President Trump's Inauguration Speech
Full text here:
https://www.whitehouse.gov/inaugural-...
The President spoke of nationalism, protectionism, and paternalism in short sentences of small words.
The theme of the Trump-Pence campaign and now the Trump Presidency has been about "rebuilding" and "making American great again." When did America stop building? When did it stop being great?
The desire to "get back what we lost" looks to a mythic past, not to a realizable future. Rebuilding roads is not building new kinds of infrastructures. I point out that in the 1930s, the WPA built roads, but that the Internet was technically possible as we had telephones, radios, teletypes, and wire photos. The Roosevelt Administration was truly conservative, not objectively progressive. So, too, here, is the goal to "regain what we lost" not to find and create new enterprises.
https://www.whitehouse.gov/inaugural-...
The President spoke of nationalism, protectionism, and paternalism in short sentences of small words.
The theme of the Trump-Pence campaign and now the Trump Presidency has been about "rebuilding" and "making American great again." When did America stop building? When did it stop being great?
The desire to "get back what we lost" looks to a mythic past, not to a realizable future. Rebuilding roads is not building new kinds of infrastructures. I point out that in the 1930s, the WPA built roads, but that the Internet was technically possible as we had telephones, radios, teletypes, and wire photos. The Roosevelt Administration was truly conservative, not objectively progressive. So, too, here, is the goal to "regain what we lost" not to find and create new enterprises.
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I was not a Trump supporter, but I do believe that if there is a way to drain the swamp without a civil war, Trump is the only option.
America stopped being as great as it originally was conceived the day the first redistributionist gained a foothold in Congress and convinced enough gullible senators and representatives that government has the right to enforce equality of outcome, not just equality of opportunity.
I know I'm not alone here,
I know there are many of us.
But it lifts a weary spirit to see it.
I'll take a lesson from that.
Moreover, other people, seeking other futures, through other means found escape. The Catholic schools served the French, the Irish, the Germans, and the Poles who left for outlying cities that became suburbs. In the final episodes, Detroit's African-American parents sought out Catholic education for their children as a gateway out of poverty. Statistically, it seems that the urban Whites ("hillbillies") never did.
Non-union shops in the South still followed union-like work rules. They were not low-paying sweatshops.
https://www.yahoo.com/news/four-custo...
Despite my harsh words I'm not really the guy to just blast away at people.
It's obvious I'm not going to sway your mind and at this point I doubt if anyone else is keeping up with this thread.
But I can't help but bemoan.
Imagine if we had put forward a Latino or a black man. Or a popular union buster.
A man with principles more closely aligned with our agenda.
Imagine if we hadn't played straight into their hands, validating their age-old accusations, by electing the most racially antagonistic candidate in, well, ever.
Obama left this country a powder keg and Trump is a blasting cap.
I remember the 60's when universities were war zones with real fatalities and assassination stopped being unthinkable.
Blood will flow from this.
Objectivism is valuable, yes...but not the end to end all. Neither is my favored "Prime Law" or my hard worked concept of "wide scope accountability"; but I think I see a bright pin hole at the end of the progressive tunnel.
All we can really do is march on, improving ourselves and others, (by example) as we go.
Any of which I would have enthusiastically supported regardless of their flaws.
And they would have supported those same issues without being an incoherent, ill-reasoned, bumbling ass.
And they were not unelectable. Hillary was a weak candidate riding an unpopular platform.
But Trump was the spoiler. The made for TV candidate. Just as Kennedy's election turned on a television appearance, so too did this electorate swoon to the practiced manner of a TV celebrity.
And I would not have defended Mike if his point wasn't valid.
And well supported by the Objectivist community.
I rarely down-vote on this site, but my up-votes are based on the quality of a poster’s arguments, not on whether he or she is a “bona fide OBJ!”
I still look in every day but this site has strayed so far it causes me almost physical distress.
It's worse than sad - it is disgusting.
People come here looking for Objectivism and instead find this.
Objectivism is based squarely on explicit, unbreakable principles - of which Trump has shown none - a fact his followers seem incapable of admitting.
And even that's not the worst of it.
He seems to oppose the very things we believe in (free trade, free markets) and it certainly looks like he supports many of the things we abhor. (Kelo anyone?)
But who knows? He is just as duplicitous as the politicians he vilifies.
Within hours of being elected he began nonchalantly reversing positions boldly proclaimed - even chanted - a day before.
He has proven he will say whatever is expedient in the moment at hand -with no thought to its future.
But these people simply do not care.
So long as he pays lip service to their cause they are mesmerized.
Too entranced at the sound of his words to see he is the same as that which they despise.
The same power-mad would-be-king. The same LIAR - albeit from the private sector.
And they have taken over this site. THIS site.
"Galt's Gulch" rallies to such a man and down-votes a bona fide OBJ!
If Ayn Rand could she would have already disavowed this place.
Vehemently.
As only she could.
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