Darren, I don't understand what you're talking about here:
Darren wrote:You're ignoring the generations of culture, rightly or wrongly, that effected the disruption we're seeing. ... The tea party in WV was mostly the elderly retirees that were pissed off enough to go to meetings rather play bingo at senior centers. Few are internet adept. ... Add in the faithful generations of lever pulling Democrats that crossed over and there was a sea change. Blame the media/PR all you want, good or bad, change happened.
What are "the generations of culture"? What were the elderly retirees "pissed off enough" about? Are you talking about the fact that the President was a black man? What does being "internet adept" have to do with it?
Darren wrote:Trump will go down as a marketing genius that took lemons and made lemonade.
Trump is not a marketing genius; he merely proves the rule that you can fool some of the people all of the time. Anyone who had any familiarity with his track record in business in NY and NJ over the past 30 years could have told you that. His M.O. has always been to leverage the hell out of a deal, take the skimmable cash, stiff the contractors and walk away, leaving the investors holding the bag.
Darren wrote:Even rodeo clowns have an important job to do. Don't let the tomfoolery deceive you.
I don't disagree; as much as they hate Trump personally for his lack of discipline, his narcissism, his vulgarity and his complete absence of principle, the moneyed interests behind the Tea Party brand are perfectly willing to use him as tool in implementing their agenda. He wasn't their candidate and he's far from ideal, but he is fundamentally aligned with their views.
Darren wrote:IMO, Trump mobilized what was called the silent majority in the past.
Well, except for the actual fact that the majority of voters voted for Hillary Clinton. By a margin of about 3 million.
Darren wrote:When the Democrats pulled the slicky in California to stop Saunders they lost the future of the party.
Bernie Sanders is not the future of the Democratic Party. Hell, he's not even a Democrat. He was never going to win the nomination, and he and everyone else knew it. The only people "resentful" about his loss are ideological purity drones who either don't understand or don't care how a major political party actually works.
Darren wrote:When Trump stumbled in Alabama, it should be clear that the base that came together to elect Trump, is still active.
Trump's "loss" in the Strange-Moore battle has more to do with the frankly bizarre Dominionist and homophobic peculiarities of the Alabama GOP base. To the extent Steve Bannon robustly backed Moore -- and that Trump was clearly cowed by it (that last campaign appearance was excruciating) -- you can see where the power actually lies.