WhatFinger

Give Trump a Chance. He is more than his surface. He will help more people by accident than Obama did on purpose.

Presidential Dramas



You didn’t have to suspend your disbelief to vote for Obama because you believed everything he said.
Trump is drama. The theatre lights are bright. You can see what you get. You don’t have to suspend your disbelief because you have no reason to be disbelieving. It is all there right in front of you. He is not hidden. Vote for what you see, not the liberal critiques of him. Beneath the confusion of Trump’s whirlwind personality lies a central core that spins itself into completed deeds, accomplishments, buildings and confrontations with those who criticize him. Halfway through a play by Obama we give up our suspension of disbelief and realize that it is all false, that he is pushing a conservative society into a liberal disaster. The Obama drama eventually ends in disaster and the liberal audience is too stupid to leave before the third act, before the chandeliers fall down. But conservatives leave the Obama theatre because we feel that we have been lied to and that the actors are reading off Teleprompters.

However, when we’re at a Trump play we stay to the final act. We know that the theatre is structurally strong. It becomes more and more real. The actors don’t smell of hypocrisy and liberal palaver. They are what we believe because Trump is the real thing beneath his jarring speeches. Trump may forget a few lines or make odd expressions but he is sincere in what he does. Trump could be Gregory Peck in “To Kill a Mockingbird.” But now the liberal press has taken to accusing him of racism. Whatever stupid things Trump has said they are dust in the wind. You have to take the gestalt, not the verbiage. He is not rhetorical Obama. He is Trump, who makes differences; doesn’t espouse fakery. Last year I was accused of racism by two professional boxers. They were one third my age and the thought of fighting them didn’t excite me. Everybody else in my boxing gym, Gleason’s, thought their accusation was ridiculous. But like all slams it stuck to me a bit and it was a while before I was fully cleared from being a bigot. It was ridiculous but reverse prejudice always is stupid. The accusation of prejudice was so silly. I had been a rapper in a semi-black group, had backed a black label, had been a professional boxer among many black fighters and had been to jail (a supposedly black experience). I had also given black fighters jobs as messengers at my insurance firm when I had no use for messengers and just wanted to support them till they could get on their feet. The prejudice against possible prejudice has become ridiculous. Look at the apologetic Academy Awards trying to undo an injustice against Blacks that was never committed. Which is all my way of saying, give Trump a Chance. He is more than his surface. He will help more people by accident than Obama did on purpose.

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David Lawrence——

David Lawrence is a writer for Canada Free Press.


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