Why I'm With Her (And Not With Him)
INTRODUCTION
Anxiety - For the last few months, little has been on
my mind apart from one glaring issue which has induced acute anxiety in me and
resulted in many sleepless nights: the election. It’s all I can think about.
It’s practically all I dream about. So I figured I’d vent some of my excess
thoughts and feelings on the matter into a blog post, and in doing so provide
my friends and loved ones some insight into my perspectives.
Disclaimer - This is not an unbiased appraisal of both
candidates. I have an agenda, and that is to see Hillary Clinton win the
presidency next month, for reasons I hope to elucidate here. Some of my points
may be broadly drawn, and some of my policy perspectives may be shallow
(particularly economic policy) because fundamentally, I’m not a political
person. I try to follow politics as much as I can in order to be a responsible
citizen, because political elections and decisions really do affect our daily
lives, but it doesn't come naturally to me.
Christian Conviction - The primary lens through
which I view all this stuff isn’t political; it’s spiritual. It’s theological.
As a fledgling theologian and practitioner of Christian ministry I can’t help
but see this election through my experience and through my expertise, from a
vantage point of the Christian Gospel. Ordinarily I'm reticent to air my spiritual
convictions on political matters, especially considering the fact that we live
in a democracy wherein matters of policy are not dictated by particular religious teachings, and with good reason! Given how one candidate
in particular has vaunted his own support among Evangelical Christians,
however, I figured my own Evangelical perspective is fair game. So I will share
how I view the issues at play this election, paying special attention to how my
faith informs how I will vote next month. Note: this is not a religious test. I believe someone could lead our country well without explicit Christian faith. I am merely picking up an issue one of the candidates himself brought to the table.
Disagreement - All that said, I already know many of my fellow
believers (and some of my non-believing friends) disagree with my convictions
and my conclusions. I only ask for your patience, and for your respect. I
arrive at these conclusions after much prayer and consideration. I will break
my argument into a few parts, starting with:
HILLARY
Hillary Clinton is a women of unique talents, unique
experience, and utterly unique legacy. It has been said that she is among the
most qualified candidates to run for president in American history, but it has
also been said (at the Republican National Convention no less) that she is
literally in league with the Devil. The former claim may be true; I doubt the
latter is. In any case, following a contentious primary race against the far-left
progressive Bernie Sanders, Hillary has struggled to garner support among progressives
and rural conservatives alike. And now, here she stands in a race against
business magnate Donald Trump, vying for the highest office in the land. And in
spite of generally low enthusiasm around her candidacy, I support her. Here are
a few reasons:
Public Service - Hillary’s entire life’s work essentially
boils down to one thing: public service. As a lawyer, as the First Lady of
Arkansas, as the First Lady of the country, as a Senator, and as the Secretary
of State, she committed her life to serving the public, to making people’s
lives better. Those who know her best attest to her passion for helping, her
sincere, unwavering commitment to making things work for the most people. One
issue Hillary has championed most consistently throughout her career is the
welfare of children and of families. She worked toward universal health
coverage for children, for child-poverty relief initiatives. Her singular focus
around this issue makes me feel like our nation’s children will be safer and
more prosperous in Hillary’s America.
Policies
·
Gun control - Let’s make
something clear: Hillary doesn’t want to abolish the second amendment or end
personal gun ownership. Granted, some of her gun control proposals, if
implemented, may curtail the utterly unfettered access to guns that many enjoy
now, but only in an attempt to stem the epidemic of mass shootings and gun
violence in our country. Fundamentally, she wants to apply (or enforce)
universal background checks and end gun-show loopholes. She wants to keep those
on terrorist watchlists from purchasing firearms (so does Donald Trump by the
way). Personally, my pro-life convictions lead me to a much stronger anti-gun
stance than Hillary, but as the two candidates are concerned, I’m with her.
·
Racial justice - Hillary, of the
two major candidates, is the one willing to look at our national policies,
particularly those around policing and mass incarceration, which
disproportionately target and disenfranchise people of color in our country.
