G I N T wrote:The leaked video did decide the election. That and the comments about some irrelevant Hispanic woman/former beauty pageant contestant from over 20 years ago. Take a look at the polling numbers before and after that happened. It shows where the voters' priorities are, and it's really sad that irrelevant nobodies like Alicia Machado and a behind-the-scenes private conversation about nothing to do with actual policies, decision-making, leadership, etc (you know, the stuff that actually does matter when electing a president) are determining a presidential election.
Alicia Machado has only one vote, she isn't deciding anything. It's just his general attitude about, well, people that make him undesirable to most as president. Specifically, people are afraid that his attitude will prevent him from being able to be a good leader. He's very disliked (as is Hilary), which is not a typical quality in a great leader.
I have no problem with Clinton winning, even though I think she's garbage as a candidate. But to win off of silliness like "He's racist!" (that fat Machado woman) and "He's sexist!" (the leaked video) is where my problem is. Come on. There are much bigger issues facing the world/this country, and the election is essentially being decided off of things that could not matter less.
I agree that, in theory, he may not be racist or sexist. I haven't called him that and don't particularly think there is justifiable evidence for those terms.
He is, however, undeniably
immature as a human being. He has poor temperment and makes emotionally charged and inflammatory comments.
Those are the biggest reason he won't be the next president. It's not like people were cool with him and thought he was a diplomatic, cool headed, inspirational leader until these leaks and stuff. It just confirmed what most people already felt about him.
The election is being decided off of peoples' votes. Nothing more, nothing less. And how leaders think and speak
does matter. It's actually very important in world affairs and in developing bipartisan support.