PeterZ wrote:So you trying to say utterly stupid and disconnected things in homage to Trump? Why bother? Very few truly think He is a good candidate. We just believe the alternative is much worse. Heck, even significant numbers of Democrats believe this
I should explain: The reason why I said it was because Trump actually said this in a speech about his energy plans: “If I win, believe me we’re going to start opening up the water so that you can have your farmers survive so that your job market will get better.”
As for the alternative being worse: I can't see how. The thing about Trump is that he doesn't produce policy proposals as much as he does soundbites; "We'll build a wall and make Mexico pay for it", "Families of Terrorists should be executed too", that sort of thing. When he does go into the nitty gritty details, he gets things wrong or confused, when he talks about his personal accomplishments, he vastly exaggerates or tells outright lies that are easily disproven (like, for example, that bit about him never settling lawsuits? Turns out that he does.). A recent Article on Politico called him a fact checker's nightmare. Please do check that article out, it's hilarious.
Now, granted, lies and exaggerations in campaigns are nothing new. The whole fact checking business didn't spring up from nothing, but what is astonishing about Trump is that he takes Stephen Colbert's concept of "Truthiness" (defined as "the Truth one feels in his heart, not what is written in the textbooks"), and just runs with it. His supporters certainly seem to eat it up.
For this lowly european, a Trump presidency has about the same appeal as Berlusconi's tenure as Italy's Premier. Unless he does a complete flip for the general election (and chances are that he will; there are numerous statements by him that seem to indicate that he's very much playing to his audience right now), I don't see him as someone who can increase America's prosperity. He's far more likely to do something that benefits him personally (like, for example, his plan to make libel lawsuits easier to pull off) than something that's going to benefit the people at large.
In a recent commentary piece on fortune.com, Mark Alderman and Howard Schweitzer collected statements made by Trump about his policies. One running thread throughout was that he believes unpredictability to be a virtue. Now, in many ways, it can be: A military commander with a penchant for unpredictable tactics can be supremely successful. A sports team that is flexible enough to switch tactics mid-game can pull off impressive wins. Even in business, a touch of unpredictability can help.
But that's not what we want from modern politics. What we, as westerners, expect from the state is stability: A reasonable framework for us to work and live in that isn't going to surprise us by suddenly imposing the death penalty for being jewish or something. Trump promises the opposite of that. No, he's probably not going to go on a genocidal rampage across the middle east or something (although, who knows), but he isn't going to be seen as a guarantee for stability.
Then again, there's a certain subset of the american population who would celebrate an unstable US government for some infathomable reason, so maybe he's catering to them?
Regardless, no matter how bad you believe Hillary to be, she isn't one to rock the boat. At worst, she'd be like Germany's Chancellor Merkel: Utterly boring and borderline ineffectual. I don't know about you, but when it comes to politics, I'd rather have boring ineffectiveness over unpredictable bullshit any day.