She talks about implicit bias and discrimination in our criminal justice system
and promises to do something about it. She meets with civil rights leaders in
an attempt to learn how to move forward. And she has, I might add, broad
support from the vast majority of people of color in our country.
·
Climate Change - She’s also the
only major party candidate willing to actively work against the effects of
human-exacerbated climate change. The vast majority of climate scientists agree
that human industry has polluted our planet such that we will experience a
severe global warming which will render our home inhospitable in the too-near
future, unless we make drastic changes now. We need a leader who will
prioritize the future of our planet over short term corporate interests.
·
Marriage Equality - Last year the
Supreme Court issued a landmark ruling which made marriage equality the law of
the land. While some of my Christian brothers and sisters may have theological
convictions around the issue of non-hetero sexuality, I hope it is clear that
Christians don’t have the right to enforce with the power of law their moral
convictions on other citizens. The government ought not possess the authority
to deny partnership rights to couples of any gender, and Hillary recognizes
that. I stand with her on this issue.
·
Health Care - My entire
family was able to procure health insurance for the first time in my life
because of the Affordable Care Act. The ACA was written for families like mine, for people like me. I know
“Obamacare” isn’t perfect, but if we scrap it entirely we’ll lose its
beneficial aspects (children can be on their parents’ plans until 26, you can’t
be denied for pre-existing conditions). Hillary wants to take what works from
the ACA and build from its foundation something more workable for everyone. I
hope we give her the chance, for my family’s sake.
·
Taxes - During the economic
rebound following the Great Recession, gains were made across the board, but a
higher percentage of these gains concentrated in the highest economic stratum.
This further calcified a pattern of wealth concentration wherein the top few percent of Americans possess more wealth than the lower half. Hillary Clinton’s tax plan entails closing corporate
loopholes and increasing taxes only on the highest earners in order to pay for
the programs she wants to implement in her presidency. Middle class families,
according to this plan, may actually see tax cuts, especially thanks to the
child tax credits she is proposing.
·
Education - People who grew
up where I grew up don’t have the same opportunities or resources as children
from middle or upper class families. It was only through education, free,
public education that I was able to get to a place of success in a field
I’m passionate about. Hillary is (as ever) committed to investing in our young
people, and allocating funds where they are truly needed: our education system.
She is even working with former-rival Senator Bernie Sanders to develop strategies
either for tuition-free or debt-free public college and debt-relief for
graduates with exorbitant student loan debt. As a student, I support these
efforts. I don’t believe these goals are naive; I think it’s just a matter of
priority. And I believe Hillary will prioritize education. To keep things fair.
Because without free education, you can’t pull yourself up by your bootstraps.
Capitalism doesn’t work without it.
·
Immigration - Contrary to the
claims of the Trump campaign, Hillary does not support purely “open borders”,
but desires comprehensive immigration reform. She wants to provide a “path to
citizenship” for immigrants already living in our country. She wants to fix the
broken system and make it a reasonable, affordable process to immigrate into
the United States, instead of punishing those immigrants who took advantage of
gaps in the system for the betterment of their families. Hillary’s is not only
the more humane plan; it’s the more economically-reasonable one.
·
Refugees - Trump supporters tend to
hold against Hillary that she desires to increase the rate of refugees coming
into the United States by 550%, which, it turns out, is true. And here’s the
thing: I applaud her for it. As a country we ought to have the moral courage to
take in displaced women and children. After all, the process for vetting
refugees is thorough; if a terrorist wanted to come into our country there are
a dozen easier ways to do it. And in any case, the US is a land of opportunity, and these folks need refuge. We must not refuse
this call to hospitality, “for thereby some have
entertained angels unawares.”
·
Living wage - For years, as inflation
has increased, the minimum wage has not increased proportionately. This means
that a family may have one parent working full time at a minimum wage job and
still be living under the poverty line. Hillary supports raising the federal
minimum wage to offset this disparity. The increase may not be as stark as
Bernie Sanders proposed earlier in the election cycle, but it will be a step in
the direction of helping struggling families make ends meat.
