Trump and his New York values

I don’t know if it is permissible for anyone to declare someone else’s view the most sensible because it happens to be the same as theirs, but this piece on Trump in The Weekend Oz by John O’Sullivan is the best I have seen: US election 2016: Donald Trump continues to defy the rules of politics-as-usual. As I see it, Trump is essentially a New Yorker with many of the attitudes and sensibilities of someone from New York. But he is also in his late sixties and has a residual set of values based on the way things were half a century ago. A liberal in the 1960s is someone whose values were laid down around the time JFK was president, which means he has approximately the same values that Ronald Reagan would have twenty years later. Over the span of those years, what was mainstream Democrat became mainstream Republican. Today, mainstream Democrat is Bernie Sanders and Barack Obama, while Hillary is held back by a residual, although minimal, grasp of the values of the early sixties. But here the issue is Trump who in many ways sees the world much the same way as I do, and I think in much the same way as O’Sullivan.

It is this that causes Trump to make those peculiar kinds of mistakes when he tries to walk away from the things he believes in and try to imitate what he thinks a Republican believes. My advice to him is just to do the Kennedy thing and not try to pander to the religious right. They will never support him so long as Cruz is running, and in any case, it is those same fools who decided not to vote for Romney in 2012. The bigger game is in pulling Democrats across to the Republican side, not trying to shore up his near-certain constituency should he become the nominee. This, I think, is the same point O’Sullivan has tried to make.

Will Trump’s suggestion this week that women who have had abortions should face legal penalties finally trip him up?

This was a serious mistake on two levels. To pro-choice voters it looked like a barbaric threat to a constitutional right millions of American women have personally exercised. Echoed by the media, also mainly pro-choice, it will confirm the caricature of him as ­brutalist right-winger. To conservative voters and anti-abortion organisations, however, it revealed the very thin and outdated understanding that Trump has of the conservatism he now espouses. The anti-abortion movement long ago abandoned any thought of penalising women for having the procedure. Today they typically characterise such women as victims and direct almost all their criticisms at “abortion mills” that murder women through negligence as well as babies intentionally, or at organisations such as Planned Parenthood that provide abortion almost as a late stage method of birth control.

Or then this:

On other issues as well, such as killing the families of terrorists, Trump expresses what he supposes to be hardline conservative opinions; but because he is late to the faith (and perhaps not very devout), he constantly gets it wrong, and expresses instead what liberals (like himself until recently) think conservatives believe in their dark hearts.

Reporting that concentrated on this misunderstanding might weaken Trump with at least a segment of the Right. But most mainstream journalists have a view of conservatism only slightly less skewed than Trump’s.

What Trump doesn’t get is that there are plenty of us on the right that, whatever our religious beliefs, hold other values as more important, with the preservation of our way of life high on that list. We are not worried that he won’t get the exact nuance right about abortion nor about the way that terrorists should be dealt with through constitutional procedures. We don’t need him to take the hardest most-Rambo line he can think of. For myself, I am content to let him enter the Oval Office and in the company of the cabinet he chooses, work through what needs to be done. It is his instincts that I am looking for him to guide him as these issues arrive on his desk. Again I think O’Sullivan is exactly right about this.

Trump voters discovered their hero in the early debates not because he was an alpha male or a star of reality television — though these things helped — but because he expressed their own feelings and opinions on matters that both major parties sedulously avoided. . . .

Trump discovered his voters and their issues almost as much as his voters discovered Trump. Once he had done that, however, reporters and sociologists noticed the existence of entire classes of voters whose interests government had largely ignored and whose angry discontents were fuelling an insurgent campaign that broke half the rules of polite electioneering. So angry were these voters, indeed, that they simply tuned out criticisms of Trump, however seemingly justified, as emerging from a failing, inactive, and remote establishment that despised them and therefore him.

And then these same non-insightful journalists and political insiders also discovered something else.

As the primaries wore on, Trump proved to be winning votes at all levels of wealth and education, even if disproportionately at the lower end. And Tea Partiers were more concerned with fiscal solvency, expenditure control and constitutional limits on what government can do, whereas Trump supporters were enthusiasts for activist government that would get things done at home and abroad.

It therefore comes down to what Trump can and cannot do if elected. But the one thing he most certainly could do by winning the election is deprive Hillary of the office herself, with this conclusion:

Trump could never inflict the same amount of damage on the Republican vision of America as Clinton. She would enjoy the support of a major party, the media, the judiciary, the bureaucracy, and all the great social and cultural institutions of America. She would be virtually unimpeachable as the first woman president.

