're gone.
I'd like to save at least a few of them, and that's why the Georgia Senate runoffs are so important.
And Trump is just horsing around with what, certainly by now as his lawyers have suffered round after rounds of defeats, has devolved into a vendetta and little more. There is work to be done, sir, and Trump is acting like he always has, myopic and self-centered. It is time he acted like Reagan, about time he acted like a statesman. Is that too much to ask without being labeled a troll?