I think our own parties are the ones we ought to criticize the most. I haven't done so as much here because y'all do that for me, but in personal conversations I'm usually more critical of Trump than anyone else (unless there's someone just outright opposed to him).Esquire Bertissimmo wrote: ↑Thu Jun 26, 2025 5:13 pmI really feel for Americans in this moment.
A lot of y'all clearly felt forced to pick between bad options and now you're getting some policies that, while foreseeable, weren't really what you were signing up for.
The burden here really probably should weigh heaviest on Trump voters, not because of moral culpability, but because their voices are the only ones that really matter in this case. A young conservative Christian making a principled case about defending the constitution and Americans' civil liberties would be much more impactful at this point than yet another blue haired oddball mixing their condemnation of ICE tactics (something I hope most Americans could agree with) with a deeply divisive and unpopular stance on immigration (let them all in, let them all stay, denigrate anyone who has a problem with this).
So I agree, Republicans ought to recognize tribalism within our own and fight against it. Just because we voted for the fellow doesn't mean that we have to have an ego about it and think that everything he does is right. He's human, he's going to make mistakes, and he's in a position of power, meaning that he constantly has the temptation towards corruption. If we don't recognize that, then we're just naive.
That said, I also believe that we ought to hold to our principles. But doing so doesn't require blank-check endorsement of Trump.