One thing I've thought about after Trump's election is my own role in getting him elected. I was extremely anti-Trump during the campaign and yes, I absolutely had/have a blind hatred for him. I think my attitude, my statements (not just mine, many people feel the same way about Trump that I do) helped push people away and ultimately to Trump. People find mindless hatred ugly and distasteful, even if there is some irony in Trump supporters feeling that way about anti-Trump hatred.
So, yeah, I think damage is being done to our democracy. But I think the only way forward is to better understand the people who currently support Trump. To stop mocking them. To stop pigeonholing them. To stop calling them names, like racists, xenophobes, homophobes, etc.. And that will be hard to do with the type of rhetoric that was coming out of the Trump campaign and the overwhelming support Trump enjoyed from openly racist, anti-immigrant organizations and individuals. But people have every right to be racist. People have every right to take an anti-immigration stand. They don't have to be right (in my or anyone else's opinion) in order to have the freedom to believe what they want and to advocate for their beliefs. Thought police have no place in our democracy.
So I think the hardest part in recovering will be for those of us who find the racist and anti-immigration ideas abhorrent, to accept that people in our democracy who have a voice and who have every right to express themselves have some degree of sympathy for those ideas and that we cannot stop that. They are part of the American team, just like pro-choice liberals are part of the team.
We can't just point to Trump and say he is the reason our democracy is in trouble. All of us need to be able to look at ourselves and understand that the world will not neatly adhere to our own world-view.
I don't necessarily disagree with this. However, I think you're dismissing the core believers in trump. The die hard people, as people who can be reasoned with.
Donald trump couldn't have won the General without the help of luke-warm democrats/independents/conservatives. Meaning, people unhappy with the DNC, untrusting of Clinton, and those who typically vote republican one way or another. These people can be reasoned with. I think most of them voted trump to either shock the system or because they really just didn't like Clinton. Unfortunately, these people aren't delegated and they typically don't caucus. They'll vote for whoever the party nominates, and sometimes they vote blue other times they vote red.
However, trump would've never killed it in the GOP primary without his hateful xenophobic rhetoric. I'm talking about the caucus going tea party clothing wearing die hard republican. These people worship trump.
This is what gives me cause for concern that there's a significant population that is terminally ill politically. How can you reasons ith people who don't believe in civil rights, deny the occurrence of climate change, believe that there's a dark conspiracy of globalists looking break down national borders, and who'd love to turn the clock back to 1950... or hell, 1850! How do youneason with people who don't believe in real facts but in the alt facts and conspiracies spewed by Rush, Alex, Drudge, and Sean? People who trust more in am radio talk show hosts than scientists, professors, economists, and former ambassadors?
Seriously, think about it, the GOP has been the "party of stupid and racists" for quite some time. Reince Piebrus after Romney's loss in 2012 ran an autopsy on the election. He concluded that the GOP needed to open its tent, soften its rhetoric on women, minoirities, and gays, and become more moderate.
Trump pulled the opposite approach and kicked ***. He excited the base by doing the opposite that was believed to be common sense. Hateful, bombastic, and xenophobic rhetoric made the base cream their pants harder than anything since Phyllis Scafly declared victory over the equal rights amendment.
Hell, those "moderates" like Jeb Bush barely even had a pulse in 2015-2016. In order to gain any popularity, a republican needed to borrow rhetoric from the 1850s southern states and 1930s Germany. The top republicans, Cruz and Trump, made Barry Goldwater look liberal.
So looking ahead in 2020 and beyond, what's there to understand about the die hard Trumpetiers who make up the core GOP today? How do you reason and compromise with people who flat out are crazy? The republican base, im talking about those caucus participants, who make most of the decisions, can they be reasoned with when they flat out don't even believe in reasoning with others?