I agree with the gist of this. But, I don't think this was a repudiation of Obama. Obama's approval rating is over 55%, much higher than either of the candidates. Obamacare has some issues, especially in regard to the rate hikes we're about to see. But, I don't think this election is the result of repudiating the policies of a president that most of the country approves of.Kerfuffle wrote:The sun will come up tomorrow - that's what will happen and we'll be fine. I'm very happy about the outcome - this was an election about the lesser of 2 evils and who you didn't like more. Trump, while offensive in his comments, is not going to start launching nuclear weapons or set up concentration camps as the propagandists like to scare people with. Hillary is corrupt and people have had enough of her corruption. This election was also a total repudiation of Obama and his policies - people are fed up. I think it's funny though that people in Sweden would even care about the US election.Frusciante wrote:Yikes. What the hell will happen now? In Sweden we're in shock...at work today there was such a weird feeling. Everyone walked around in some kind of bubble, not sure what to think. What are your thoughts?
Also, I was mostly never concerned about him doing some of the divisive things he mentioned. And, I think that's true of most people that don't support him. I mean, we're not totally clueless. I didn't reject him out of fear of him accomplishing those things. I rejected him because the world view he has presented for 15 months doesn't remotely align with mine. Take the muslim ban for example. There was no way that was ever going to happen. I'm well aware of that. But, the fact that he thought that was a way to gain support is a window into how he thinks and views things. That's what I'm rejecting, not the possibility of him actually doing these things. That's a really important distinction.