FIRST RULE OF BUSINESS: IF IT UPSETS YOUR COMPETITION, YOU ABANDON IT, RIGHT? | 2016-12-03
Like Perot and Goldwater and Reagan and all the rest, Trump paid a bunch of big money Advisors.
These professionals were told that alt right and other extremists scared his anti-White enemies. So they demanded that he denounce them all.
Now let us take this political example over to big business. Trump has never tried to take over the presidency, but he has taken over a lot of businesses.
Let us say he is engaged in taking over a rival business and hired what are called professional advisors in that area of the market. They tell him that a group in charge of that group scares the tinkle out of rival business leaders.
Let us say that his high-priced new advice says that he must take away their concerns.
Somebody whose first reaction to a scared opposition is to reassure them is a little unusual in Reality World.
In fact the first reaction to someone who wants to reassure his enemies is to be sure that those advisors are not allowed to pick up anything sharp.
But on his old Reality TV show, if a new hiree panicked when an opponent yelled "Six Million Jews!" for the hundredth time and the new man demanded instant surrender, the old Trump would have shouted, "You're FIRED!"
These shrieks came from people who shrieked Nazi all the time.
The big money professional advisor then takes his gigantic fee and advises that this "Nazi" be disowned.
And the people paying them lose.
Again.
It is amazing that a top businessman fell for this crap two or three times before he simply nixed any more advisors he had to keep away from the sharp pencils.
Nothing I advocate is even vaguely radical. It is common sense for everybody except the eternally defeated conservative.