tallslenderguy Posted Thursday at 04:24 PM Report Posted Thursday at 04:24 PM This goes out to Trump supporters. i want to know and, hopefully understand your perspective. Using two recent speeches that Trump delivered, both of which are available unedited, so it's not someone else's reporting or opinion, just Trump. The first speech would be his recent delivery to the UN, the second would be his recent (September 30,2025) speech to the leadership of the US military at Quantico Virginia. Any Trump supporters who are willing to, would like to know your views on things like content, delivery and any and all thoughts and feelings you have about them. Quote
Moderators viking8x6 Posted Thursday at 04:30 PM Moderators Report Posted Thursday at 04:30 PM Moderator's note: A request to those who are not either Trump supporters (or conservatives who are not Trump supporters): Please be respectful of the contributions our right-wing brothers choose to share here. Shouting them down, telling them they are crazy or evil, or otherwise abusing them will not improve our communication. 2 2 Quote
nanana Posted yesterday at 01:32 AM Report Posted yesterday at 01:32 AM For full disclosure neither a Trump supporter nor anti-Trump, but think I’d pass as more conservative than many if not most on this site. 1) UN speech: a) extemporised without benefit of teleprompter. Seemed to tap Trump’s themes of unfair trade and defense deals, manipulation of climate change concerns to steer economies towards more state intervention and wreck energy security, ending wars, cultural and crime concerns relating to illegal immigration. Tone seemed typical Trump braggadocio, affection for little people and leaders he disagreed with (comments about really liking Lula da Silva). Also offers of help, e.g., US energy sales. I’d imagine it could be a bit embarrassing to be in the audience but also that audience would want to hear Trump’s views. I heard nothing that would make me embarrassed to be an American; at the same time there are some proxy back stories he seemed to obscure, e.g., drugs from Venezuela but not Colombia; Gaza genocide. 2) Dept of War speech: combo of braggadocio, motivational praise, and back-handed also motivational praise, seemed slightly patronizing, slightly appreciative. Seems similar in approach to many speeches I’ve heard from various of my past organizations’ leaders, most of whom give an impression that if it weren’t for them, the organization would have continued in a sorry direction. Best analysis I’ve read is that the whole convocation was really about enabling coordinating two of the “coms” around upcoming coordinated military maneuvers in Latin America and Middle East to shut down Venezuela- Iran cooperation. But doing it in a way that obscures it thus getting everyone into a meeting. This seems typical Trump, where you can’t take what’s going on on the surface at face value, e.g. pretending to negotiate with Hamas in UAE to set them up for Israeli bombing. I’m hoping it lands with my liberal brethren that over focusing on what Trump says in public is not necessarily the best way to “understand” him. I only jumped in when I saw that none of our real right-wing barebacker brethren had yet responded (and wanted to review the files shared). But like the OP I ‘d be interested in their take, hoping one shares his skinny. 1 Quote
tobetrained Posted 2 hours ago Report Posted 2 hours ago Just joined and, somehow, stumble first into this convo! What a world! I answer as a former Democrat now independent. The Trump vote was not just from those on the conservative side but those done with Democrats and the progressive wing. note: I voted for a random 3rd party as a protest vote to both major parties. Personally, due to progressive politics, I'm struggling to find a job. I've been told by former colleagues in those companies: They said "...they won't hire a man "(position seniority was lowered to best-qualified woman-- someone who didn't make final round of candidates for position), "...they won't hire a white man" (position scrapped and combine with another), and -- directly in the interview: "We believe in DEI policies. Why should we hire you?" [again, I'm a white man] Here are two other scenarios which demonstrate the issue with progressive politics gone wild: 1) last Halloween here in my building, the building manager says: "we won't allow trick-or-treat as it's not inclusive enough." Do I need to explain how ridiculous this is? I really hope not. 2) the women's soccer pro team (new) in Boston was announced last year. They're initial marketing campaign, "...too many balls in sports." (or whatever). The initial response was "that was transphobic." Are you kidding me? A woman's organization starts by making a "joke" about male genitalia and the only (initial) push back was transphobia. Imagine a men's club put out a marketing tag line, "too many [cats] in sports." Both are wrong. It actually took two months before one of the major national or local news services reported it as male-bashing -- which it was. It should be clear too, male owners have had to sell their teams or executives fired for that or less. It's not clear to me anything was required here -- though the team changed their name. I write these as example of how far the pendulum as swung broadly. I write on two trump-specific issues below: As for Trump directly, I don't like him or how he goes about things. But he gets credit for forcing NATO members to start seriously talking about their own self-defense and stop using the US as a shield to avoid their own defense spending. Few countries lived up to their 2% of GDP requirement and now he's got a 5% annual agreement (by 2030, I think). Whether they live up to that or not is a different convo. But now, even German Chancellor Merz publicly acknowledged (in a BBC interview) Europe has been free-riding off the US for decades. And it has. There are a whole batch or reasons but include green politics -- but FAR from limited to that -- defense production is VERY non-green. Or, take Greenland and say you believe in global warming. Russia has claimed the Arctic circle... which includes areas of Greenland. Irrelevant now but not in the future, if you believe in global warming. Denmark is in no position to defend itself from Russia let alone Greenland. Even NATO itself has done nothing. Greenland may have an army of polar bears -- but drones are more effective than they. Isn't it the the responsibility of our President to defend our own rights? In this case, why should we allow another country to close us in on both sides (Bering Strait on the west and Greenland on the east). It's actually negligence (of both Dems and Reps, as well as NATO), and clearly Russia doesn't care about human lives. I could go on -- on many different topics. But Trump's voters were those who support him and those tired of how crazy the politic left has become. Quote
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