Cuba policy. Sixty years of hostility with a near neighbor could actually end, and I don't think there are a lot of politicians who would have taken up that agreement.
Iraq. Whatever you think of the outcomes, the decision to respect the previous agreement for the timeline for withdrawal rather than negotiate some new timeline was certainly consequential. And then, persuading Nouri al-Maliki to resign as prime minister was also consequential.
Anti-LGBT discrimination in the military.
Sure, I'll give Hilary a leg up there. For me, it's not enough to vote for her. There are far too many negatives.
I can understand the negatives. But compared to the other side?
The wall isn't happening. No way, no how.
I agree. But that doesn't mean we won't waste a ton of time and money on it.
Mostly because Trump doesn't stand a chance in the general election but also because the idea itself is beyond jumping the shark.
Why vote for a candidate who consistently jumps the shark?
Of course every president 'might' use nuclear weapons. Clump is a neo-conservative war hawk with only nuanced difference in foreign policy. If that.
Sorry. I've been rather cynical since W.
I think you'd be hard-pressed to find any politician of either party willing to suggest that they "might" use nuclear weapons. It is extremely dangerous, even to suggest it. Of course, it is an extreme contingency option, maybe, but any suggestion that they might come into use makes it a lot harder to preempt proliferation, and proliferation is extremely dangerous. Trump is the exception.