I think the boosting the economy and job creation are very important issues. I disagree with you that the only way to achieve those goals is to vote for Republicans. And I certainly don't believe that Trump is the best person to do it.
I don't think Republicans have all the answers either, but I more closely identify with their fiscal policies than I do the Democrats. I'm not 100% in love with Trump's economic plan, but I had some really grave concerns with Hillary's. I'd much rather give Trump's plan a try than Hillary's.
Liberals don't want people meddling with their lives either, Bob. We don't want the government telling us who we're allowed to marry, or whether it's okay for a college student to get an abortion after she was drugged and raped in her dorm. We don't want the right imposing their religious beliefs on us, telling us what books we're allowed to read, or what scientific advances we're allowed to pursue.
I agree with all that. I described myself earlier as a
moderate conservative. I added the word moderate because I'm split on many of my views. Fiscally I'm a far right conservative, however on most social issues I'm more of a centrist (even left on some issues). For instance, I'm pro-choice and pro-gay marriage. I'm also agnostic, but I sympathize with the concerns of religious people. And it should go without saying that I'm pro-science. On the other hand, I'm pro-second amendment (I have a conceal carry license) and I'm against marijuana legalization. Since I'm all over the place on these issues, I'm never going to find a presidential candidate that I 100% agree with. That's one of the reasons I put more emphasis on the fiscal policies because that's usually a place where I can find more agreement.
Once again, you might as well be describing a conservative. But we're not the ones telling people they can't marry just because we don't want to make them a cake. We're not the ones refusing to issue people a drivers licence because we don't approve of their lifestyle.
But you are the ones penalizing people and causing them to lose their business because they don't want to bake somebody a cake. While I agree with the right of a gay couple to marry, this is where I have sympathy for the religious right. Someone shouldn't be forced to compromise their religious beliefs. Just go to a different bakery.
I think you're a one issue voter, just like a lot of people on both sides. You're probably also someone who votes for the party, not the person chosen to lead it. You've likely been voting the same way for your whole adult life, and in any other election I would have had no problem with that. But this has not been a normal election, and I just wish you had widened your view a bit beyond the economic issues that matter to you.
That's mostly correct, but I wouldn't say I'm a one issue voter. It depends on what's going on in the nation and world at the time. This time around I thought getting the economy revved up was most important. I see economic growth as the key to achieving many other things, so it's just not about people enriching themselves. For instance, creating job opportunities would go a long way toward improving the terrible conditions in our inner cities. When I talked about voting for the economy a lot of people responded with comments like, "you just want the rich to get richer." That's not it at all. There are still a lot of people who don't have jobs, or are underemployed, and are really struggling to get by. Those are the people I'm thinking about. I'm not the heartless son of a bitch that some people have tried to portray me.
Also being both left and right on some issues, it's impossible for me to find a one-size-fits-all candidate. I'm always forced to make compromises. That's the hell I must live with. It's unfortunate that if you're a Republican candidate you must be for A, B and C, and if you're a Democrat you must be for X, Y and Z.
...but giving people affordable healthcare in order to save lives is the work of Satan.
That's where I have to take exception. Nobody on the right wants to take away affordable healthcare, they just have different ideas on how to do it. If you were to say that the Republican ideas are flawed and won't work, then I could accept that as a defensible position. But to say they want to take away healthcare and have people dying in the streets, that is patently false. That's exactly the kind or morality argument that I talked about early that really pisses conservatives off. Let's keep it about the facts and leave the "Republicans want poor people and grandma to die" arguments out of it.