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We have serious problems to solve, and we need serious people to solve them. And whatever your particular problem is, I promise you, Bob Rumson (Donald Trump) is not the least bit interested in solving it. He is interested in two things and two things only: making you afraid of it and telling you who's to blame for it. That, ladies and gentlemen, is how you win elections. You gather a group of middle-aged, middle-class, middle-income voters who remember with longing an easier time, and you talk to them about family and American values and character. And wave an old photo of Mexican immigrants, Muslims, or a chinese person, and you scream about patriotism and you tell them, she's to blame for their lot in life,
The American President, 1995
With editing by Goose
Seeking America’s ‘lost’ greatness and finding Trump most appealing
The way Joe McCoy sees it, the last time America was great was when Ronald Reagan was president, when people played by the rules. No, it was in the ’70s, Holly Martin says, when you could depend on Americans to work hard. No, to find true American greatness, Steve Trivett contends, you need to go back to before the Vietnam War, “when you could still own a home and have a good job even if you didn’t have a college education.”
Even if they don’t have “Make America Great Again” campaign caps, Donald Trump’s supporters easily recite the signature slogan of the real estate developer’s insurgent presidential bid. And even if they don’t agree on exactly why the country lost its way, they do accept — give or take a few degrees of hyperbole — Trump’s contention that the United States has become, as he has put it, “an economic wasteland” that is “committing cultural suicide.”
The premise behind “Make America Great Again” is that the country is no longer great. It can be great again, and the campaign has a certain can-do billionaire in mind as the guy to make that happen, but at the moment, the leading contender for the nomination of the party that regularly touts the notion of American exceptionalism is arguing that the country ain’t what it used to be.
Interviews with Trump supporters across the country find a profusion of perspectives on how and when America lost its mojo; what bonds them is a sense of frustration so abiding that they’re willing to take a chance on a man they readily admit is anything but presidential, at least the way the term has historically been defined.
“The way he talks is just silly sometimes — he sounds like a fourth-grader,” said Holly Martin, a freelance technology writer who recently moved, in search of a lower cost of living, from the suburbs of Washington to the exurban town of Winchester, Va. But Martin, 59, attended a training session for Trump campaign volunteers recently because “he talks like a regular guy, and he actually loves this country. He’s not afraid to say that we’ve lost our good character.”
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I would argue that the last time America was great was during the early Kennedy years. You had to be there to understand and I was.
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I would agree with that flowergirl.
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Well, if you were a black person living in the south, you might not agree.
Just sayin'
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Or a draft age male living anywhere who was paying attention to the steady increase of "military advisers" being sent to southeast Asia.
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Indeed.
And don't forget very nearly coming to nuclear armageddon when some fool put missiles in Cuba.
In 1962 Rachel Carson wrote Silent Spring, telling of how indiscriminat use of pesticides was killing us.
Some American rivers were so polluted that, by the end of the 60s a river in Ohio caught fire.
The five year survival rate for a child with leukemia was one fourth of what it is today,,,,,,,,,,,,
As Billy Joel wrote about nostalgia:
"You can get just so much
From a good thing
You can linger too long
In your dreams
Say goodbye to the
Oldies but goodies
'Cause the good ole days weren't
Always good
And tomorrow ain't as bad as it seems"
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You can find something wrong with any time period. The 50's, which so many repubs want to go back to, were horrible in many ways. People got polio, divorce was shameful. One certainly couldn't be openly gay back then. People stayed in terrible marriages. But we were building highways and roads.
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florentine wrote:
You can find something wrong with any time period. The 50's, which so many repubs want to go back to, were horrible in many ways. People got polio, divorce was shameful. One certainly couldn't be openly gay back then. People stayed in terrible marriages. But we were building highways and roads.
My point exactly
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The best day of my life is today. In the here and now I have some control to positively effect my life and the lives of others around me. The future holds exciting promise. All the yesterday's are filled with memories . . . Some good, some not so good, and some OK, but there is nothing that I can do that will change the past, and I can look forward to the promise of tomorrow while doing the best I can today.
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Ah those rose-tinted history goggles.