You’re right about ordinary people not serving in congress, they’re almost all millionaires. That wasn’t what you meant, but it is also one big difference between those who serve in congress and ordinary people. I have no use for those who voted to overturn the election. But with the huge ideological divide in this country, you have way too many people who will vote for those candidates, not because they believe those candidates are good persons or even correct on thinking the election was stolen from Trump. They vote for them because of ideology, their ideology matches with those who voted to overturn the election. By ideology, I mean conservative vs. liberal or progressive, whatever you want to call it. They don’t care how bad a scumbag their candidate is, they only care on a political philosophy level. In today’s modern political era of polarization, the great divide, the super, mega, ultra-high partisanship, you won’t get a conservative to vote for a liberal or a liberal to vote for a conservative. The divide is too great. Recent history has shown that those who identify with either major party will vote for their party’s candidate 94% of the time regardless of who that candidate is, it could be Atilla the Hun, but the party Atilla belonged to would garner that party’s 94% of voters on average. That’s just the way it is today.

Would you ever vote for a Republican, I think not regardless of who your party’s candidate was.


It's high past time that we start electing Americans to congress and the presidency who put America first instead of their political party. For way too long we have been electing Republicans and Democrats who happen to be Americans instead of Americans who happen to be Republicans and Democrats.