Name me a conservative lost, but Donald Trump is not my cup of tea.
Rand Paul was a candidate that I liked, the one who suffered a charisma deficit, but a conservative who actually referred to the constitution.
I thought that he had the opportunity to attract juvenile voters and equalize Republicans from their impulses of war parties towards the appearance of hearty fiscal health.
As a result, Paweł was recorded early by the GOP establishment as some hazardous “insulationist”, which means that he did not want American children to fight wars in the Middle East.
At that time, the establishment GOP did not mind Trump when he sucking all oxygen in television media in Fox News, and thus the pursuit of Paul’s campaign. In the minds of the establishment, Trump had to be a useful idiot.
He would pay the attention of the candidates who threatened the establishment, and when the time finally came, the wise men released Jeb! and his 100 million dollars and a cruise to victory.
It was a great plan, except for one thing: reality.
It didn’t happen, right? Now they are afraid of Trump.
I am not afraid of him – Congress and the courts will do their work – but Trump is everything I don’t like for the leader for the republic.
It is charismatic and full of undisputed, with a campaign built mainly on a messianic charm. His basic real believer really doesn’t care about what he is saying. So Trump is rather like the current president, only Pinker, with crazy hair and a much larger attitude and a smaller number of media mongrels begging for their cakes.
Having said that, I love what Trump did with the Republican political establishment.
Because if any collection of Łasiska deserves what comes to them, then this crew, for all the promises they made in a conservative base, and they broke them all the time so that the great donors were not bad.
With each Trump’s victory, and every squeak and scream from GOP Pucha-Bahs, I enjoy a picture that I built in the Kass Mind Palace:
GOP painting in the Renaissance style as Roman senators in gowns with a wild red barbarian at the gates.
They raise nasty hands-sorely reserved for lifting the cup and ordering slaves to fall over-and beg leather barbarian about mercy.
They are preparing to remove the knees. They hate him, and this horse smell and skin and barbaric hygiene. But they like to be close to power. And if he still wins, you’ll see that they are cozy. This is what the establishment types do.
And I can’t say that I don’t like what is happening because they deserve it.
The common wisdom is that if Trump continues and wins the republican nomination, he will be concerned about Hillary Clinton’s democrat, who recently announced that he was always trying to tell the truth.
But I’m not so sure. Still, if you read Lorca, you get a panic of GOP establishment. They pay about the disaster.
They do not say that they would prefer that Democrat Hillary Clinton – a real candidate for Wall Street – than Trump.
But they haven’t abandoned their dreams about the ticket yet. They think that if they manage to force Ben Carson to give up and organize a marriage, something that will raise his novel taste, Marco Rubio. If they can only talk to Ted Cruz, but they can’t because they spent the last few years, hating Cruz’s courage.
Pooh Bahowie missed the reflection of John Kasich, although Kasich in some polls is running for vice president and follows Trump in Ohio. Kasich’s main problem is that he can’t stop giggling. I don’t think it’s his fault. This is just the way the guy says. But who wants a giggle president? Nobody.
They completely missed the fact that the American nation is more enraged than ever and for a reason. The party leaders thought that they could melt this anger.
“They did not see Trump as a ship for all this anger,” said Tom Bevan, a friend and publisher of the Realclearpolitics page, in an interview with the upcoming episode of “The Chicago Way”.
“They looked at Trump and thought … There is no way, like Republicans, no matter how bad they would gather around this guy. You heard that the types of establishment say that they do not know one person who would vote for Donald Trump and then leaves and wins.
I offered my crazy theory: they thought they could exploit a barbarian to stop candidates such as Paul.
“They did not know that they would end up with the candidate (Trump) on the television stage in a country who would say that George W. Bush lied us in the war in Iraq and was responsible for September 11,” said Bevan. “They ended up much worse than Rand Paul.”
Trump’s arguments regarding Iraq resonate with republican voters. And this is a dramatic change among the rank and files that has only been coming in the last few years.
The anger you see on the republican side will hit the Democrats in the next election cycle. Although I was hoping, I think it is too early for this kind of rebellion this year. Liberal media ripped off GOP for the fact that so many candidates applied for the president, but it was the democratic party that isolated against democracy.
All thus feeling Bern for Bern Sanders, will soon be aware that Clinton and the Democratic Party have already falsified the game with all their superdelegates and cash on Wall Street.
But this is in the next cycle.
Now is the time of Trump, a barbarian at the gates of the Republican Establishment.

