y66, on 2016-December-02, 20:23, said:
Time to turn attention away from the Trump Show and focus on his basic policy agenda and the ways in which it touches millions of people? Good idea.
For convenience I copy the link here rather than the quoted passage. The linked article has further links. It's very useful but it gets deep fast.
For example, his first bulleted point:
Repeal of the Affordable Care Act, stripping health insurance away from millions while reducing taxes on the wealthy
has a link ( already highlighted I now see) to
http://www.vox.com/2...price-obamacare
which has a link to
http://tomprice.hous...0Act%202015.pdf
As I say, it is useful but it gets deep.
The ACA is complicated. And repealing the ACA is only the first clause in the above sentence.
Now what has Trump said? He is going to repeal the ACA and replace it by something "really terrific". Who can object to really terrific? And so we get back to Trump the person. I don't believe a word he says.
I do agree that we are being jerked around. Trump sees an advantage to doing this, Jon, as far as I can tell, does it for the sheer pleasure of it.
What to do? Well, that depends on who, on when, and on goals. And it depends, more than just a little, on what we think of members of Congress. The Republicans obviously have a lot of control. Not complete perhaps, but a lot. They can ram a lot of things through and if it all comes down to party line votes I expect they will do just that. The voters expect them to do so. Senate rules about filibusters can be changed, and anyway I do not favor Democrats taking their cue from Republican intransigence of the past eight years. So where does this leave us? Not anywhere good.
I generally put some faith in clarity and honesty. To as large an extent as possible, I hope that the likely consequences of various proposed changes can be laid out. And that's where honesty and clarity will be of extreme importance. If the planned changes still have the support of the people, then I expect that we will be making those changes. On the other hand, if some of the consequences don't look so good, and if Congress and the President say they are going to do them anyway because they have the power and that's that, then there will be another election in 2018.
I realize this is not exactly an optimistic view. Realism often conflicts with optimism.
I think that the Hamilton brouhaha is a fine example of the approach the cited article is trying to discourage. Lots of publicity, absolutely no effect. Or at least no positive effect. We will see what actually can be done.