Oh, that's okay then. I really hate politicians, almost as much as I hate other politicians.
truly a controversial statement (yes I know what thread I'm in). liking politicians competes with "fiscal liberal" and "reactionary" for top placement on the list of things no one describes themself as. Such a strong feeling though. You hate them? You
hate them? Not just anger, indignity, outrage; but
hate? When did you first come to hate?
It's funny, these people keep getting re-elected even though nobody likes them. I don't really get it.
Now here is where
I make the controversial claim: other than the obvious "I hate every representative in Congress except my own" thing, they keep getting elected because the only thing America agrees on is that it hates Congress, and thus we keep electing politicians who only have that in common. But as it turns out, most of the people in office (who we hate for being manipulative, corrupt, evil, insane, whatever etc.) are in office because they are pretty darn good at hating each other. Giving the constituents what they want, as it were.
It's precisely because people have such a massive, raging hate boner for politicians that they elected someone who personifies literally everything they despise in politicians. It's precisely because people started to confuse the sin (corruption, lying, stalemating, bluster, scandal, obstruction, incompetence, neglect, decadence, opulence, etc.) with the sinner, and now hate the sinner more than the sin. So now the sin doesn't matter as much, as long as its decoupled from the hated sinner. It's now about whether you really hate politicians, and how many of them. Enter Donald Trump. Because coming in as an independent, he was hated by both parties; he hates politicians more than anyone; not the bad things politicians
do, but politicians as a
class. He hated the greatest number of politicians, and they hated him, and people thought "well if the politicians hate him he can't be that bad", because by making politicians and politics, itself, the object of scorn, anything politicians do becomes wrong. If one only hates the sin, then one recognizes when a politician does something decent; but when people come to hate the sinner they define the sinners as "one who does wrong", so of course they'd reject them! We've gotten to the point where we as a society forgive the sins, but not the sinners. That's why people have such cognitive dissonance when seeing polticians (especially ones we don't like; I bet you don't think of your favorite congressman as a politician) acting human freaks us out, because we associate
being a politician with a lot of things (robotic, manipulate, lying, etc etc etc) but nothing positive. To be a politician is its own sin. And if you don't believe me, look at the election results: which party won? The Party of No. Which candidate won: Hillary Clinton, the politician, or Donald Trump, the celebrity?
And when the people who supported Trump come to hate him, will it be because he has done terrible things? Or because he has become just another politician?