When faced with accusations of flip-flopping, Keynes has been attributed with saying something like “When the facts change, I change my mind. What do you do?”
But I hardly see how you can apply this virtuous position to Trump, since nothing he says or does is based on facts. Inconsistent self-contradictory rambling based on what he thinks will sound impressive and popular is not the same thing as flip-flopping between two well reasoned positions.
By November, will most Georgia worshipers of Trimp the Chimp even remember this, or that everything he touches dies? Won’t new flows of bullshit distract their attention?
The lesson learned is “Never Give A Inch!”(*) Retreat means defeat. Only luzers admit error. Always attack, never apologize. Drive on!
Never Give A Inch [sic] is the retitled film from Ken Kesey’s novel Sometime A Great Notion about a strike-breaking Oregon logging family. After a falling tree severs Henry Fonda’s arm, Paul Newman nails it to his boat’s mast with forefinger upright, telling the unionized** community to Fuck Off. That’s Trimp the Chimp’s way.
** How many syllables in the word “unionized”?
Chemist: 4
Non-chemist: 3
It’s a perfect example of a catchy phrase obfuscating what’s really important.
Being able to develop, evolve, and change positions based on knowledge and experience is good. Constantly or dramatically changing one’s position in order to garner votes or to be more well-liked is bad. Taking a new position while pretending it’s not a new position so you don’t loose the people who disagree with your new position is bad.
Subsequent to the advice about the potential efficacy of mainlining Clorox, I’m removing any residual iota of credit to him on the flip flop. Totally stopped-clock accidental correctness.