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Donald Trump isn?t a conservative. He?s a blowhard

Waco WaltzWaco Waltz Member Posts: 10,836 ✭✭
edited August 2015 in Politics
I don't trust Trump and I think the writer here has it right except maybe for his ideas on China. Tariffs would encourage Americans manufacturers to start making thing made in America. Chinese goods would become more expensive? Good, stop buying the junk.



It's Time For Conservatives To Reject Donald Trump
Donald Trump isn't a conservative. He's a blowhard.
Patrick Hedger

By Patrick Hedger
JULY 29, 2015




This has gone on long enough. All that anyone can talk about right now is how Republican voters are itching for someone to "stand and fight," "speak his mind," and "tell it like it is." All right then, here goes.

Donald Trump is not a conservative, and it's beyond time every Republican knows it. This MSNBC caricature of the GOP incarnate is getting heaps of praise from frustrated conservative base voters and unfortunately too much airtime from conservative political pundits because he evidently "tells it like it is."


Except that he doesn't.

Trump's number-one issue is immigration and Mexico. They are "the new China," after all. whatever that means. Thank you, Mr. Trump, for raising the issue of border security, as if it weren't already an integral part of every single platform the other GOP candidates (even of Rand Paul). We can agree that border security is important. Beyond that, Trumponomics is a mess of routinely debunked fallacies and pages pulled straight from Bernie Sanders' manifesto.

Donald Trump Is a Health-Care Socialist
First off, Trump explicitly supports single-payer healthcare (i.e., Europe and Canada). "[W]e need, as a nation, to reexamine the single-payer plan." That is a direct quote from Trump. It's in his 2000 book, "The America We Deserve." As of last week, Trump still defends his position on socialized medicine. Americans don't deserve long waits for poor care and a burdensome tax regime to fund it all.

Trump's grand plan is to expand these programs?
We don't even need to look across the border or the Atlantic to see the kind of mess single-payer creates. Medicaid is a single-payer system. A well-known study published in the New England Journal of Medicine found that Medicaid produces no discernible improvement in health outcomes versus being uninsured. Government "insurance" is that bad. In fact, the only difference found in the study was that Medicaid recipients consumed a lot more healthcare than the control group.

The same problems exist with Medicare. As Michael Tanner of the Cato Institute explains: "Studies have long shown that there is little correlation between Medicare spending and healthy outcomes." How do Americans "deserve" systems that are functionally no better than being uninsured?

Making matters worse, these programs are absolutely bankrupting the nation. By 2031, entitlement spending and interest on the debt will consume 100 percent of tax revenue. All other spending, including defense and border security, will come from borrowed money, much of it probably from China. And Trump's grand plan is to expand these programs?

Donald Trump Also Supports Higher Taxes
His plan to help pay for this massive new government takeover of healthcare is also quite troubling. Trump has expressed support for raising the corporate tax to help cover the increased spending. Currently, the United States has the highest corporate tax rate in the industrialized world; U.S. companies face nearly a 40 percent combined state and federal rate. Even President Obama has expressed support for lowering the rate.

After all, you can't sell only 14.25 percent of a yacht.
Jacking up the corporate tax rate to fund a nationalization of the healthcare industry is perhaps one of Trump's more mild tax plans.

Trump has also proposed a one-time, 14.25 percent wealth tax on all assets above $10 million. He proposed the tax in 1999 as a way of trying to eliminate the more modest national debt at the time. Such a policy would actually just end up wiping out the economy instead. Wealth and cash are very different things. Wealth is your home, your car, other belongings, and investments. A one-time mega-tax on these things would cause a massive fire sale across the country. After all, you can't sell only 14.25 percent of a yacht. Stocks, real estate, and other assets would flood the market, destroying much of the value of all of these things, be they on the market or not.

Mercantilism Isn't Free Trade, Donald Trump
Let's talk China and trade. Trump claims to be a free-trade advocate. The problem with that is that Trump has also threatened China with a 25 percent tariff. First off, China wouldn't pay for this tariff; you would. Consumer goods would become much more expensive across the board. Tariffs only deplete purchasing power and are effectively major regressive taxes on the poor.

We ought to be outraged at the downright contradictions that emanate from Trump within seconds of each other.
Second, we've already had a numbskull Republican president wage an unprovoked trade war. It was Herbert Hoover when he signed the Smoot-Hawley Tariff into law. What happened? Other nations retaliated and raised tariffs on American-made goods (as China would surely do) and U.S. unemployment subsequently spiked. If you haven't heard of this dramatic episode in American history, try it by its more common name: The Great Depression, to which the Smoot-Hawley Tariff was a major contributor, if not an igniting factor.

All this being said, it isn't the more nuanced economics that ought to frustrate conservatives. Some of these concepts are a little tricky. Instead, we ought to be outraged at the downright contradictions that emanate from Trump within seconds of each other. On one hand, we are supposed to believe that Mexico is "just killing us" economically. On the other, we are supposed to believe that Mexicans are flooding here for a better life. Which is it? This is the same kind of populist nonsense we hear from Democrats when they cry, "Education and healthcare should be free!" while at the same time demand that "Teachers and nurses should be paid more!"

Enough is enough. The frustration of conservatives toward politicians is understandable and completely warranted. Republicans often get to Washington and don't do what they say. But right now, we ought to be paying more attention to what Donald Trump is really saying, or we'll rue the day he's in a position to do anything.

Patrick Hedger is the policy director of American Encore, a group dedicated to promoting free markets and free speech. Patrick is a native of Florida, a graduate of George Mason University who holds a BA in government, and pursuing a master's degree in public policy.
2016 Barack Obama Capitalism Cato Inst conservatives Donald Trump Free Market GOP Rand Paul Republicans Ron Paul taxes Trade

Comments

  • nordnord Member Posts: 6,106
    edited November -1
    Waco,

    You may not like him. You may not trust him. You may not agree with him. That's just fine.

    But the Donald is shaking up the establishment big time. He's very likely smarter than the entire bunch going against him and I don't think he gives a fig about their hurt feelings.

    Trump electable? A few weeks ago I'd have said no. Today I'm not so sure. There are many on both sides who have become fed up with the Washington insiders. Trump may just be the man to fetch the golden ring out of the hands of those who have been anointed.

    I guess we'll see a bit more tonight. With any luck blood will be drawn. Remember... The pig that's stuck the worst screams the loudest.
  • bpostbpost Member Posts: 32,669 ✭✭✭✭
    edited November -1
    Trump is good for the process of electing a president. His unabashed willingness to say things a majority of Americans think has created excitement in politics that keep the Media filling hours of otherwise boring TV air time with boring talking head verbiage about Trump.

    We just went through a mid term election with the same old finger pointing at the other guy for America's ills. What happened; Mitch (useless as teats on a boar hog) McConnell and John (cry me a river and kiss Pelosi) Boehner were sent back to DC to do the same crap they have done for years, NOTHING.

    Trump makes it exciting but he would be a poor choice for POTUS. He is NOT conservative, he is for, about and focused on what is best for Trump.
  • Waco WaltzWaco Waltz Member Posts: 10,836 ✭✭
    edited November -1
    He is good at injecting needed topics into the death but I think that's all he's going to be doing.
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