Does /pol/ still support Trump?
>>131301402
Nah. Trump's irrelevant already. Just a paid actor, used as diversion, distraction. Joke's over
Can't speak for /pol/, but I sure do
>>131301402
I do, he's good for my country.
>>131301402
Don't think /pol/ care anymore, desu
>>131301402
Fully but not because he's the best president ever.
The guy is cringe when he tries to be a high elite class member and he says and does things that I don't think are particularly smart or well informed (it seems that he is still looking at the news more than the daily classified reports.
But a Republican majority (an obstructionist party with goals but no plans), and a disagreeable president who is honest (in the sense that he's not condescending and fake like most politicians- not that he's always accurate) but so far not very harmful; these things are far more preferable to a unified Democrat majority and executive branch who are organized with plans and the power to roll them out and transform the country quickly and irreversibly.
When the lawmakers of the country are bickering and fighting and struggling to get things done, it means that the system is stable (as they aren't throwing whole industries into turmoil with new ideas) and that they are not employing new programs that interfere with me.
>>131301402
we never did
Watching the left be on maximum ass blast since last November has been absolutely priceless.
>>131301402
Who gives a shit what a bunch of losers think? We still support him at r/The_Donald, which legitimately helped Trump get elected.