We fixed the keg said:
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This time, there is a difference. Trump is not just "not conservative", but he is rooting out and actively replacing conservatism in the only place where it used to live.
Can you expand on this part? Genuinely curious.
From the perspective of the economy, energy (green-initiatives), judicial appointments, foreign policy, immigration, and CRT/DEI, I don't see a world where another 4 years of Biden doesn't push us off an abyss leading to decades of austerity. With Trump, I see each of the above either turning around (energy/economy), or at least, greatly slowed down (immigration/CRT/DEI).
The biggest concern I have is that Biden can put us in a position where even a conservative candidate, say Desantis, is going to be a one-and-done president because the pain we will all feel doing what has to be done immediately. (at this point, that may be a reality anyway). I believe a president elected in 2028 with one or more of the list above turned around will have an easier path to fixing more of the problems.
First, I think the fact that Trump is our nominee is proof that we have reached that point already. There hasn't been more than a few adults in the room for decades, and we are too enthusiastic about the show to change that.
I think it is also important to recognize the differences between what we mean when we refer to conservatism. When I think of conservatism, that is a short name for small government federalism - the idea that if any government involvement is needed at all, it should be as small and as local as possible. When Science Denier here thinks of conservatism, he sees it as big government making decisions that are less bad than "non conservatives". Those are not the same thing. Trump is in the second camp.
The problem with the second version of "conservatism", is that the system to make those bad decisions is still in place, making bad (albeit slightly better than the worst possible) decisions for us. The only thing standing between that kind of leader (let's just call him "Trump" for simplicity's sake) and a worse kind of leader (let's call him "Biden" for the same reason) is a few thousand votes in Wisconsin or a bad pick for Attorney General, or, for example, hypothetically of course, a bad flu season. All because the system of massive federal government behemoth is still in place, and in fact, enlarged and entrenched by him.
So when Trump's Republican party refers to "conservatism", what is meant is him running the show, as opposed to those who are leftist. That gets us a better version of running into a ditch, but it also removes "not running into a ditch" from the conversation.