Running Mate - When news broke that Hillary had chosen to
run alongside Virginia Senator Tim Kaine, a few of my more progressive friends
were unenthused. He seemed like a safe choice, a strategic one. And a
moderate-leaning Catholic Democrat from a swing state is, to be sure, a
smart choice. Investigating his past and policy positions, however, has
convinced me that Kaine is a generally solid man. He’s a former-civil rights
lawyer and a family man with strong moral convictions. He’s been called a “Pope
Francis Catholic”. A man of faith with strong social justice convictions? Count
me in.
Experience - It always confounds how some consider being
a “Washington insider” a liability when it comes to running for president. Can
you imagine the same line of reasoning for any other job? Who wants some rogue novice fixing her toilet in lieu of an experienced plumber? Who would rather an
amateur tooth-enthusiast work on his teeth than a trained, credentialed
dentist? When it comes to the two major party candidates running for president,
one has a wealth (and I mean WEALTH) of experience, and the other virtually
none. I don’t know about you, but I want someone at the helm of our country who
has more than the vaguest idea what the job entails.
Listening - Much has been made of Hillary’s aloofness
toward the public. She comes across as disingenuous and calculated. She seems
to say what she needs to say in order to get what she wants. But those who have
worked closely with Hillary tell a different story. She isn’t a charismatic public
personality, they say, but a listener. She is detail-and-policy-oriented, which impels her to approach conversations with political allies and opponents alike
with a listening posture. She is driven by the stories of people she meets on
the trail. Even rivals attest to her willingness to come to the table
and listen. And at a time when our country is more divided than ever, this quality may prove invaluable.
History - I must confess the idea of a woman finally
assuming the highest office in the land is moving to me. It is, frankly,
embarrassing that it has taken us so long. America ought to be at the fore of
this kind of progress, but instead we are slogging behind many other world powers. And
why does it matter? Because representation matters. Little girls finally being
able to see someone who looks like them in our highest office is a cause worth
fighting for and celebrating. Hillary also has a strong record advocating for
women’s issues and women’s rights, here and abroad. And in a country where
women are often underpaid for their work, it may do us some good to have a
woman in office who will work to close the gap. Granted, if Hillary were, apart
from her gender, utterly unqualified, her womanhood alone would not be
sufficient reason to elect her. Fortunately, however, she has plenty of
experience and ample qualification to boot. Additionally, I believe it merits
mentioning that, while there are legitimate reasons to oppose Hillary and her
policy positions (I’ll mention a few below), the particular degree and kind
of hatred which have met Hillary’s bid for presidency are, in my opinion,
at least partially gendered. She represents, for some, the epitome of the
“bossy” woman, supposedly usurping male authority in her attempts at political
power. Again, obviously not all Hillary detractors are sexist, but the way many
Trump supporters talk about her, with gendered slurs (b***h, c**t, whore) and
sexist jokes, demonstrates how far we still must come in our pursuit of true
gender equality.
RESERVATIONS
Abortion - In spite of my left-leanings, I actually
consider myself morally pro-life. I mourn for the loss of life which takes
place in the act of abortion, and I wish Hillary had a more nuanced approach to
the issue, or at the very least greater sympathy for those who feel so strongly
on the other side. I recognize in this issue, however, a system of complex
variables at work, including the social and economic factors which keep women from
carrying their pregnancies to term. Poverty, for instance, is a driving motivator behind many
abortions. If we can deal with these other factors in constructive ways, by
making contraception more readily available, by increasing sex education in
schools and prioritizing poverty relief efforts, abortion rates will go down precipitously.
In fact, abortions are on the decline in the US as education and contraception
have become more readily available.
Death Penalty - I am also wary of distilling my pro-life
ethic down to a single political issue. I also consider the death penalty, for
instance, a pro-life issue. I do not see a Christian case for it (John 8:1-11), and
I do not believe the government should possess the power or authority to take human life.
Hillary, unfortunately, does not share my conviction here. Also, as I
mentioned, I consider gun control a pro-life issue (here Hillary and I
agree).
