- Reaction score
- 8,490
- Points
- 1,160
Yup, this sums me up too. Something went wildly wrong for the Democrats here.
In any case- Americans made their choice and he won. Republicans took the senate as well; the house isn’t called yet. His cabinet will I’m sure, be interesting. A lot of people made some fairly desperate long bets on Trump and will see that loyalty rewarded, probably to the detriment of some functionings of government.
Once the facts are fixed, all you can do is work with them as they are. Canada’s going to face very challenging policy questions. We and the rest of our western allies are going to be dealing with a very, very different America- one we can put much less faith in, unfortunately. This will have implications for our national security and sovereignty that will take time to unfold.
Ukraine is utterly fucked. Biden has two months to take such bold executive action as he can, but in this respect, the winner of the election is Putin. We can expect an emboldened Russia. Poland and the Baltics have cause to fear in the mid term.
Taiwan also has to ask itself if the conventional guarantor of its security and sovereignty can be relied on anymore. There’s a case to be made for no, it cannot.
The single biggest real thing to watch for up here will be if Trump follows through on his promise of across the board trade tariffs.that could be economically bumpy for us. We will probably also have problems at the border with significant influxes of people leaving America hoping for asylum here.
Other people smarter and more awake than I will, before too long, have many other implications for us to consider.
I don't think that different personalities could have fixed a couple of decades of bad and unpopular policies. This is not solely an American issue. Every Western country has been following the same playbook for a while now. And in every Western country that playbook has been found wanting. Incumbents have been forced to backtrack on many of their policies.
I think Covid was the breaking point. Not so much because of enforce vaccinations, perhaps more so with enforced lockdowns and deprivation of liberty, but largely because the economy was destroyed through shutting down business and printing money. Worse, the distribution of that scrip was inequitable (peculiar given the emphasis on equity). The subsidies went to people working for the government or on the dole. The people hardest hit were independents and small business owners. And at the same time, all that printed scrip, drove the price of everything higher. Then, to compound the misery, having taken millions out of work and caused the failure of many small businesses, governments decided, in their infinite wisdom, to bring in millions of low cost competitors - people that competed for seats in schools, for doctors, for houses, for jobs and for market share. And youngsters saw their prospects fade to black.
As to Ukraine - I'm on wait out.
Trump knows when to rile a crowd. He also knows not to rile someone before you start negotiations. They will be riled enough afterwards.