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Op-Ed

Democrats master the art of ripping things up

Jay Ambrose is an op-ed columnist for Tribune News Service. Readers may email him at speaktojay@aol.com.
Jay Ambrose is an op-ed columnist for Tribune News Service. Readers may email him at speaktojay@aol.com. Miami

The two most notable things Democrats came up with after President Trump’s astonishing State of the Union address this week was the governor of Michigan spouting hooey as part of the Democratic response and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi ripping a paper version of his speech in half.

It all fit a pattern of Democrats needlessly overstating Trump’s voluminous faults, dodging his achievements and finally finding it necessary to play games to get him.

Consider, for instance, Gov. Gretchen Whitmer saying that wages have stagnated all over the country during the Trump term. The truth is what the economist Steve Moore has said: Average household incomes of the middle class have gone up $5,003 under three years of Trump as compared to $1,200 under seven years of Obama.

Wages have been rising, especially for many at the bottom; consumer confidence is up; and, of course, profits are up and the stock market is rising. Oh, that’s just for the rich, it is said, even though 55% of Americans benefit from stock increases.

Trump discussed such issues Tuesday evening, as well as how economic advances have been especially helpful to the disabled, women, workers without high school degrees and African-Americans.

Concerning this minority group, he spoke of his program growing new businesses in black neighborhoods, legislation giving more financial support to black colleges and universities, and reform of federal prisons.

It is not just black Americans who benefit from the prison program, of course, but people of all races, just as all of us benefit from a strengthened military and the fact that we are now energy independent.

To underline Trump’s points, the TV cameras would occasionally visit the balcony and focus on everyday American heroes with dramatic stories.

The Trump narrative adds up to a whole lot, something remarkable in so many directions, but especially the economy. What are the Democrats supposed to do about this? He has already done through capitalism much of what they want to do with more big government, and they aren’t about to fix what he has done wrong.

The national debt? It could ruin the economy. Trump is doing next to nothing about it, but the Democrats’ absurd spending ideas would make it unbelievably worse and their proposed tax hikes would not even pay for their new programs.

Progressives hate the man, and it is understandable given his pettiness, his vindictiveness, his vulgarity, his sloppily expressed notions so easy to misread, his lack of coherence, his narcissism, his sense of how they actually look down on millions of Americans and his own suspected bigotry.

But on top of all that, the Democrats want power and what goes with it, and they have given us three years of democratic destructiveness in an effort to get rid of Trump.

The Russian collusion investigation was a farce. This latest impeachment effort was suspicious all the way through, from the whistleblower to inadequate and unfair House hearings to the four-week delay in passing “overwhelming” evidence to the Senate, which was then told it should seek out more.

For all of this, Trump was surprisingly eloquent in his call for unity at the end of his State of the Union speech, saying that, if the men and women of Congress could somehow stand above their “differences” and take advantage of their “inheritance,” they could “conquer the unknown.”

He talked about setting sights on the “brightest star” and “walking forward together,” simultaneously rekindling “the bonds of love and loyalty and memory that link us together as citizens, as neighbors, as patriots.”

Trump had missed shaking hands with Pelosi when he walked on the stage, either intentionally or unintentionally. She then introduced him, leaving out traditional words of high respect for the office.

As he spoke, she sat behind him making faces like a spoiled fifth-grader, and then, like a teenage vandal, began ripping his written speech apart as he walked off the stage and millions watched on TV.

The act had symbolic meaning. The Democrats are ripping apart our democracy and possibilities of unity in order to have their way, even as Trump’s favorability ratings go up.

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