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|    nyc.politics    |    Politics specific to New York City    |    92,003 messages    |
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|    Message 90,636 of 92,003    |
|    my life is changed to All    |
|    =?UTF-8?Q?I=E2=80=99ve_voted_Republican_    |
|    09 Oct 20 17:54:42    |
      From: januarybaybee@gmail.com              /Reuters Oct 8, 2020               I’ve voted Republican my entire life. But I just cast my ballot for Joe       Biden                     I just did something I have never done before in a U.S. presidential race:       vote for a Democrat.              I had no choice. I want to see Donald Trump and his Republican enablers       crushed. I want to see Lindsey Graham and Mitch McConnell and other Trump       sycophants chased out of Washington.              I do not love the Democrats and nor do I love Joe Biden, though at least the       Democratic candidate seems made out of flesh and blood and radiates a       much-needed empathy. Nor does Mr. Biden have the instincts and character of a       dictator. That alone sets him        apart from the current occupant of the White House.              In recent elections I voted for George H.W. Bush, George Bush, John McCain and       Mitt Romney. When I voted for these men I did it because I believed they would       do the best job. I did not do it out of loathing for their opponents.              In 2016, put off by Mr. Trump and Hillary Clinton, I voted for an obscure       conservative candidate who did not have a hope in hell.              Not this time. Even though my single vote will not count for much, I do not       want to take any chance that Mr. Trump might be re-elected.              The things that have come out of his mouth are simply foul. At last week’s       debate he refused to condemn the Proud Boys, a white supremacist group. Nor       would he condemn white supremacy in general.              He has refused to blame Vladimir Putin for meddling in the U.S. election. He       confessed his love for North Korea’s Kim Jong-un, the most murderous tyrant       in power today.              He is destroying American democracy by casting doubt on the legitimacy of the       election and undermining a free press. He has threatened not to leave office.       I fear violence in the streets as he gives a nod and wink to his most       fanatical followers.              It makes me heart sick to see what he is doing to the country of my birth and       that of many of my relatives and ancestors.              Mr. Trump lost me when he denigrated Mr. McCain’s war service. Mr. Trump       said he prefers his heroes free – a hideous thing for a man who never risked       his life for his country.              I really thought at that moment the country would turn on him. How dare he       mock such sacrifice?              My father was a U.S. infantryman in Europe in the Second World War and he       dealt with his wounds as guest of the Germans in a POW camp. I always thought       he was a hero.              But once Mr. Trump was elected, I hoped against hope the gravity of the office       would temper him, make him more humble – especially given three million more       Americans voted for Ms. Clinton.              Instead, he claimed fraud. The popular vote was rigged. Then he bragged that       his Electoral College victory was the greatest in history. It was not, but it       was the only way he could deal with being rejected by the majority of voters.        Mr. Trump is always        the victim.              On the day after he took the oath of office, he went to give a speech at the       CIA. He stood in front of the Memorial Wall and lied about the inauguration       crowd size. Pettiness doesn’t even come close.              I could fill page after page with his lies, which have had fatal consequences       during the pandemic.              We now know, thanks to journalist Bob Woodward, that in early 2020 Mr. Trump       understood how deadly the virus was but refused to relay that to Americans. He       also thought the Democrats were using the virus to hurt his re-election       chances.              He is even willing to expose his supporters to grave illness. During the worst       of the pandemic, he held an indoor rally in Tulsa, Okla. – no masks       required. Attendee Herman Cain, a former GOP presidential candidate, died of       the virus. And now COVID-19        is wreaking havoc in the White House, with Mr. Trump himself contracting the       virus. He is still playing it down, telling Americans there is nothing to fear       – ignoring the devastating fact that more than 211,000 Americans have died       and many who have        recovered are still feeling the ill effects.              I do not want to see the end of the Republican Party. When I was 18 years old,       I registered as a Republican because I saw it as a party of honor. It really       was the party of Lincoln. Now, I find the label embarrassing – a repudiation       of all that was        good in my home country.              It is not too late for the GOP to reassert its true self. But if Mr. Trump is       re-elected, I fear the Republicans are doomed and the United States will be in       danger of losing its soul.              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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