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Do Trump voters feel cheated by his policies?

Lets park aside the culture war for one second...

Donald Trump became President on a populist ticket which claimed to represent the interests of the little man against Wall Street. His platform was protectionist against free-trade, interventionist in favour of infrastructure spending, as well as hinting at curbing the power of big business.

Trump has opted out of T-TIP but has done nothing to change NAFTA or apply tariffs. He has cut taxes for big businesses and the rich. He has a cabinet stacked with ex-Wall Street people. In short; his economic program is conventional right-wing Republican. Also; Trump claimed to be anti-war but morphed into a hawk on Syria, Isreal, N Korea and perhaps Iran.

You can make a case for any of these policies (though I would disagree). The fact remains though that the impact of Trump is pretty much exactly the same as George W. Bush would have had if he had come to power in 2017, just taken one step further and with added chaos and controversy. Even the tax cuts have echoes of Bush because, like Dubya's own tax cut, it has greatly increased the deficit at a time of economic growth. I'm sure people remember how that worked out.

Trump was meant to be something new; an 'anti-establishment' candidate who would drain the swamp and change the system. In reality, a vote for Trump is a vote for the same 'globalist' trickle-down economics which has dominated the Anglo-phone world since the 1980s, depressed wages and increased inequality.
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Cierzo · M
Not American supporter here very disappointed with his foreign policy, again the same hawkish rhetoric and bowing to Israeli interests that has plagued American politics for decades. What happened to his promises about isolationism?

Also, although I admit I do not know it in depth, and it is early to talk about results, his tax reform does not smell good. I usually support tax cuts, but not when they are mostly for big corporations and wealthy people. There's more than enough evidence that trickle-down economics are a lie.
Northwest · M
@Cierzo [quote]Not American supporter here very disappointed with his foreign policy, again the same hawkish rhetoric and bowing to Israeli interests that has plagued American politics for decades. What happened to his promises about isolationism?[/quote]

His moves do NOT serve the best interests of Israel. They do, however, serve some other interests:

1. The Israeli Hawks, US Evangelicals and Jewish extremists, primarily in N. America. They all have the same interest in annexing the West Bank, and replacing Palestinians with extreme Jewish settlers.

2. The Kushner family/business interests. Israeli money is pouting into Kushner family interests, and in turn some of the Kushner money, is pouring into settlement support organizations.

3. US oil interests, with the Saudi heir apparent, seemingly, in Trump/Kushner's pocket.

Israel, in the long term, does benefit. History taught us that anything forced on people, only lasts for so long. In the meanwhile, Israel, and the US, will continue being the target of terrorism. A win-win solution, is the only guarantee for a safe Israel.

[quote]Also, although I admit I do not know it in depth, and it is early to talk about results, his tax reform does not smell good. I usually support tax cuts, but not when they are mostly for big corporations and wealthy people. There's more than enough evidence that trickle-down economics are a lie.[/quote]

Most people will benefit, but relatively speaking, it's a colossal giveaway to the 1% that supported Trump, and Corporate America.
ladycae · 100+, F
@Cierzo and yet before his election, you were for trump.
Cierzo · M
@ladycae Yes, and yet I think with Clinton it would be much worse.
ladycae · 100+, F
@Cierzo you don't know of what you speak. you would have to live here to know the absurdity of that statement. plus we would not have a president in a battle of insults with threats of nuclear war. which would effect everyone negatively.
Cierzo · M
@ladycae Trump and Rocket man are childish and narcissistic and say a lot of bs. With Clinton we would have less words, true, but higher chances of actual facts. Do I need to remember his words when Gaddafi died or when he callee the US to bomb Syrian air fields?