War - Another issue over which I disagree
with Hillary is war. I, motivated by the teachings of Jesus, am a pacifist, and
as such I consider being anti-war a pro-life issue. Further, as my libertarian,
non-interventionist friends have elucidated for me, Hillary has an
unfortunately “hawkish” posture toward war and foreign conflict. Granted, she
is not alone in this, and is certainly not more prone to intervention than her
primary opponent, but as a pacifist I do take moral issue with Hillary’s
propensity toward handling foreign conflicts with martial force. And from a policy position, I believe our money and resources ought to be allocated for
more pressing domestic matters. For this reason, the only Republican candidates
I have considered voting for in recent elections were libertarian-leaning ones,
like Ron and Rand Paul, who believe we ought to take care of our business at
home before we go on policing the rest of the world.
Scandals - And finally, I am not blind to Hillary’s
unfortunate scandals which have permeated her run for president. She has, on
occasion, made false or misleading public statements. She has used unfortunate
rhetoric on the campaign trail (I find her “deplorables” remark especially
counterproductive). She has garnered scorn over her handling of the 2012 attack
on two US facilities in Benghazi, Libya which resulted in the death of four
American officials, and for keeping a private email server and deleting certain
emails before turning over her records for investigation. Her Clinton
Foundation has also drawn some criticism over its handling of foreign
contributions while Clinton was Secretary of State. Some of these scandals
appear relatively innocuous when explained with greater context, and others have been rehashed over and over again in
hearing after hearing after hearing. When Republicans subjected Hillary to
unprecedented scrutiny over both the tragedy in Benghazi and her emails, in the
former case no blame was assigned specifically to her, and in the latter case,
she was reprimanded for carelessness but no formal charges were brought against
her.
TRUMP
Trump - And on the other hand, we have Donald
Trump. Whether or not I believed Hillary was a qualified, viable candidate for
president (I do), I would prefer virtually anyone over her opponent. In fact,
my primary impetus behind supporting Hillary as strongly as I do is
keeping this uniquely dangerous, ill-tempered, unqualified, bigoted man out of
office. It has become something of a refrain for me lately that, when I have
children someday, when they learn about this election in their history books
and ask me where I stood, I want to be able to look them in the eye and assure
them I stood up against a bully who targeted women, people of color, people
with disabilities, and others. I want to be able to tell
them that I did not compromise my morals for a man with hollow promises. And my
critiques of this man are not merely personal; they are rooted in policy. I
believe his policies would further disenfranchise many Americans who already
experience ill-treatment under our current social, economic and legal systems.
Here are my primary reasons for standing against Trump and his agendas for our
country:
Temperament - In the first place, one only need scan
Donald Trump’s twitter feed to discover what an unprecedentedly inappropriate,
disrespectful and utterly obscene candidate he is. He targets his political
opponents with dismissive epithets (“Little Marco”, “Lyin’ Ted”, “Crooked Hillary”)
which his followers latch onto with fervor. He lashes out against critics and
the media, he whines and plays the victim, and he generally behaves like a
child. When a former Miss Universe came forward claiming he had demeaned her
for her weight and race, he erroneously tweeted that she had made a sex tape
and encouraged followers to search it out. He even posited that, in the event
of a Hillary win, “second amendment people” might be able to prevent
her from appointing liberal Supreme Court justices. That’s right, folks. He
either “joked” about Hillary and her appointees being assassinated, or he meant
it seriously. Fundamentally, Donald Trump behaves like a bully, with a hair
trigger, wantonly dishing out insults and threats of violence all while being
overly-sensitive and thin-skinned himself. To have such a man in our highest
office, interacting with foreign leaders, would be a threat to our global
reputation and to our public safety.
Policies
·
Military - In spite of the
fact that the United States already has the biggest military in the world by
orders of magnitude (larger than the next eight largest national militaries
combined), Donald Trump believes it must grow. We must prepare for
war. We must be “strong” and intimidating to the rest of the world. On top of
my moral trepidation over this stance, it is utterly economically infeasible.
We’re already spending more than we can afford on defense, particularly as
education goes underfunded and our infrastructure is crumbling. Granted, Clinton
could also stand to be less “hawkish”, but she still pales in comparison to
Donald.
