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Ron Paul See other Ron Paul Articles Title: Trump Still Has the Best Words Lets end the war in 24 hours. Donald Trump will end the war in Ukraine in 24 hours. That alone is reason to support his candidacy. Trumps plan for doing so is, admittedly, light on details. In an interview with Fox Newss Maria Bartiromo, Trump claimed his very good relationships with Zelensky and Putin would put him in position for a swift negotiation. I would tell Zelensky no more, you gotta make a deal, the former president said, I would tell Putin if you dont make a deal, were gonna give em a lot. The Washington Post called it a remarkably simplisticeven nonsensical plan to end the conflict, and labeled the boast that he would end the war within 24 hours basically his new build the wall and make Mexico pay for it. Its an apt comparisonbut perhaps not in the way the Post meant it. For the past eight years, the standard response of Trumps critics to his bombastic rhetoric has been incredulity, frantic fact-checking, and ridicule. A 2018 analysis showing that Trump communicates at around a fourth-grade level frequently comes up in response to his more grandiose and straightforward claims. But while the elites of both parties may snicker at those who want to win bigly, Trumps rhetoric is rewriting the political map. Whether one is convinced by his plan to end the war (or to build the wall, or stop the steal, or any other Trumpian turn of phrase) is beside the point. Electoral politics is no longer about policy proposals. The issues we now debate in the political arena dont really belong there; they are pre-political, stemming from fundamental disagreements about the nature of the country, of the good, of man himself. As a result, the GOP-primary and unaffiliated voters that make up the base want their candidate to paint a clear vision for the country. They want a vision that stands in stark contrast to the onslaught of contempt for them and their way of life, and that is capable of stirring aspirations of what once wasand could be again. Trumps clear goals, not plans, stand in stark contrast to focus-group tested soundbites that dominate the rest of the political conversation. On substance and rhetoric, Trump consistently challenges the failed vision for America upheld by the bipartisan ruling class. And that is what people want to hear. China is ripping us off. Total and complete shutdown of Muslims entering the U.S. Greatest jobs president that God ever created. Very fine people on both sides. The China virus and Kung flu. Impeachment Hoax 1 and Impeachment Hoax 2. At its best, there is a self-assuredness about Trumps speech that evokes an America that cant be bullied by the commissars of diversity, equity, and inclusion. His rhetoric baits the gatekeepers of our discourse to denounce it, and him. This is all to the good for the vast swaths of this country left behind by the march of Progress. End the war in 24 hours is the latest Trumpian mantra in this vein. And it shows why Trumps political rivals for 2024 continue to falter. Take, for example, the Ron DeSantis campaigns response to Trumps Ukraine boast. The DeSantis campaign correctly pointed out that Trumps plan could leave the door open to an even more hawkish, escalatory Ukraine position than that of either the current administration or of most GOP rivals: Were gonna give em a lot. It is a valid concern for those who want a swift diplomatic settlement to the war: Could Trump inadvertently escalate the war by publicly announcing his hardball negotiating tactics? But the criticism hasnt, and wont, land with voters. DeSantis has yet to settle on his own vision for the war in Ukraine. He may well have a coherent policy plan in mind for ending the war, but voters wouldnt know it. The Florida governors messaging and rhetoric on the conflict has been all over the map, first calling it a territorial dispute, then walking that back and calling Putin a war criminal. Absent a coherent vision, even valid policy critiques wont register. Elizabeth Warren learned the hard way that having a plan for that doesnt translate into electoral success. If he doesnt change course, DeSantis may be well on his way to the same lesson. The comparisons are already there. To his credit, the Florida governor held his own at the Blazes presidential confab with Tucker Carlson earlier this month. But the event still served as an example of the power of Trumpian rhetoriceven without the 45th president in attendance. Among those in attendance, the clear winner of the summit was Tucker himself, in no small part due to the clear contrast between Tuckers straightforward questioning and the candidatess carefully couched, focus-group tested responses. In his interview with South Carolina senator Tim Scott, Carlson was not content to allow Scott to dodge hard questions about deporting illegal immigrants with vague platitudes. Wait a second, the federal government knows where everyone is, Tucker said, We know anyone using a fake social security number. So why not just like drop them off in Tijuana? Bye bye. A sincere question. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 1.
#1. To: Ada (#0)
Yes, every time I hear him talk it seems I'm listening to John C. Calhoun. Ha Ha HA! Sometimes I kill me.
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