I wasnâ€
Two years ago, I said I would vote for a Democrat over Donald Trump in 2024. I wrote that during a Republican primary I hoped Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis would win; DeSantis had stood almost alone against COVID lockdowns and vaccine mandates, forever earning my respect.
But Trump crushed DeSantis in the primary. Ever since, I have struggled over what to do in this election.
In one sense, my vote doesnâ€
With three days left in this most brutal of campaigns, I am.
In some ways, this choice pains me.
Donald Trumpâ€
Yet.
Yet when I pull back and consider the issues, I see:
It is the Democratic Party that stands against free speech; that forced mRNA vaccines on tens of millions of healthy adults; that opened Americaâ€
What exactly does Kamala Harris stand for, if not more of the same?
Thatâ€
And if Donald Trumpâ€
In the last year, prosecutors in his former home state launched not one but two trials against him, the first aimed at bankrupting him over loans he repaid in full, the second at imprisoning him for the crime of winning in 2016. In front of juries in Manhattan, a county that voted against Trump by nearly 9 to 1 in 2020, both succeeded.
And – though the media rarely sees fit to mention this – Trump was almost assassinated in July, under circumstances that remain somewhat murky.
In response, Trump did NOT stop campaigning.
He is working harder to win votes than he ever has, in the face of an elite media that hates him more than ever. For all his complaints about rigged elections, he wants to win this one quite badly.
So, yes, Donald Trump is angry. He has the right to be.
We ALL have the right to be. For too long, our self-appointed betters – in the media, in public health, in academia – have told us they know best. They have told us that men can be women if they just click their heels three times, that the United States is an evil nation founded mostly to protect slavery, that thereâ€
Theyâ€
So I will be voting for Donald Trump.
It is not an easy choice – not for me, anyway – but it is the only choice.