Sunday, June 7, 2020

The same happened to Obama

But even though Trump doesn’t follow the traditional political playbook, the politics of the Trump era have been awfully predictable. After winning the 2016 election, Republicans have been routed in nearly every election since. They’ve lost control of the House. They’re on track right now for a political shellacking, at risk of being shut out of power entirely in Washington.
Obama had the same catastrophe once we all got our Obama tax bill.  In fact, we flip flop between party catastrophes each election.   It is not politics, it is the inability to scale government services.  We have more nation than a bicameral legislature can handle. And that problem is compounded by very bad education of our politicians.

The instability is built in. The solution is to be unstable in a more efficient manner, accept it and try to avoid the psychotics, like Tom Cotton and Bernie Sanders. We dodged a bullet with the Ray Moore thing, that is what we need to learn about.

Here is another point:

Republicans and Democrats agree: America is out of control
That’s Democratic pollster Jeff Horwitt talking about the survey in which 8 out of 10 voters said they believe things are out of control in the United States. Republican pollster Bill McInturff and his GOP colleagues at Public Opinion Strategies helped Horwitt conduct the survey.

The majority of people surveyed for the poll, which was conducted May 28 to June 2, are worried about the coronavirus, the economy and the leadership in the White House.
Breaking it down by party, 92% of Democrats, 78% of independents and even 66% of Republicans are in the camp that things are spiraling out of control.
Same issue with LBJ and Nixon.  It is a characteristic of governments in the USA being broke and overwhelmed with Swamp idiocy.  We will figure it out for a few years then the Tom Cotton's and Bernie Sanders fools will foul things up again. In any event, it always ends up with massive federal losses for worthless government programs. Default follows.  Even National Review is getting tiny clues about the problem.

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