·
War Tactics - Donald has not
only proposed re-implementing the torturous practice of waterboarding, he
believes we should explore further methods of torture against enemy combatants (“I would bring back a hell of a lot worse than waterboarding”).
As a Christian, I believe torture stands in direct opposition to the heart of
our Gospel, as we worship a God who was tortured and killed by an unjust state.
And not only is torture immoral by the standard of most religious traditions,
it has been proven to produce false testimony! Just ask John McCain, war-hero (unless you ask Donald Trump),
torture-victim and anti-torture advocate. Donald also believes that we oughtn’t
be fighting a “politically correct” war but should rather target families of terrorists (because terrorists
don’t value their own lives). Now, this is not only utterly wicked from a moral
standpoint, it is also a war crime. Civilized nations have agreed not to wage
wars this way. If we stoop to the level of the terrorists, we will be no better
than them. We will have no moral high ground.
·
“Law and Order” - In response to
concerns around police brutality and the “Black Lives Matter” movement, Donald’s
position has been consistent: we need more “law and order”. He “stands with
police”, which for him means empowering them to crackdown on protesters,
activists and rioters. The solution to police violence against people of color
is, for Donald, more police violence against people of color. I hope
the absurdity is apparent, but in case it isn’t, I assure you
that police violence against black and Latino Americans is a real and pressing
concern, and “law and order” is an utterly irresponsible answer to it which
does nothing to solve the real underlying issues behind racial tensions in our
country.
·
Stop and Frisk - Along with his
law and order posture, Donald has proposed we revive a policing practice (“stop
and frisk”) which has been ruled unconstitutional. Courts found this tactic
resulted in disproportionate targeting of people of color who were profiled by
police for their race. Donald either doesn’t realize the practice is
unconstitutional or he doesn’t care; both prospects are troubling. And given
his record with race issues, this stands out as an even bigger red flag.
·
The Climate Change “Hoax” - Donald believes global warming is “a hoax” perpetrated
by the Chinese “in order to make U.S. manufacturing non-competitive”. We don’t
need a president who either manufactures or uncritically accepts conspiracy
theories about foreign powers manipulating our climate experts. When it comes
to climate science, I trust scientists over casino moguls.
·
Nuclear Proliferation - Donald has suggested in interviews that perhaps certain other world superpowers ought to have
nuclear weapons, like Japan or Saudi Arabia. He has also, in meetings
with defense experts, asked why we don’t use our own nuclear weapons. It
appears that nuclear warfare is very much on the table for Donald, and that
scares me, as it should you.
·
Border Wall - The center of
Donald Trump’s immigration platform is simple: build a wall. Now, on top of
being economically infeasible (he claims Mexico will pay; Mexico demurs), a wall will accomplish nothing more
than the alienation of our neighbor to the south. Mexicans aren’t our enemies.
In fact, contrary to Donald’s claims, immigrants statistically commit fewer
crimes. We need to reform the system, not build an unseemly, expensive wall.
Further, and perhaps more troublingly, Trump proposes we immediately deport all
undocumented immigrants, no matter how long they’ve lived here, no matter how
peaceably. This is troubling because it will tear families apart, as parents
are deported and their domestically-born children stay. Oh, but Donald has a
solution for this as well: we revoke birthright citizenship and deport the
children too! We deport citizens who have every right to live here
under the law. Not only is this morally problematic, it would be
economically devastating to immediately deport fifteen million people,
decimating our workforce and depriving the government the revenue of the taxes they
currently pay. Plus, for a conservative, Donald seems unbothered by what a
big-government nightmare (to borrow my friend Alec’s phrase) the
deportation force required to implement this policy change would be.
·
Taxes - Mr. Trump’s tax
plan is also rather simple: cut them. Which sounds appealing, until it becomes
clear who will really benefit from this cut: the wealthiest few. The exorbitant
tax cuts he’s proposing will save multi-billion dollar corporations a pretty
penny, while, most economists agree, leaving the burden on middle class families,
whose taxes may increase. How else could the government generate enough revenue
to pay for its blooming military, border wall and deportation force? How do you
cut taxes, increase defense and immigration spending and balance the budget?
