El Dorado News-Times

Why conservati­ves still attack trump

- Dennis Prager

When people you know well, admire, and who share your values do something you strongly oppose, you have two options:

1) Cease admiring them or 2) try to understand them and change their minds.

In the case of my conservati­ve friends who still snipe (or worse) at President Trump, I have rejected option one.

The reason — beside the fact that I simply like many of them — is what I refer to as "moral bank accounts."

Every time we do good, we make a deposit into our moral bank account. And every time we do something bad, we make a withdrawal.

These conservati­ves have made so many deposits into their moral bank accounts that, in my view, their accounts all remain firmly in the black.

That means my only choice is option two. But to try to change their minds, I must first try to understand their thinking.

I have concluded that there are a few reasons that explain conservati­ves who were Never-Trumpers during the election, and who remain anti-Trump today.

The first and, by far, the greatest reason is this: They do not believe that America is engaged in a civil war, with the survival of America as we know it at stake.

While they strongly differ with the left, they do not regard the left-right battle as an existentia­l battle for preserving our nation. On the other hand, I, and other conservati­ve Trump supporters, do.

That is why, after vigorously opposing Trump's candidacy during the Republican primaries, I vigorously supported him once he won the nomination. I believed then, as I do now, that America was doomed if a Democrat had been elected president. With the Supreme Court and hundreds of additional federal judgeships in the balance; with the Democrats' relentless push toward European-style socialism — completely undoing the unique American value of limited government; the misuse of the government to suppress conservati­ve speech; the continuing degradatio­n of our universiti­es and high schools; the weakening of the American military; and so much more, America, as envisioned by the Founders, would have been lost, perhaps irreversib­ly. The "fundamenta­l transforma­tion" that candidate Barack Obama promised in 2008 would have been completed by Hillary Clinton in 2016.

To my amazement, no anti-Trump conservati­ve writer sees it that way. They all thought during the election, and still think, that while it would not have been a good thing if Hillary Clinton had won, it wouldn't have been a catastroph­e either.

That's it, in a nutshell. Many conservati­ves, including me, believe that it would have been close to over for America as America if the Republican candidate, who happened to be a flawed man named Donald Trump, had not won. Moreover, I am certain that only Donald Trump would have defeated Hillary Clinton.

In other words, I believe that Donald Trump may have saved the country. And that, in my book, covers a lot of sins — foolish tweets, included.

The Never-Trump conservati­ve argument that Trump is not a conservati­ve — one that I, too, made repeatedly during the Republican primaries — is not only no longer relevant, it is no longer true.

Had any Never-Trump conservati­ve been told, say in the summer of 2015, that a Republican would win the 2016 election and, within his first few months in office, appoint a conservati­ve to the Supreme Court; begin the process of replacing Obamacare; bomb Russia's ally, Assad, after he again used chemical weapons; appoint the most conservati­ve cabinet in modern American

history; begin undoing hysteria-based, economy-choking EPA regulation­s; label the Iranian regime "evil" in front of 50 Muslim heads of state; wear a yarmulke at the Western Wall; appoint a U.N. ambassador who regularly condemns the U.N. for its moral hypocrisy; restore the military budget; and work on lowering corporate tax rates, among other conservati­ve achievemen­ts — that Never-Trump conservati­ve would have been jumping for joy.

So, why aren't anti-Trump conservati­ves jumping for joy?

I have come to believe that many conservati­ves possess what I once thought was a left-wing monopoly — a utopian streak. Trump is too far from their ideal leader to be able to support him.

There is also a cultural divide. Anti-Trump conservati­ves are a very refined group of people. Trump doesn't talk like them. Moreover, the cultural milieu in which the vast majority of anti-Trump conservati­ves live and/or work means that to support Trump is to render oneself contemptib­le at all elite dinner parties.

In addition, anti-Trump conservati­ves see themselves as highly moral people (which they often are) who are duty-bound not to compromise themselves by strongly supporting Trump, whom they largely view as morally defective.

Finally, these people are only human: After investing so much energy in opposing Trump's election, and after predicting his nomination would lead to electoral disaster, it's hard to for them to admit they were wrong. To see him fulfill many of his conservati­ve election promises, again in defiance of prediction­s, is a bitter pill. But if they hang on to their Never-Trumpism and the president falls on his face, they can say they were right all along.

That means that only if he fails can their reputation­s be redeemed. And they, of course, know that. But there is another way. They can join the fight. They can accept an imperfect reality and acknowledg­e that we are in a civil war, and that Trump, with all his flaws, is our general. If this general is going to win, he needs the best fighters. But too many of them, some of the best minds of the conservati­ve movement, are AWOL.

I beg them: Please report for duty.

Dennis Prager's latest book, "The Ten Commandmen­ts: Still the Best Moral Code," was published by Regnery. He is a nationally syndicated radio show host and creator of PragerUniv­ersity.com.

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