In 2020, I Held My Nose and Voted for Trump

There was no excuse, none whatsoever, for my having failed to vote in the 2008, 2012 and 2016 presidential elections. The USA is a participatory democracy, and expats only have to take a few simple steps in order to cast a ballot. Thrice I did not, but it would be different in 2020.

Four years ago, I was as amazed as anybody when Donald Trump won the Republican nomination for president. I assumed that he would lose badly to the Democratic nominee, Hillary Clinton. Surely he could not win, since he was a businessman with a sleazy reputation, and he had not held any sort of Trump in military schooloffice—never on a city council or in a state legislature, never a governor, Congressman or cabinet minister. Trump ascended to the White House due to the Electoral College, having received 46.1% of the votes, against Clinton’s 48.2%.

Unlike some of my leftist friends, I was willing to give Trump the benefit of the doubt. Maybe he would grow into the job, I told them.

A bare-bones assessment of his presidency follows. On the upside, he has slowed illegal immigration, he has confronted China over its decades-long habit of stealing American intellectual property, and his policies (pre-COVID, at least) kept unemployment low. His risky engagement with North Korea’s Kim Jong-un produced neither dramatic breakthroughs nor nuclear war.

The downside is considerable, starting with his mishandling of COVID. Trump unilaterally withdrew the USA from the Paris Agreement on mitigating climate change, he has seen the national debt increase to $26 trillion, he has bent laws to help his family’s interests, he has contributed to an unraveling of the USA-South Korea alliance, his plan to “drain the swamp” of Washington lobbyists has failed, and he tends to trust his instincts rather than do the hard work of studying issues and coming to well-reasoned decisions. While the middle class has struggled, his financial policies have mostly benefited the wealthy and big corporations.

So why did I vote for Trump late last month rather than his Democratic opponent, Joseph Biden? Issues of economics, geopolitics and the environment are irrelevant. My concern is what I call the American devolution which began shortly after a black man named George Floyd died at the hands of Minneapolis Trump and Herschel Walkerpolice on May 25. That was unjust, but let’s acknowledge that he was a career criminal, was high on fentanyl, was trying to pass a fake $20 bill and refused to cooperate with the police. Of the four cops on the scene that day, two were White, one black and one Asian. Yet it was cast as an example of White racism, catalyzing protests and riots in more than 200 cities.

The USA has had its share of riots, but this is on an unprecedented scale. Raging hate mobs have destroyed and plundered businesses, and defaced and torn down dozens of statues, not excluding those of George Washington and Thomas Jefferson. I remind you, they are two of the founding fathers. Churches and courthouses have been targeted, and anarchy has reigned in Seattle and Portland, both of which are a long way from Minneapolis. The cost of all this rioting—I hear that the Associated Press now urges its writers not to use the term, as it is considered “racist”—is close to $2 billion.

Cardinal Timothy Dolan has suggested that the ongoing vandalism and destruction of monuments and memorials resembles what happened during the Cultural Revolution. Few objective scholars would deny that those events of 1966 to 1976 had a long-lasting and devastating effect on China.

I do not pretend to know how much of the current civic unrest in the USA is a spontaneous reaction to perceived injustice and how much is orchestrated and paid for by some shadowy groups. It does seem2016, Trump wins... that the worst of it has happened in cities with Democratic mayors, people who were willing to stand by and let the riots happen. One reason they may have done so—although it seems to defy logic—is to embarrass Trump or hurt his chances to win re-election on November 3. The extremism on display may prove to have the very opposite effect.

It has done that for me. As indicated above, I was no great fan of Trump before the start of what radicals depict as a long-overdue uprising. But frankly, I fear for the land of my birth. What has transpired in these last few months has been so awful, so over the top, so indefensible, that I wonder what the future may hold. Trump, who so often makes me cringe, is a modern-day Hans Brinker. That young boy, a 19th century fictional character, saved Holland by putting his finger in a leaking dike to hold back the sea.