Clue: you can’t.
·
Muslim Ban - In response to
the refugee crisis in Syria, Donald has, in lieu of offering solidarity or
support to those displaced and devastated, stoked fears and spread lies about them. Donald claims there is no
reliable process for vetting refugees. This is simply untrue. And even if it
were true, should we let our fears prevent us from being hospitable? I have
theological reasons for believing we oughtn’t. Further, Donald has proposed a
blanket ban on all Muslims hoping to enter the US which, on top of being
immoral, violates the constitution, by letter and by spirit. He has also,
remarkably, entertained the notion of keeping some sort of American Muslim database. Because apparently
religious liberty only applies to Christians.
Character - There was a time when conservative
Christians demanded that their political candidates reflect their moral
standards. It would appear this is no longer the case. Before this election
cycle, I would never have imagined Evangelical Christians supporting a thrice-married
candidate who has admitted, repeatedly and unrepentantly, to having
participated in multiple extramarital affairs. This man, who owns and operates
casinos and strip clubs all over the country. Who regularly demeans women with
his speech (“pig”, “slob”, “fat”, “disgusting”), and who has, if reports are to
be believed, sexually assaulted (and perhaps raped) numerous women. In response
to these allegations, he insinuated that he would never assault the women in
question, because they are not attractive enough for him. He has, at the
very least, bragged about sexually assaulting women, kissing
and groping them without their consent. And to speak for a moment to the issue of honesty: there’s been a persistent narrative throughout the election that, of
the two candidates, Hillary is the “crooked” “liar”. While Hillary has been
less-than-honest in moments, however, it is Donald who lies with a boldness and
persistence that are staggering, as if he himself gets to decide what’s true.
It’s possible he doesn’t even care about the veracity of his claims, because he
knows his crowd will take him at his word. Please see their respective politifact pages to compare
their public statements. And finally, for a man famous and ostensibly
well-reputed for his business dealings, Donald is notoriously unreliable in
this sphere as well. He regularly welches on paying the contractors and
service providers he employs, subsequently bullying and browbeating them into
submission lest they sue him over his failure to pay. He has intimated that
he may treat foreign diplomatic and trade negotiations the same way.
Bigotry - On top of his ill-treatment of women,
Donald has proven time and again that he is not a bit concerned about respecting people of color. In 1989 he took out
ads in every New York newspaper advocating the death penalty for five young men
of color, charged with rape but later exonerated (he still insists they are
guilty despite DNA evidence to the contrary). In 1993, before a congressional
committee, he questioned whether or not certain casino
operators were authentically Native American based on their appearance. Just over the last year or so, he claimed that Mexican immigrants are drug dealers,
criminals and rapists (“they’re not sending their best”), blustered that
the judge who was trying his Trump University case ought to be disqualified
because of his Mexican ancestry, asserted that black Americans are “living
in hell”, and regularly encouraged violence against black protesters at his
rallies. He attacked the Gold Star parents of fallen soldier Humayun Kahn
following their Democratic convention speech. For years he championed the
racist “birther” lie that our current president, by virtue of his skin color and
parentage, was not a native-born American citizen and was therefore ineligible
for office. And, perhaps most damningly, he has courted the vote of white
supremacists, former KKK leaders and the hateful, racist “alt-right” community,
consistently failing to denounce any of these groups for their overt racism.
CONCLUSIONS
Life - One issue crops up time and again when I
talk to my faithful brothers and sisters about Donald Trump: abortion.
Donald has, on the basis of this one issue alone, commandeered the votes of
many white Evangelical Americans. And this is utterly troubling to me, because
it is clear that we’re being exploited by a man who has only ever held up his
own needs above all others. He is a serial liar, philanderer, misogynist, bigot
and bully, who has only recently and out of political expediency adopted this
ostensibly “pro-life” platform. Now, I am sympathetic to the desire for a
candidate who holds life as sacred, but Donald is no such candidate. He may
claim to be pro-life, but how pro-life can a candidate be who threatens to kill
whole families? He may claim to be for religious liberty, but how pro-religious
liberty can a candidate be who would deny entrance into our country an entire
religious group? He may claim to be pro-family values but how pro-family values
can he be when he makes sexual passes at women, while married, and without
their consent? He is presenting us with facsimile versions of values we purport
to hold dear, but I beg of you, brothers and sisters, please do not be won over
by his promises and threats. In spite of his pledges to “protect Christianity”, he
will use us up and spit us out. He will do what it takes to gain more power and
prestige. And we’re rolling right over and letting him have it.
