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Politics Be Damned: Time for Saner Minds and Voters to Prevail

We're deep into this election season. Candidates on both sides are vying not only for votes but for those all-important delegates needed to be named the presidential candidates for their respective parties. One name I didn't think we would still be talking about at this point in the game was Donald Trump. Seriously, didn't you think that by now we would have all quit laughing and he would have gone back to "The Apprentice"? I've known a few Republicans in my time — a few women, more men, some gay and even one black Republican. They were a little crazy, but I assumed there were enough reasonable minds still in charge over there that someone would have said, "Donald, you're fired!"
But they didn't! Now the craziest chickens have come home to roost! And those are some mean spirited and angry chickens and "The Donald" is now their would-be "Rooster in Chief," giving them life as he preaches to every fear, insecurity and bias — the worst in too many of us.
For the longest time, I have been content to let the GOP drown in their own dysfunction; after all, he is their guy, but the recent Trump/Duke mash-up was a reminder that Trump and all he represents is really all of our problem.
Apparently David Duke's endorsement and Trump's response were what it took for GOP leadership to finally grow a pair. In a CNN interview, when questioned about the Duke endorsement, Trump would not condemn the former Ku Klux Klan grand wizard's support for his presidential campaign, saying that "he had no knowledge of the white supremacist leader."
His actually said, "I don't know anything about David Duke, OK? I don't know anything about what you're even talking about with white supremacy or white supremacists. So I don't know, did he endorse me or what's going on."
When asked if he would unequivocally condemn and reject the white supremacists who support Duke, Trump said he would need to conduct research into the groups. Really? He doesn't know anything about "white supremacy or white supremacists"? Has he listened to his own rhetoric and that of many of his followers? Was he just having a brain fart, because in a 2015 interview he knew about David Duke and said that he didn't want Duke's endorsement. Well, apparently that was the straw that, while it didn't break it, put a serious kink in the GOP's back. Everyone from Paul Ryan to Mitt Romney ran to the mic with varying degrees of condemnation.
Ryan publicly tongue lashed Donald Trump for refusing to denounce Duke and the Klan. Mitt went as close to full on commando as we've ever seen him, calling Trump "a phony, a fraud, a misogynist and a bully who threatens America's future." Former New Jersey Gov. Christie Todd Whitman went as far as saying she would vote for Hillary Clinton over Trump.
But seriously, GOP dudes, that's just not enough! Trump isn't just some crazy old uncle with the bad toupee saying whatever wanders through his mind that no one takes seriously. You didn't let him come out for dinner, tell a few silly stories, make some crass remarks and then shuffle off to bed so the grown folks could talk seriously. Those new voters he brought out? Well, he's been like the pied piper of rabid rats and those rabid rats have taken over the discourse of the GOP. He is power hungry, reckless, dangerous and he's got your party's nomination process by the short hairs. Now you're scrambling to halt his delegate juggernaut.
The sad thing is the rest of the GOP field isn't much better. Like they say, "If you lie down with dogs, you'll get up with fleas." Everyone was okay with Trump's antics until he started to rack up the wins.
In my humble opinion, you stand up for what you believe in. Sometimes you cut ties — even if it means a set-back or even a loss — when it's the right thing to do. Hatred, bigotry, misogyny, homophobia and divisiveness are not principles this country stands for — not that they don't exist in this country — but we have continually strived "to be a more perfect union."
If the character of the candidate (Trump) does not represent the values of the Grand Old Party, cut him loose. He's already said he has enough money to run his own campaign, so let him do it and let his ilk go with him
Then stand up and admit your role in creating the political environment from which Trump was spawned; get back to those core, pre-Tea Party values of the GOP and invite those who share these values — candidates and voters — to engage in spirited debates and convention on the issue. You stand up for what you believe in and disavow what you don't. Maybe they'd lose some of those new voters. Maybe they'd lose the election! But maybe they'd regain some credibility.
If the party leadership doesn't have the intestinal fortitude to do the right thing, then maybe it's time for all those Republicans who don't agree with this politics of division, bigotry and hypocrisy to stand up and throw all the bums out. Now, I'm not expecting this to happen, but it needs to.
The rest of us aren't off the hook! Voter turnout by Democrats has been down. On Super Tuesday, Democratic voting was down from 8,228,763 in 2008 to 5,557,243 in 2016 while Republican voters increased by 3,282,199.
None of us can sit back and hope for the best. The stakes are too high — all three branches of the government are up for grabs, not just the White House. There really is something you can do about it. Stand up for what you believe in and most importantly VOTE!

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