USA 2020 Elections: Thread

grarpamp grarpamp at gmail.com
Thu Aug 18 18:20:07 PDT 2022


> Biden-Dems losing numbers...

Confidence in...
US Congress - 7%
News Media - 11%
Supreme Court - 25%
Military - Dropping Like A Woke Hot Potato
Biden - Abysmal
Pick any Institution - Most far below 50%


Buchanan: How, When, Or Will We Ever Come Together Again?

https://buchanan.org/blog/how-when-do-we-come-together-again-159577

When 30 FBI agents showed up at Mar-a-Lago to cart off boxes of
documents, it was an authorized, legitimate and justified procedure to
retrieve national security secrets being illegally kept there.

Or it was an unprecedented regime raid on the home and office of the
foremost political rival of President Joe Biden that called to mind a
“Third World country,” the East German “Stasi,” the KGB or the
Gestapo.

And Jan. 6, 2021?

That was a riot, a disgraceful breach of the Capitol, involving
assaults on Capitol cops that deserved to be and are being punished.

No, it was more than that. Far more. It was an “insurrection,” a
“fascist coup,” an act of treason led by far-right extremists to abort
the transfer of power from the winner of the election of 2020 to the
loser. It ranks right up there with the 1814 burning of the Capitol by
the British.

Such is the magnitude of the divide in America, a divide that extends
far beyond our clashing views of Jan. 6 and the Mar-a-Lago raid.

Consider abortion. Before the 1960s, abortion was almost universally
regarded as a shameful and criminal act. Doctors who performed
abortions were disgraced and sometimes sent to prison.

But after the Dobbs decision by the Supreme Court declared that Roe v.
Wade in 1973 was wrongly decided, restoration of women’s right to an
abortion is being championed by half the nation.

The other half of America yet believes abortion involves the killing
of an unborn innocent child.

Part of America celebrates the Supreme Court’s decision to declare
marriage equality for homosexuals. Yet, a traditionalist minority
believes such a mandate imposes on the nation a secularist morality
contradicted by the tenets of the Christian faith that was the basis
of laws for our first two centuries as a nation.

Nor is it only clashing morality that divides us.

For a nation, a country, a people, a democracy to endure, there needs
be a broad consensus of belief, culture, custom and politics.

On the issue of law and order, without which a republic cannot stand,
there is now disagreement over the role and conduct of our police.

During the George Floyd summer of 2020, “Defund the Police!” was the
clamor of the left, and among the street chants of Black Lives Matter
was, “Pigs in a Blanket, Fry ‘Em Like Bacon.”

Only a stunning political recoil caused its abandonment.

For a nation, especially a great world power like the United States,
some things are indispensable to its preservation.

A democratic republic needs to preserve the value of its currency, to
defend its borders against illegal mass migrations and invasions, to
preserve law and order, especially in its great cities.

Which of these requisites exist today when the nation suffers 8%
inflation; 250,000 illegal aliens cross our southern border every
month; and “mass shootings” occur daily in our cities during which at
least four victims are gunned down, wounded or killed?

The preservation of a democracy also requires the confidence of its
people in its defining institutions.

Yet, since the Reagan era, Americans’ collective confidence in our
major institutions has fallen from one-half of the nation to
one-fourth.

In 2022, confidence in the Supreme Court fell by a third to 25%. Only
a fourth of the country retained high confidence in the presidency;
and confidence in Congress plummeted to 7%, or one in every 14
Americans.

One in 6 Americans had great confidence in our newspapers, with only 1
in 9 citizens saying the same about television news.

In summary, we are a country whose people have a diminishing
confidence in almost all of its institutions, from big business to the
churches, universities and media. Only small business and the U.S.
military enjoy the confidence of the American people.

Public approval of Biden’s performance is at the lowest level ever
recorded for a president at this point in his first term.

True, we have been through and recovered from divisive times.

In the 1860s, 11 of the 33 states seceded and fought for four years to
gain their independence of the Union.

The 1960s were divisive, but the left, with Sen. George McGovern its
political expression, captured less than 40% of the vote against
Richard Nixon in 1972. Ronald Reagan ran up two landslides in the
1980s.

Those days are long gone.

The left today dominates the academic community and culture to a
greater degree than it once did and is further removed from the heart
of the country in Middle America than it has ever been.

When, how, does America ever unite again?

And what unites us, other than an external attack on the country, like
Pearl Harbor or 9/11?

Where is the common ground on which to stand?

Does such ground even exist, given the divisions in religion, race and
ethnicity, and the seemingly irreconcilable disagreements over
morality, ideology, culture and politics?

Has the great experiment run its course?


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