This really is the reality since it is all of the above who will do all they can to elect her, and without Trump her success is assured, at the 95% level. None of the other 17 Republicans who have gone for the nomination has ever had the slightest chance of winning. The immense amount of money that is coming to Cruz and Kasich from among the largest Democrat donors is a sure sign they know who Hillary’s most formidable opponent is. O’Sullivan ends with this:

Trump would have none of [Hillary’s] advantages as president — not even the support of congressional Republicans. He would be unable to pass controversial parts of his program. His administration would become a byword for gridlock.

The Road Runner would run out of steam and finish up wrapped entirely in red tape — not a cartoon threat but a cautionary tale.

I would expect more, but first we have to see Trump win. Although O’Sullivan doesn’t say so in words, he seems to have been saying it very clearly between the lines of his article, the best analysis of the election I have so far seen anywhere.

Ignorance, malice and an unbelievable innocence in the midst of wolves

First read this: Europe’s Muslims hate the West and then read this: An Up-close Look at the Liberal-Muslim Alliance.

We no longer know history, not our own and certainly no one else’s. Our ignorance and the malice of our elites will do us in, and there is little chance of recovery in Europe from here. So far as Europe goes, it is a lost continent, like the Titanic at the moment it hit the iceberg. It hadn’t sunk yet but its fate was from then on inevitable.

Powerline comes to Melbourne

melbourne by hinderaker
John Hinderaker, one of the four at Powerline, has just been visiting Australia and mostly Melbourne. He calls his post Back from the Outback which is not technically correct if you are visiting mostly Melbourne and a little of Sydney, but never mind: his final words of the post make up for everything:

Don’t be surprised if I refer to Australia from time to time in the future. It requires a rather epic journey to get there, but the trip is well worth it.

And not just a place to visit either since, for now at least, it is officially the most liveable city in the world as well.

Searching for excuses

Such tedious, tiresome drivel from The Oz, this time from Janet Albrechtson. She has never been much of an analyst, but at least she used to be on the same side on most things and so I would more often than not get through a column she wrote. But now that she has taken the Murdoch shilling and enlisted in one of the anti-Abbott regiments, I only read as far as I need to so as to work out the lay of the land, and then go to the comments, most of which see things the same way as me. I would have fallen into line more or less immediately after the transition if there had actually been a line. But he is not called Lord Waffle for nothing. I am in sympathy with the comments below, not quite in sequence but these are ten out of the first twelve that came up.

I) I bet Albrechtson, Devine, Savva, PVO, Kroger, Reith, and so have all been Wined and Dined by Malcom. Ross Cameron was and he was so impressed Malcom gave him a Book when he left for home.

II) Janet is right about Abbott. But what policies are we getting from Malcolm? Sweet nothing. And then today, we hear of his masterstroke: the states will add to our taxation burdens! Hallelujah! Problems solved. More government bureaucracy, more government controls, more taxes to pay for more bureaucrats. And not one word about reducing spending, which Scott Morrison told us is Australia’s major problem. First, Malcolm floats the lead balloons of increased GST, then increased capital gains tax, then the shafting of negative gearing, then theft of our superannuation…and having failed with all of those, now we get state taxes! Malcolm doesn’t have a clue what to do, so he shoves the problem onto the states! He is blundering from one mess to another. It’s time for the Liberals to jettison their Labor-ite PM and get someone who can deliver on their conservative promises and principles.

III) So there’s not enough money. But we won’t cut spending. We’ll just rearrange the deck chairs. And if you don’t look carefully you won’t realise that a swifty’s been pulled and we’re all going down.

Good one Mal.

IV) Much as I detest Malcolm Turnbull, making the States more autonomous is a good idea. But it might take a bit more preparation than todays anouncement.

V) Finally Malcolm has united Australia. From the left and from the conservative side there’s at last consensus about the PM. His latest Tax plan is a dud. Universally hated. Good one Malcolm. Losing the next election is getting closer. Bring out the Utes. Buy up nappies. Get Malcolm a hanky.

VI) Does free speech still exist in Australia?

Is Australia still a democracy?

Tony is an elected member of parliament and represents his constituents he, I and everyone else can speak on whatever suits them!

Why are you going down this path Janet, has your partner Michael Kroger enlisted you in the peril exercise of gagging free speech in this country, why does this not extend to Howard, Reith, Costello et al!

For years Turnbull and his shadow Lucy Macbeth have undermined Abbott and now you appear to have joined their social engineering experiment along with the rest of our pathetic and lazy journalists/commentators in this country.

