Your Opinion? by Mark Morford, SFGate.com
Supporting Trump is not your “opinion.” It’s just death
By Mark Morford on November 4, 2016
Trump is not an opinion. He is just death
This is not a matter of opinion. It is not a matter of which party’s sociopolitical agenda you “believe” to be fair and true, and which you think is unsustainable and damaging – a bit of education reform here, America’s role in the U.N. there, your well-informed take on taxation and global economics, health care for the poor and the impact of environmental conservation. If you’re voting for Trump, you care as much for those notions as a fish cares about lasagna – which is to say: absolute zero, and aggressively so.
Continues here
Re: Your Opinion? by Mark Morford, SFGate.com
Just wondering here whether its time to vote for people based on their character rather than their party allegiance
I can't imagine how anyone would vote for Trump if you take the party out of it.
Re: Your Opinion? by Mark Morford, SFGate.com
I think that a lot of people are going to vote for him just because he's rich. I remember when Michael Huffington was running for the Senate, a woman I knew was going to vote for him; I said that I thought he didn't have any qualifications, he was just rich. She said "Well, I'd like to be rich." Tom Tomorrow defined this attitude as "misidentification with the economic elite".
Quote:
Posted in reply to the post by Thad:
Just wondering here whether its time to vote for people based on their character rather than their party allegiance
I can't imagine how anyone would vote for Trump if you take the party out of it.
Re: Your Opinion? by Mark Morford, SFGate.com
When some people hear "Protect our border" a visceral recognition occurs.
Please forgive us for an over abundance of Testosterone
We would like a more committed Citizens Oath as well.
Maybe a new National Anthem with less reverence for War.
Quote:
Posted in reply to the post by Sara S:
I think that a lot of people are going to vote for him just because he's rich. I remember when Michael Huffington was running for the Senate, a woman I knew was going to vote for him; I said that I thought he didn't have any qualifications, he was just rich. She said "Well, I'd like to be rich." Tom Tomorrow defined this attitude as "misidentification with the economic elite".