But this is to be expected for a political outsider candidate to have very little experience in politics, really.
... see, just a little bit ago I said a few words on business practices...
No, this is not to be expected for an outsider than has little experience in politics, not unless they have fairly significant character and/or cognition flaws. Experience has nothing to do with it, having less foresight than a blind lobotomized rhesus macaque does (that's the charitable interpretation, mind; the other ones involve varying degrees of malice).
Please don't be one of those people that piss all over actual outsiders of little experience that are worth two dessicated damns by saying this is the level of behavior you expect from them
Even if y'lack experience, you can have enthusiasm without enthusiastically shooting yourself in the foot in the process. Generally it ain't even that
difficult (to at least only clip a toe instead of burying the bullet right in the center) if you stop to think for two seconds, or have the basic administration/leadership competence the nonexistent gods gave a diseased pinecone. And we really should be able to expect at least
that much from a political candidate, regardless of their previous experience or adherence to current political structure. Clearly we can't from trump, but that was clear a long time ago. Let's at least not let his actions set the bar for those that come later.
Rest of that bit, just... fine, okay, if you call this fulfilling promises. Just, for love of fornication,
please don't internalize this as normal, standard practice, or anything even remotely resembling either, even for folks of a roughly similar background. It's not. At all.
The war won't go on forever, and will likely end in pretty short order (at least in Syria and Iraq) if people would stop funding jihad there. That's why I think the USA should continue helping the Iraqi army kick out ISIS and the other bullshit infesting the place but back off in Syria and let the government and the Russians do the same.
*scratches head* The conflicts in that region have been going on for longer than I've been alive, and probably longer than both our lifespans combined. This particular conflict may be coming to a temporary close, but for all it's been pretty terrible the actual conflicts are rarely more than a small fraction of the
problem. Funding is only part of it, and while that should be addressed, too, the stuff I was talking about was the human resource aspect, leftover soldiers old and new. Even ignoring the base ethical component, that's a good chunk of what refugee related political stuff is about, trying to reduce the likelihood of radicalization, increase the resources nearer state actors have to deal with their own groups or military/etc. response to the conflict itself, all that sort of junk. Yeah, the US's investment in that's been kinda' piss poor (particularly related to our capability) and those we
did take in generally not the likeliest risk vector or whathaveyou, but... every bit helps, and at least we should have been avoiding making the step from anemic to actively counterproductive, y'know? Remains to be seen if we're going to actually manage to backpeddle on that front, but...