“The most important vote in my lifetime”

American troops in the Pacific during the Second World War.

When a 96 year old veteran who has voted for President 18 times and finds the coming 19th vote the most important of then all, it’s worth listening. Tom Gibbs brings our attention to this article in the New Yorker by Roger Angell.

He ends his essay with this scary view of President Trump: “If Donald Trump wins this election, his nights in the White House will very soon resemble those of President Obama. After he bids an early goodnight to his family, he sits alone while he receives and tries to take in floods of information from almost innumerable national and international sources, much of it classified or top secret. His surroundings are stately, but the room is shadowed and silent. There are bits of promising news here and there, but always more bloodshed, sudden alarms, and unexpected lurking dangers. The import of the news is often veiled or contradictory, or simply impenetrable. The night wears on, and may contain brief hours of sleep. There’s time to tweet. A new day is arriving, and with it the latest rush of bad news—another police shooting out West, another suicide bomber in Yemen, and other urgent briefings from a world already caught up in the morning’s difficult events. He needs to respond, but the beginning of this President’s response is always reliably at hand: How will I look?”  (Click here to read the full article).

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