A fundamental change has now taken place in the political
parties of the United States:
Republican
Party: Now under the present
direction of the newly President Elect, Donald Trump, this can hardly be called
the Republican Party. The dynamics of thought have completely shifted. To what was traditionally a party of the elitist
right wing authority of all that was held to be the very essence of what was
truly American politics, upholding all the values of free enterprise, religious
values and all that the ruling classes of America stood for. Now it has become
a more democratic entity upholding the rights of Americans that feel that the
elitist power base has totally betrayed Main Street. Donald Trump has struck a
nerve with Americans who feel lost and forgotten in what they believe America
was and should be again. By putting a hold on immigration, which should have
been dealt with decades ago and wasn’t, and realizing that main stream America
was being lost in the process.
This clever tactic of recognizing these fundamental facts,
has brought traditional Democrats and Independents to want representation where
they have a party that’s going to stand up to congress and its total lack of
consideration for jobs, health care, and the well being of WHITE America, over
minorities. Over the years the steady influx of immigrants and illegals, has
created a division where cheap labor from immigrants at the price of white America
has been forgotten, and by the outsourcing of work to the rest of the world at
the price of the working people and middle class America.
This has resulted in the unheard ‘Rust Belts’, revolting
from all sides to newly coming of age students, with an opportunity to vote,
who see no opportunity for there futures in this country. This party should be
renamed the Nationalist party of America, the now new NPA? To my mind the
Republican Party of old was so fractured, with its myriad of ideals, it didn’t have
a hope in hell of being elected.
Democratic Party: By
contrast it appears the Democrats who formerly had this nucleus of the
electorate, backed by Unions who were the main stay of the party have completely
shifted away. You now have Hillary Clinton’s support by Wall Street, vast
corporations and super pacts, which have completely shifted to support the
America they want. It’s as though the Democratic movement has shifted to what
the Republican Party, in part was once?
In addition, you have a Bernie Sanders, who stands for what
I believe the majority of people really want, better education for all America
in order to bring up the rear to balance out the elitist force that’s driving
the country. His only problem is, it is out of total alignment with all the
values of enterprise and the very essence of what America has been since its
inception. So the Democratic Party is
really not united in its purpose, and had Bernie Sanders been given a greater
roll in this election I truly believe the result would have been different.
Conclusion: There
you have the picture, without expressing in depth that both parties wanted
reform, but it was a question of who better to bring this about. The electorate
has spoken. The situation we have today is not unlike what took place at the turn
of the twentieth century. It has all happened before, just in another way. We
had the ‘Robber barons’, J.P. Morgan, John D, Rockefeller, Andrew Carnegie and Vanderbilt. Between these four people they
controlled America. The Sherman Anti Trust laws put an end to that by busting
up these monopolies. Capitalism, small business and enterprise have been the
very essence and backbone of what America has been and is, but without
regulation unbridled greed and corruption can take over. Its is we the people
that must stop this, for the divisions that have been created between Wall
Street and Main Street have become out of control.
I have touched on a vast subject, that whatever we now face,
we must not desert the values of our ‘Founding Fathers’. We must seek ways to
create greater integration among all races. When I opened my son’s history
book, when he was in elementary school, it clearly stated that, ‘we are a
nation of immigrants’, and until that is fully respected, we will not reach
that pinnacle of becoming, as we have been, an example to the rest of the
world.
On a final note, to give my personal opinion, racism must be
faced head on and dealt with. We have a problem that has been avoided for far
too long. Arriving here for a short period in 1967 and returning to England in
1972, I was exposed to an extremely hostile environment between Black and White
people. Something I had never encountered, growing up in England. The Viet Nam
war was also a time for student revolt and the burning of draft cards. I
returned to live in America in 1976.
Even under the Carter administration these areas of racial
conflict were somehow appeased but not completely.
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