• Trump Derangement Syndrome Epidemic Hits America Hard

    From End of Times@[email protected] to talk.politics.guns,talk.politics.misc,comp.os.linux.advocacy,comp.sys.mac.advocacy on Sun Mar 8 14:14:08 2026
    From Newsgroup: comp.sys.mac.advocacy



    This is worse than the big Democrat COVID Hoax of 2020!

    The majority of Americans have TDS. Trump is hated more than Satan!

    Maybe he could make it better by focusing on Epstein intstead of Iran so everybody votes MAGA in November?

    March 8, 2026
    Trump's Iran War Is As Unpopular As He Is

    A hospital in Tehran. Photo: Mahsa/Middle East Images/AFP/Getty

    It's now been a week since Donald Trump and Bibi Netanyahu began their war
    of destruction and regime change in Iran, a conflict that has gone regional
    as Iran retaliated. Polls taken before the bombs started dropping showed
    there was far from any national consensus favoring an attack on Iran or any other foreign military adventure. While it takes some time to conduct public-opinion surveys, it seemed Americans really would prefer their
    leaders focus on the economy and the cost of living.

    Now there's enough postattack polling to make it clear this is a war that
    is very unpopular, much like its commander-in-chief in the White House. G. Elliott Morris collected eight polls taken since last weekend and found
    just one (from Fox News) showing net approval of the war at zero. The rest were negative, ranging from YouGov at minus-10 percent to CNN-SSRS at
    minus-18 percent. The polling is roughly at the same levels of Trump's net job-approval ratings (currently at minus-11.2 percent at RealClearPolitics, minus-12.8 percent at Silver Bulletin, and minus-13 percent at Decision
    Desk HQ). As Morris points out, this is really a historical anomaly:

    This [is] the most unpopular war at launch in the history of modern
    polling. For comparison, 92% of Americans backed the war in Afghanistan,
    and 72% supported the Iraq invasion when those conflicts began. If history
    is any guide, war polling only moves in one direction from here: down.

    Nate Silver makes a similar observation about wars past and present:

    [As of 2008] the relevant data set for the effect of wars on American
    politics was comprised of 4 or 5 (depending on how you count) post-WW2 conflicts: Korea, Vietnam, the 1990�91 Gulf War (a. k. a. Operation Desert Storm) and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, sometimes lumped together
    under the "War on Terror". The conventional wisdom was something like this:

    The war will initially be popular, producing patriotic feelings and
    boosting the president's popularity: the so-called rally-around-the-flag effect.

    However, unless it is resolved quickly (as was only the case in the Gulf
    War from among these examples), it will eventually become a quagmire, and
    the president's popularity will suffer after extended deployments and
    deaths of American troops.

    Silver goes on to hypothesize that strong public reactions � positive or negative � to wars may have become a bit obsolete thanks to technological changes that have sharply reduced U. S. war casualties and the absence of a military draft that made wars up to and including the Vietnam War a truly national fight:

    So the emerging conventional wisdom ... is that American voters are increasingly indifferent about wars � until and unless there are attacks on American soil, large numbers of casualties among American troops, or a
    draft.

    None of those things were remotely likely as a result of Venezuela. But
    while I'm not going to speculate about what could spin up from Iran, there
    are obviously more risks. It's a much bigger country in the most
    politically volatile part of the world. This time, the U. S. /Israeli operations are far more than a "surgical strike", like the strikes on
    Iranian nuclear sites last June.

    But there's an alternative explanation for the initial unpopularity of the current war: Unlike the Korean War, the Vietnam War, the Persian Gulf War,
    and the Afghanistan and Iraq wars, the Iran war is very much the project of one party and one president (yes, there was a lot of Democratic opposition
    to the Iraq War from the beginning, but there was a lot of support as
    well). In Congress, and in public opinion, Democrats overwhelmingly oppose Trump's war, and Republicans overwhelmingly support it. Despite initial
    talk of a "MAGA revolt" against the war based on negative reactions from a
    few high-profile social-media influencers, the more Republicans love Donald Trump, the more they support his war, as NBC News explains from its latest polling:

    An overwhelming majority of Democrats, 89%, say the U. S. shouldn't have struck Iran. Among independents, 58% agree.

    Republicans are overall more supportive of the strikes: 77% say the U. S. should have struck Iran, while 15% disagree. But there's a significant
    divide between Republicans who consider themselves aligned with Trump's
    Make America Great Again movement and those who don't.

    A full 90% of self-identified MAGA-aligned Republicans back the strikes,
    with just 5% saying they don't think they should have been launched.

    The more it looks like this war will drag on, the more partisan perceptions
    of it are likely to harden. There remains a significant risk that 2024
    Trump voters anxious about the economy will continue to defect from his coalition if it appears he cares more about toppling overseas regimes than about addressing living costs. And if the war produces a sustained energy price hike or the conflict widens, it could really begin to have a negative effect on Trump's already poor approval ratings and the odds of Republicans hanging onto Congress in November.
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