While I do agree with you that one person is not going to be able to fix gender ideology in one presidential term, also could we look at how bad it got in the years Biden-Harris have been in there. All of the trans agenda they have pushed on us. Changing Title 9, putting trans nutters in high political positions, inviting topless trannies to the White House and more. Even if you don't agree with all of his policies, at least he has some I REALLY do agree with. Harris is a complete no go for me. She is just beyond bad and a flip flopper on issues. I did not vote for Trump before, but I am in November. I have been a lifelong Democrat. I recently looked more into Clinton's time in office and Obama's. They both put alot of things in place that are causing our troubles now. The Democratic party has become something I can't be a part of anymore.
I won't tell you how to vote but you and I both know that Trump is transactional and that his only going concern is Trump: for the right amount of money, he'll side with gender ideology.
Thank you for your well-reasoned argument against using a chain saw to cut butter. To your excellent points I would add that Trump's reelection could lead to a reduction of gay and lesbian Americans' legal rights and a de jure return to second-class-citizen status. That's at or near the top of the fundiegelical and right-wing Catholic wish list.
Heaven knows there are times when I fantasize a Trump administration could make systemic, top-down changes to curtail the excesses of trans activism that would be difficult to accomplish under an executive branch like Biden's, which is officially affirming, inclusive and welcoming to gender identity ideology and its social consequences.
The attempt to cram "gender identity" into Title IX would be stopped in its tracks. Federal agencies would cease to push ideological campaigns such as requiring health care organizations to record patients' gender identities and report them to the government. The FDA could become far more aggressive about regulating the off-label uses of substances used in gender medicine. Perhaps there's a federal agency that could be enlisted to define standards of gender-affirming medical care based purely on the science instead of cherry picked findings, outright falsehoods and activist spin. The list goes on.
Assuming Trump is defeated, it looks like we'll need to craft strategies to achieve the outcomes mentioned above on our own. The problem is where and how to begin. Sometimes it feels like we're turning a roll of scotch tape around and around looking for the end without finding it.
While I do agree with you that one person is not going to be able to fix gender ideology in one presidential term, also could we look at how bad it got in the years Biden-Harris have been in there. All of the trans agenda they have pushed on us. Changing Title 9, putting trans nutters in high political positions, inviting topless trannies to the White House and more. Even if you don't agree with all of his policies, at least he has some I REALLY do agree with. Harris is a complete no go for me. She is just beyond bad and a flip flopper on issues. I did not vote for Trump before, but I am in November. I have been a lifelong Democrat. I recently looked more into Clinton's time in office and Obama's. They both put alot of things in place that are causing our troubles now. The Democratic party has become something I can't be a part of anymore.
I won't tell you how to vote but you and I both know that Trump is transactional and that his only going concern is Trump: for the right amount of money, he'll side with gender ideology.
Well said. I agree.
Thank you for your well-reasoned argument against using a chain saw to cut butter. To your excellent points I would add that Trump's reelection could lead to a reduction of gay and lesbian Americans' legal rights and a de jure return to second-class-citizen status. That's at or near the top of the fundiegelical and right-wing Catholic wish list.
Heaven knows there are times when I fantasize a Trump administration could make systemic, top-down changes to curtail the excesses of trans activism that would be difficult to accomplish under an executive branch like Biden's, which is officially affirming, inclusive and welcoming to gender identity ideology and its social consequences.
The attempt to cram "gender identity" into Title IX would be stopped in its tracks. Federal agencies would cease to push ideological campaigns such as requiring health care organizations to record patients' gender identities and report them to the government. The FDA could become far more aggressive about regulating the off-label uses of substances used in gender medicine. Perhaps there's a federal agency that could be enlisted to define standards of gender-affirming medical care based purely on the science instead of cherry picked findings, outright falsehoods and activist spin. The list goes on.
Assuming Trump is defeated, it looks like we'll need to craft strategies to achieve the outcomes mentioned above on our own. The problem is where and how to begin. Sometimes it feels like we're turning a roll of scotch tape around and around looking for the end without finding it.
You’re welcome