The Fordham Ram

Comments (1)

All The Fordham Ram Picks Reader Picks Sort: Newest

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

  • B

    Ben Arisen (@BrightLeaf88)Oct 20, 2016 at 1:38 am

    Good point, and I agree. Everyone changes their opinions and behavior over time as they grow as people. One additional point I would make, though, is that not all “flip-flops” are the same. We as voters should be able to scrutinize abrupt changes that come after a long period of steady belief or behavior more closely than we scrutinize the kinds of evolution that happen slowly over a long period of time.
    For example, it is certainly acceptable that Hillary Clinton regrets her “superpredators” comment from over a decade ago, but on the other hand her long history of scandals and dishonesty seems to have been pretty consistent over the course of her life. From the claims that she was fired from the Watergate investigation committee in the 70s for dishonesty, to the claims by the alleged rape and sexual assault victims of Bill that Hillary threatened them in the 90s, to the funneling of funds for Haiti through the Clinton foundation into the hands of campaign donors in 2010, and all the way up to recently with Benghazi, collusion with her super PAC and the Democratic Party, paying people to start violence at Trump rallies, orchestrating massive voter fraud and illegal voter registrations, pay-for-play deals with donors, indirectly accepting campaign donations from foreign governments, destruction of evidence (the emails), lying under oath, a quid-pro-quo deal with the FBI and State Department, and probably much more I can’t think of or don’t know about, Hillary has been lying and cheating her whole life. I am not inclined to believe this will stop after she gets into office, especially considering she cheated Bernie out of the primary just to get this far. I do not think this constitutes a normal and acceptable “share” of scandals.
    Likewise, Trump has some implausible changes-of-mind as well. For example, he has been pro-choice his whole life, and only recently changed his stance on this issue which I think was probably just to better suit the conservative base he is going after. I noticed in tonight’s debate Donald didn’t really seem too passionate about the abortion issue, and even refused to say that he would want Roe v. Wade to be overturned, only saying instead that he would have the states decide it. Whether he has truly abandoned the sexist attitudes he displayed in the Access Hollywood bus over a decade ago is hard to say; I would guess probably not if the recent claims of women coming forward are to be believed, but with the way Clinton handles her campaign I am not exactly convinced. The things he has said about individual women on the campaign trail and previously, like “x woman is a fat pig” or “Megyn Kelly is a dumb broad” or whatever is certainly very rude and there is a point to be made about gender-specific forms of insult but just insulting individual women is not on par with sexual assault. Besides, he also viciously attacked many men, probably more; I have never seen one adult completely dominate another like Trump bullied poor little Jeb in the primary.
    While I agree that we should not dwell on past blunders of candidates, when their behavior represents a lifelong pattern I think those trends deserve a bit more scrutiny.

    Reply
Activate Search
From the Desk of Bailey Hosfelt, Culture Editor