I think this election cycle President Trump won so handily, not only because his competition was grossly incompetent, but because it was far less taboo this time around to be a Trump supporter.
In 2016, before President Trump had a chance to establish a four-year record for himself in office, it wasn't popular to openly support him. His "Make America Great Again" hats were ridiculed as a cheap branding trick and the mainstream media was unrelenting in its quest to crucify not only Trump, but those who supported him.
Throughout the last four years of political lunacy, which included wide-open borders, rising inflation, squandering of taxpayer cash, and multiple geopolitical dust-ups, it became far less of a faux pas to support Trump publicly. This period culminated in an internal coup that subverted the primary process, further reinforcing this shift.
Today, there are still scores of Democrats who believe Trump is irredeemable and repugnant, just as there are still plenty of news organizations that spend 24 hours a day attempting to make him look bad. But this election go-round, there were just too many Americans on the center-left, center, and center-right who decided that the humiliation they would need to endure by supporting Trump publicly paled in comparison to how insulted they felt by the current administration's assumption that they would buy an entire campaign based on flip-flopping, outright lies, race hustling, and identity politics.
For every one person that still found it inconceivable to support Trump publicly, there were two more, myself included, who simply could no longer endure having their character and intelligence insulted strictly because they backed a set of political ideals that, at any other point in recent history, would've been considered center-left, moderate or barely right-leaning.
With that sea change among the most crucial part of the voter base, inclusive of independents and many around the center of the political aisle, Trump won this election in a landslide. And Democrats, who had been told many times over that their political strategies were wearing thin, were forced to face undeniable, quantitative proof of just how much of the American public agreed with this assessment.
As such, it's undeniable that the nation has issued a collective exhale in response to the election results. Many people who voted for Trump, and who may have still been wondering whether it's OK to express their political beliefs publicly without being called "garbage," now know that they can: they are in the company of more than 70 million other voters and form the majority of the country. For years, Trump campaigned on the saying that his voters were the "silent majority." This election proved him right.
It was risky for many high-profile people to come out and publicly endorse Donald Trump prior to this election, and is a testament to just how much the left has lost its way. Had Trump not won, many of these people would have been lambasted as "far-right wingers," "purveyors of misinformation," and people whose moral and ethical integrity should be called into question heading into another Democratic administration.
But instead, with a Trump mandate, millions of Americans can exhale publicly and, like Joe Rogan said last week, finally just admit that no matter what everybody says, they just like President Trump. Rogan said on his podcast a couple of days ago:
"...you're getting what you get. That's who the guy is and I like him. I've gone I've grown to like him. I had a much more negative opinion of him back in the day because it was There's only so much you can pay attention to and do deep dives on right before you lose your f*cking mind and with him I was like It's probably not good for the country."And what we saw last night at the UFC fight, where Trump had a great interaction with fighter Jon Jones, who handed him his belt after winning his fight, is that whether people like it or not, the man that the media told us was Hitler nonstop has morphed into the people's president.
I wrote last week about how this election doesn't just feel like the beginning of four years of change; it feels like it could be spearheading a populist/libertarian renaissance in the country that could last multiple election cycles.
You could tell from his entrance to the fights last night that the nation is starting to feel the excitement for this potential, too. Seeing Trump at the fights last night was like the flyover before an NFL game. It was one of many moments over the last year while he was campaigning that people muttered: "We're back. America is back."
Jon Jones made an astute statement last night when he handed Trump his belt after winning his fight. We're in this together, and whether people like it or not, right now Trump is now the People's Champ — and it doesn't matter if you don't like it, because the election numbers back it up.
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