ImLawBoy wrote:I guess my read on your take is that it sounds akin to those takes about a changing America that won't accept backward thinking like Trump's. Turns out that wasn't quite right.
In my view this is more like growing pains. The globalist push has already happened, the world order has been shaken. This is why much of the country is unhappy and looking at the remnants of industries that have disappeared. The industries haven't really disappeared, they've just disappeared
from this country.
So of course there's a backlash now. So I ask myself what's the future look like? Do I think Trump, or anyone for that matter, can turn back the clock and bring those industries back? No and here are three examples why I think that. One, the defense industry was a huge employer here in Southern California. The end of the Soviet Union killed that industry, since the arms race was what justified that spending. Not coming back. Two, the automobile industry, what can we say? It'll never be what it was, not in this country. Coal mining? Is there anyone besides those living in coal mining country who think that's going to be big again?
So yeah there's a lot of resistance right now, but when the dust settles I don't believe we are going to see a world where nations have gained some separation and have reinforced boundaries. I think it's going to be a world where the tentacles have multiplied and more of the world is linked in their grasp. I think that's a good thing by the way. The world will not improve by going backwards, only forwards. The people can make this a lot less painless by working with this change and not against it.
edit: Trump hasn't taken office yet, so we have no idea what he's going to do. In 4 years, or 8 if he gets a second term, we'll see. If Trump, armed with a Republican everything, can't put a dent in it, who will?