Temptation - When Jesus was tempted by Satan in the
desert, he was offered safety, prosperity and power. Donald Trump offers us the
same things. He offers us safety from terrorists, prosperity to our churches
and greater power in the form of a conservative on the Supreme Court. But if we
capitulate to the whims of this demagogue, even for a Supreme Court seat, we
will have irreversibly compromised our witness to our country and to the world.
We will have sided with an oppressor instead of the oppressed. We will have
ignored the cries of the marginalized in our midst, the people of color, LGBTQ
folks, and women, in electing a boorish man who promises to take us back to
some heydey, some past time when things were better. But when were they better,
and for whom? Were they better in the 50s, when schools were segregated and
Jim Crow laws prevented black Americans from participating as full citizens in
public life, and when suicide and alcoholism rates for suburban housewives were astronomical? Were they better during the days of our founding fathers,
when people of color were owned as property? While Donald has tapped into the
resentment of a contingent of Americans who feel underrepresented by
demographic shifts in our country, we must at least realize that he is using
us. He is saying what he believes will work. He is leveraging our fears, and making
false promises. And I hate to see my people, my faith family, so wantonly
exploited.
Faith - It is in fact not in spite of my faith but
because of my faith that I cannot stomach supporting Donald Trump. If I did not
believe in the Christian Gospel, I may well be taken in by his promises of
protection, of security. I may be convinced by his fearmongering and won over
by his “strength”. But as it is, I believe his anti-immigrant rhetoric violates
the hospitality at the heart of Christian ethics. I believe his ill
treatment of women and minorities does substantive damage against the Imago
Dei, the image of God inside every human being. I believe his greed and
top-down economic policies stand against God’s Scriptural identification with
the poor. I believe his support of torture is anti-Christ.
Savior - Yet in spite of all these anti-Christian
characteristics and ideas, Donald has postured himself as the savior of our people,
the only one who can help. But need I remind you, brothers and sisters? We
already have a savior, and one who, rather than killing his enemies, died at
the hands of his enemies to demonstrate his love. Donald represents a violent,
aggressive impulse which simply cannot hold up against the image of the
crucified God.
You Must Vote! - I have heard from many a friend and neighbor
that they simply cannot support either candidate this election. And in spite of
everything I’ve said about Hillary, and about Donald, I respect that stance. I do disagree, and wish my friends would see the gaping disparity in qualification
between these two candidates, but I respect the voting process and understand
the importance of voting one’s conscience. Many of my friends are supporting
third party candidates, like Gary Johnson or Jill Stein, and I cannot hold it
against them. I have my own policy disagreements with these two as
well, but I do not believe either of them poses the same threat to our country
and its citizens as does Donald Trump. Some are refusing to vote based on
religious conviction, and I understand that, too. Those refusing to vote out of
obstinance or laziness, however, do not have my sympathy. This is a crucial
moment in American history. And I will gladly cast an ideological vote as well
as a pragmatic vote for Hillary Clinton. I hope you will consider doing the
same.
Well First off, The reason to vote For Hillary because you are a Christian is not legitimate. Hillary Proclaimed in the third debate that She is Pro-Choice and strongly defends abortion until the day before birth. Abortion is Murder and that goes against the sixth commandment. She is also responsible for 6 deaths in Benghazi and then she breaks another commandment and lied about it.I also like how you just leave out Three Word: Radical Islamic Terrorism. Climate Change is not as important as Terrorist attacks.
ReplyDeleteWell, first off, how about you put your name with your criticism of Jordan's thoughtful post?
DeleteOf course it is a legitimate posture to have! Thanks for sharing your perspective.
ReplyDelete