By Stephen Macaulay
I will admit that I have underestimated the amount of fear and uncertainty that evidently exists throughout America. The fear of the Other, whether that is someone who is going to sneak across the southern border and rape and pillage or someone who is undergoing sex reassignment. The uncertainty that comes from a memory of the not-too-distant past of shelves being without toilet paper.
We want someone who will save us from that. And while Tucker Carlson’s “Daddy” comment may be perceived as creepy, that’s what I suspect many of our fellow citizens were looking for: Someone who will be in control, someone who will assuage the fear and uncertainty simply because he rails against those people who probably sent the toilet-paper-producing jobs overseas.
Were it not that the numbers for Trump are so commanding it would be easy to say that this is an election that the Democrats lost.
They did lose it — bigly — and maybe they did so because they played the rules that have been relegated to the trash can of history.
For weeks after Harris was, in effect, anointed, there were many who were critical of her lack of fulsome articulation of her plans and policies. And she did a mealy-mouthed job of trying to explain what she would do, which became rather tiresome when she kept talking about her upbringing.
Meanwhile, Trump just kept warning people of the “invasion” and the prospects of “World War III” and the “evil” nature of his opponent.
Haitians eating cats and dogs in Ohio was certainly a more striking image than any comprehensive housing plan.
“But that’s not the way it is done!” the Democrats cry. “People need to know policies!”
No they don’t.
One of the things that the Democrat procedural wonks don’t seem to recognize is that for many people 280 characters is all they want or need — at most. And they would probably prefer a GIF.
Hell, this commentary has gone on far too long by that metric.
Trump won. Harris lost. And soon we’ll see the consequences.