^First of all... indelible or inalienable?
I think you both (
@Asmodeus and
@Moxie) make great points. But a number of things...
1) I don't believe Clinton has ever said that she wants to eliminate the 2nd Amendment. All she has said, and the polls show that the majority of gun owners agree with her, is that it's not unreasonable for gun purchasers to be properly vetted before they are permitted to buy. As some have observed, it's ridiculous that a person can be on the 'no fly' list but they're still able to buy guns. This is one of the problems I have with Trump, he has lied blatantly. It's very simple to listen to Clinton's speeches about this issue to get the facts, but that doesn't suit his purposes. In any case, - and I'm no constitutional expert - Clinton would not be able to eliminate the 2nd Amendment even if she wanted to. You would need a two thirds majority of the legislature, and at least 40 States agreeing with the change. That is clearly an impossible task. Trump would know this if he studied up on the constitution, and notice I'm giving him the benefit of the doubt and assuming ignorance, but the reality is that he probably is aware, and what it comes down to again is rallying the base by... lying.
2) Are the global elite becoming unhinged? I would say not. This is just the scripted response from Trump supporters when he gets called on some of the ridiculous things he says. But I do acknowledge, given the Brexit experience, that truth is not an effective weapon in the current climate. This was never so clearly demonstrated as when Gove commented that "I think we're all a bit tired of the so called experts!"
3) I do agree that some of Clinton's flaws are magnified by what has been a remarkable 2 decades of persistent and very consistent accusations thrown in her direction. Speaking to Republicans I'm friends with (oddly enough, I'm not sure I have any personal relationships with anyone who supports the Dems), they have all privately conceded that the whole Clinton-hate thing is a bit overdone. By the way some of these people have held office, albeit mainly at the state level. What I will say though is that some of the email revelations are frankly disturbing. There's a hint of patronage there that shouldn't really exist in a functioning democracy, but perhaps we're all a bit naive!
4) I think we all need to respect why Brexit, and Bernie and Trump have been such effective campaigns. This is something my colleagues and I studied for years in banking, and to be honest we thought the Occupy movements and the riots in London a few years ago was the start of the unravelling of the status quo. At that point the establishment was able to head it off, but as I remarked to a friend then... I didn't think it was over. Capitalism or what we like to call capitalism effectively ended when the Berlin wall came down. In it's place we have seen the rise of a corrupt version. I guess we shouldn't be surprised, because the Western model could pat itself on the back following the collapse of communism and we (the people) became quite contented and amused ourselves by reading books like Fukuyama's "The end of history". What we have now is actually more correctly described as a plutocratic system. For two decades the returns to capital have grown exponentially even as the returns to labour have stagnated. For the first time in generations young adults are earning on average less than their parents in real terms. Back when we started looking at the charts in our macro discussion groups we all acknowledged that this state of affairs was unsustainable. The last time we had this type of situation a corrupted version of Marxism was created and history tells the story about what happened there. I don't know what the endgame is, but this has to change. Bernie and Trump are the American rebellion against the status quo, Brexit was in large part the British version. I say this because the parliamentary system in the UK is in many ways anti-democratic. You simply, as a voter, cannot easily get your political desires fulfilled via the ballot box in the UK. That's what made the referendum such an effective protest against the establishment. For once you could vote, and your decision could not be frustrated by the first past the post system in the UK. I guess in Presidential elections a similar thing occurs (albeit less extreme) with the electoral college system. Anyway, a big part of the reason why the returns to labour have been stagnant is that multi-national corporations have been able to arbitrage away labour costs by exporting jobs to low cost centres. This is why specifically the lower middle class have been badly hurt by globalisation, so it's not a surprise that immigration is such a hot topic. Ironically this protest movement couldn't be happening at a worse time. I believe we are just about to see the globalisation dividend for developed economies as poorer nations which have grown rapidly in the last few decades start to import the sorts of products that western economies specialise in. Now would be the worst time to pull away from globalisation so it's going to be interesting to see what happens when the dust settles.
5) I do think the choice between Trump and Clinton is a tough one. I'm highly sceptical about a lot of her economic policies, but then I'm not a huge fan of a lot of traditional Republican economic policy as well. For the comments Trump has made (and I really don't care if he means it or not), the divisiveness, racism, misogyny and the dangerous ignorance, I think that Americans will do themselves a huge disservice if they vote this guy. He simply doesn't have the temperament for this type of work. I shudder at the thought of a foreign dignitary upsetting him and him making comments that could precipitate an international incident. The guy isn't even a real Republican for goodness sakes, he's hijacked a major political party and is going to ruin the careers of a lot of politicians. Worst of all he purports to represent the aspirations of the forgotten middle when he is part of the problem in the first place! It's like a bad dream
Anyway, that's my two pennies worth. As for you Ricardo... kiddo... you're as thin skinned as Donald Trump with absolutely nothing to back it up. This is an adult conversation. Remember, don't participate unless you have your helper with you