VII) The comments below reflect conservatives’ frustration at having the party usurped by a weak wet waffler. Who wants to reward bad behaviour? Not I. Minority parties are looking good.

VIII) “wants it known that just because we don’t know his economic plan, that doesn’t mean there isn’t one” Exactly, just because Tony didn’t know to watch his back didn’t mean Turnbull wasn’t there all ready to ……… ? He did have a devious plan after all, Tony found out too late.

IX) Somehow this Prime Minister reminds me of Julia Gillard: not up to the job. Both of them have high personal ambition but no ability to match it.

X) Perhaps tomorrow Janet can explain this latest fiasco announced today by Malcolm Turnbull which in one stroke has lost the election for the Coalition.

Poor Scott Morrison.

The Libs are evens to lose, and what a shipwreck that would be. They may be setting up a line of excuses, but having created the instability in the first place, no one around here will blame anyone but Malcolm himself.

The problem is that most people are too young to remember the world before it went insane

ivanka and children

My thoughts on the photo story of Ivanka Trump, her husband and children in a normal mother, father, kids relationship, on the day she came home with their third child. It is just like how it used to be. And then there is the picture of Donald Trump with his grandchildren having an Easter lunch. Many people can any longer relate to such a world.

trump with grandchildren

Helping the world’s poor by keeping them impoverished

Shame it doesn’t matter to greenies the world over who wish to luxuriate in their ignorance. So for the rest of us: Another Climate Alarmist Admits Real Motive Behind Warming Scare. What she said, and please note these are quotes:

“One has to free oneself from the illusion that international climate policy is environmental policy. This has almost nothing to do with the environmental policy anymore, with problems such as deforestation or the ozone hole,” said Edenhofer, who co-chaired the U.N.’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change working group on Mitigation of Climate Change from 2008 to 2015. . . .

“We redistribute de facto the world’s wealth by climate policy,” said Edenhofer.

And I might note that it is not incidental that these cretins make a pile of money running these international agencies as well. The strategy could not be more clear:

The plan is to allow Third World countries to emit as much carbon dioxide as they wish — because, as Edenhofer said, “in order to get rich one has to burn coal, oil or gas” — while at the same time restricting emissions in advanced nations. This will, of course, choke economic growth in developed nations, but they deserve that fate as they “have basically expropriated the atmosphere of the world community,” he said. The fanaticism runs so deep that one professor has even suggested that we need to plunge ourselves into a depression to fight global warming.

To people for whom this policy makes sense, nothing you could say would dissuade them. More to the point is why we let them get away with it. They are the very essence of ignorance and evil.

A trilogy of Trump videos

The above an unsolicited endorsement from a dying woman who was a former Miss Wisconsin. Below his interview today. And below that, the infamous moment when Trump’s campaign manager did not throw a reporter to the floor, discussed by Trump in the interview.

That moment in which nothing can be seen.

The new meaning of trumped up charges. Some thoughts by Piers Morgan on this whole business. Trump’s reaction is such a whole new world!

Sniping at Tony Abbott could tip scales

The only thing that makes it worth voting for a Turnbull government is that Tony Abbott is still there on the backbench. It remains obscure to the point of invisibility why Malcolm does not do everything he can to bring Abbott into the tent. The only things that Abbott has said is what a good government he had led. And since it was a LIBERAL government – you know, one on the same side as Malcolm is supposed to be – I cannot see why Tony’s triumph’s are not also Malcolm’s triumphs, or can at least be counted on the same side of the ledger.

It is Turnbull, however, who wishes to make this a distinction as large as it can possibly be. A political leader that does not try to combine everyone, to smooth over the differences, to make the machine run as well as possible, is hopeless at the job. If Turnbull is trying to deny credit to Tony for his achievements, it can only be because Malcolm understands himself to be the undersized and insignificant nonentity he is.

All of which is brought to mind by that Left-Labor Turnbull shill from The Oz, not Niki in this instance but Van Oncelot in a column he titles, Federal election 2016: sniping Tony Abbott could tip scales. My own wording is along the lines of “Sniping at Tony Abbott could tip scales” as the following selection of comments on his column might indicate. These were the ten most recent comments when I logged in, all of whom see things in the same way as I do. But in saying this, please also look at the last of these comments below.

I) How did I miss it?

Of course – it’s all Abbott’s fault!! Must be his sniping.. because all of use can wax lyrical about the enormous achievements of Turnbull. Such as … ummm … and there was the … aahhh … Oh and the … geez what was it again?