My forlorn hope is that by doing so, Trump can buy time and sanity will prevail in the USA.

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7 Comments

  • Eĺly Posted October 7, 2020 9:32 pm

    I follow your messages with great interest, you are always a righteous man and you say things by name.
    About president we agree with you ,
    Romanian christian pray for his health .
    We hope for a better future even if for the moment everything is in fog.

  • Victor Hugo Limpias Ortiz Posted October 7, 2020 10:06 pm

    I totally agree with your perspective and concerns, Richard. The violence of “Floyd riots” respond typically to those far-left tactics long used in Latin America: legitimate, spontaneus and would-be-peaceful popular reactions are cleverly-and well orchestated-distorted by cover-up mercenaries, who are in charge of impulsing violence. Once most of the media has been taken by the far-left, this perverse distorsion of reality is not even mentioned, and if it is, is denied, neglected of protected (as it proves AP biased attitude). D. Trump will win again, thanks to social networks, which are quickly replacing those biased media political distortions.

  • Bettye Wood Posted October 7, 2020 10:48 pm

    It is difficult to predict the outcome of the election. After witnessing the fiasco referred to as a “debate” (only half of it, actually), I left with a feeling of hopelessness. Joe Biden seems to be a good guy, but I am doubtful he will 1) be physically and mentally capable of performing the rigors demanded of the job; and 2) last four years, leaving us with a Vice-President assuming the office. The COVID issue was and continues to be critically mismanaged. I actually am looking forward to the VP debates tonight, which is a first for me. May God bless America. Oh, and nice article, Richard.

  • Kenneth Hausmann Posted October 7, 2020 11:04 pm

    I agree with some of what you said, but Trump hit the Covid hard and fast. Shut down travel from China, ‘forced’ American companies to produce ventilators. Brought in ships to New York to act as hospitals. Fast tracked vaccines and treatments. We needed to get out of the climate accord, we are hurt by it while other countries just ignore it. Manmade climate change is a myth, although of course it is important to conserve resources and keep the pollution down. The debt increase is due largely to COVID payments and they are still trying to spend more. Record low unemployment for all minorities, many people out of poverty and off of food stamps, record stock market gains, the lower income gained a much higher percentage growth of income than higher. Biggest thing of all for me is he is pro life, while Biden promotes the slaughter of millions of unborn with federal funds. Also, Biden has promised to go after the second amendment, using Beto as his gun czar. This one isn’t close.

  • Kevin Nietmann Posted October 9, 2020 12:45 am

    Richard-Good summary of how many feel about Trump, aside from those who literal hate him (those people need to get a hobby or maybe a life). Trump’s handling of the corona virus is viewed negatively because of 24/7 propaganda about it by US media. The Democrats decided to villainize his handling of the virus as a central part of their campaign for the presidency. Let’s not forget that the Dems spent January with the phony impeachment of Trump. When the Dems could have been raising the alarm about the virus, they were on their impeachment hobby horse. So their claims of Trump under reacting to the virus sound like projection.

  • Denise Burmingham Posted October 10, 2020 11:30 am

    I voted for Trump in 2016 and voted for him again in 2020. I did not vote for him because of his personality. I voted for him because of his policies. I stayed up and watched the 2016 election and was pleasantly surprised when he was announced as our next President! Hillary was in shock. The Democrats have tried his whole presidency to get him out of office! They have wasted taxpayers money and have accomplished very little during this time. They have made his job very difficult. I am sick of how he has been treated by the Hollywood elite and others! A lot of Trump supporters are quiet because of the backlash of the leftists. I am worried about the future of our country! Prayers for peace!

  • Rex Lardner Posted October 11, 2020 4:17 am

    Richard:

    Great commentary. I actually voted for Trump but now cannot stand him. He has divided the country and still is not taking the Covid19 virus serious. I don’t know if you saw the first debate but he was awful, interrupting Biden 71 times!

    Thanks for your thoughts.

    Rex

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