There has never been a better time to … i give up

II) Nothing to do with Abbott. Far more likely is Turnbull’s poor performance, his high handed treatment of Morrison, the feeling the country is now run by an unelected dynasty, the splitting of The Liberal Party, the left wing trying to gain control, who back the same beliefs as Labor, and the outrage by so many, of the removal of a sitting PM, which they consider, their job, if so inclined. In contrast Labor stood by their leader, no matter how poor his figures,and present as a disciplined group, compared to The Libs. A situation the Libs gifted to themselves.

III) What a load of rot. Tony the Australian Sniper…give us all a break. When are the editors going to step in and end this vendetta against Abbott? There’s a powerful difference between cool-headed analysis and heated vitriol, and Niki and Peter are giving us plenty of the latter.

IV) PVO I think the only sniping is coming from the likes of yourself, Niki Savva and a majority of the media prepared to analyse every word, eye twitch, smile or whatever Mr Abbott does, todays story about stealing a girls wave is the sort of rubbish that is being printed these days.

V) Two years ago one could have written the headline: sniping Turnbull could tip scales. You reap what you sow, Mr Van Onselen. Yes, you. Aka: spare us the hypocrisy.

VI) Rest assured that a sniping Vanonsolon won’t matter a fig, as he rates almost zero on the influence scale.

VII) If Turnbull wins the coming election then no future PM or government will be willing to take unpopular but necessary fiscal decisions. We will go down the pathway of populist tosh until the budget situation becomes intolerable and then political fireworks break out.

VIII) Why do you say “Of course” Turnbull won’t emulate Abbott’s win? Is it because Abbott was not as bad as Rudd, or because Turnbull is not as good as Abbott?

IX) While Turnbull is busy differentiating himself, he may as well bring back the mining tax, dismantle border protection and undo the free trade agreements. As for me, I will make my own differentiation at the ballot box.

X) I am finding it hard to comprehend the people in this forum who are saying they will vote for Labor over the LNP because of Turnbull. I too have not been very impressed with Turnbull so far, however, the prospect of a Labor government with the likes of Shorten, Plibersek and Bowen trying to run the country terrifies me! If that mob get control, Australia will never get out of debt in our lifetimes and what sort of legacy is that to leave to our children?

Funnily enough, I am on the same side as MR X, but I have to say that Malcolm seems to be doing everything he can to drive people like myself away. But so long as Tony is there, and his most important mates along with him, there remains no alternative comes the election.

Absolutely wrong

You cannot work for Murdoch and support Donald Trump. There are no exceptions to this rule, and unfortunately the absence of exceptions includes Andrew Bolt. This is his post today, with its last line in support of a Trump critic, that he was absolutely right. Here’s the whole thing, including the quoted comment:

Taking it to Trump, who by trashing the race probably helps make any Republican less electable:

Charlie Sykes, a popular radio host in Milwaukee, welcomed Donald J. Trump to his state in a phone interview on his program on Monday, explaining that “here in Wisconsin we value things like civility, decency and actual conservative principles.”

And then, for Mr. Trump, the 17-minute interview went downhill from there.

Mr. Sykes, an outspoken conservative and opponent of Mr. Trump, began by pressing the Manhattan businessman to apologize to Heidi Cruz, the wife of Senator Ted Cruz of Texas, for resending a Twitter post juxtaposing an unflattering picture of Mrs. Cruz with a shot of his wife, Melania Trump, a former model.

The spat began after an anti-Trump “super PAC” produced an ad geared at Utah voters featuring an image of Mrs. Trump, then Melania Knauss, posing nude from a January 2000 GQ magazine pictorial.

On Mr. Sykes’s program, Mr. Trump defended the photo of his wife — calling it “an artsy picture” — but blamed Mr. Cruz for starting the feud, even though the super PAC that produced the Texas ad is not connected to the Texas senator.

“I expect that from a 12-year-old bully on the playground, not somebody who wants the office held by Abraham Lincoln,” Mr. Sykes said.

Later, when Mr. Trump again complained, incorrectly, that Mr. Cruz “started it,” the radio host interjected: “Remember, we’re not on a playground. We’re running for president of the United States.”

Absolutely right.

Heidi Cruz works for Goldman Sachs so is the very essence of the wrong side of the debate. That Cruz must legally not in any way be associated with any PAC supporting him means he has no choice but to keep at least three degrees of separation. But to think that Cruz’s team did not start the attack on Trump’s wife on its way is ridiculously naive.

But that is hardly the point. Someone who wishes to investigate if someone is worthy of the office once held by Abraham Lincoln (and now held by Barack Obama) does not begin by attacking Trump for defending his wife against an attack by a Cruz supporter. If these are the high principles being defended, we are lost and doomed already.