Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m sorry OP. I would really struggle living with that too.
+1
Marrying a Trumper is like being married to the BKT killer.
You equate a trump supporter to a serial killer?
See, it’s the liberal way or the highway! Typical.
+1
Crazy much? And why Trump may win again. Vote for your guy and let others do the same without going off the deep end.
I can't stand Trump since I can't see pass his character. But his supporters can, instead they focus on economy, small town recovery, immigration reform, pro-life, etc - ideals that matter to them. Doesn't make them hateful, just different view point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m sorry OP. I would really struggle living with that too.
+1
Marrying a Trumper is like being married to the BKT killer.
You equate a trump supporter to a serial killer?
See, it’s the liberal way or the highway! Typical.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Folks. I highly doubt this is a sincere post. The whole goal is to introduce a bit of whataboutism, it's relative. Stoke fear of "splitting up families". Don't be fooled this is a politically driven post cleverly designed propaganda. People are better at spotting and calling it out in political forums, so they sneak it in casually in other forums, here, family relationships, and even the childcare sections. Don't be fooled.
On the very small chance this is from a person;
i really don't just see how this is true, and how there were zero signs until this year, you even admit, you overlooked it last time. It's always been there. As I have said before I have elsewhere I have Republicans in my family as friends they never voted for trump. Trump-supporting isn't just some political differenc.e You don't have to be a Republican to support him, people just like to say those things to disguise the truth about what they are.
I highly doubt your husband has been able to hide who he really is from your for 22 years. Get out of here with that!
The only difference now is YOU are starting to feel social shame for supporting those things. Or you magically developed a conscience. Had you developed a conscience you would know what to do, since that isn't the case just do what you've been doing for 22 years and keep your head in the sand.
Of course it can be real. My DH and I were much closer politically before Obama. I think President Obama was the best modern President for sure; my DH is frankly jealous that this guy his age was and is so successful. DH has always been more guns and security oriented but prior to 2008 our differences were not a chasm.
Lady you are lying to yourself.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Folks. I highly doubt this is a sincere post. The whole goal is to introduce a bit of whataboutism, it's relative. Stoke fear of "splitting up families". Don't be fooled this is a politically driven post cleverly designed propaganda. People are better at spotting and calling it out in political forums, so they sneak it in casually in other forums, here, family relationships, and even the childcare sections. Don't be fooled.
On the very small chance this is from a person;
i really don't just see how this is true, and how there were zero signs until this year, you even admit, you overlooked it last time. It's always been there. As I have said before I have elsewhere I have Republicans in my family as friends they never voted for trump. Trump-supporting isn't just some political differenc.e You don't have to be a Republican to support him, people just like to say those things to disguise the truth about what they are.
I highly doubt your husband has been able to hide who he really is from your for 22 years. Get out of here with that!
The only difference now is YOU are starting to feel social shame for supporting those things. Or you magically developed a conscience. Had you developed a conscience you would know what to do, since that isn't the case just do what you've been doing for 22 years and keep your head in the sand.
Of course it can be real. My DH and I were much closer politically before Obama. I think President Obama was the best modern President for sure; my DH is frankly jealous that this guy his age was and is so successful. DH has always been more guns and security oriented but prior to 2008 our differences were not a chasm.
Anonymous wrote:Folks. I highly doubt this is a sincere post. The whole goal is to introduce a bit of whataboutism, it's relative. Stoke fear of "splitting up families". Don't be fooled this is a politically driven post cleverly designed propaganda. People are better at spotting and calling it out in political forums, so they sneak it in casually in other forums, here, family relationships, and even the childcare sections. Don't be fooled.
On the very small chance this is from a person;
i really don't just see how this is true, and how there were zero signs until this year, you even admit, you overlooked it last time. It's always been there. As I have said before I have elsewhere I have Republicans in my family as friends they never voted for trump. Trump-supporting isn't just some political differenc.e You don't have to be a Republican to support him, people just like to say those things to disguise the truth about what they are.
I highly doubt your husband has been able to hide who he really is from your for 22 years. Get out of here with that!
The only difference now is YOU are starting to feel social shame for supporting those things. Or you magically developed a conscience. Had you developed a conscience you would know what to do, since that isn't the case just do what you've been doing for 22 years and keep your head in the sand.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do people internalize this stuff so much? I am a leftist with conservative friends. Just don’t go there. There are a million other things to discuss.
Perhaps She doesn't want to be attached for life to a racist bigot? Just throwing that out there.
Perhaps HE doesn't want to be attached for life to a racist bigot! If he’s Trump supporter, he’s a racist but if she’s democrat, she’s not racist ? Hypocrisy to fullest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OMG OP I feel for you. The biggest concern I would have is that your kids are exposed to this on TV and radio constantly. This is going to do some damage to their worldview and not sure how you can effectively counter this. Can you put some boundaries on any discussion with your kids and how to control what they are exposed to?
I also wonder if your husband is depressed and maybe a reason for his beliefs?
OP here - He usually holes himself up and listens alone, so that is not a concern. We kind of have a truce on this. He knows I can't stand right-wing radio and I don't make him listen to NPR.
I am not entirely sure what happened for him to really go down the rabbit hole, but have a theory. Not going to really go into this in detail, but it's work-related and a constant source of anger/resentment/unhappiness. We've talked about counseling, but I think that would really be the end. There's a lot of pent up stuff we probably should have addressed long ago. I'm trying to ride it out and see if we can reconnect in the future.
If Trump wins again I am swearing off following politics entirely for my mental health. I am not some super-liberal, but the last four years have been a head snap.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OMG OP I feel for you. The biggest concern I would have is that your kids are exposed to this on TV and radio constantly. This is going to do some damage to their worldview and not sure how you can effectively counter this. Can you put some boundaries on any discussion with your kids and how to control what they are exposed to?
I also wonder if your husband is depressed and maybe a reason for his beliefs?
OP here - He usually holes himself up and listens alone, so that is not a concern. We kind of have a truce on this. He knows I can't stand right-wing radio and I don't make him listen to NPR.
I am not entirely sure what happened for him to really go down the rabbit hole, but have a theory. Not going to really go into this in detail, but it's work-related and a constant source of anger/resentment/unhappiness. We've talked about counseling, but I think that would really be the end. There's a lot of pent up stuff we probably should have addressed long ago. I'm trying to ride it out and see if we can reconnect in the future.
If Trump wins again I am swearing off following politics entirely for my mental health. I am not some super-liberal, but the last four years have been a head snap.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband and I have been together for 22 years, married most of it.
I'm one of the posters from a previous thread that said if we met today I wouldn't go on a second date. He and his whole family (all very educated) are all in for Trump. In 2016 I chalked it up to not liking Hillary Clinton, which wasn't exactly unique. But we are in a whole other territory now - Flynn was railroaded, indictments for Comey, etc. are coming, refusing to denounce the killing of Heather Heyer, Antifa (don't get me started), and now, defending Kyle Rittenhouse and lauding him for his trigger control.
I wish I was joking or exaggerating. I am not. I don't even know the person I am married to anymore.
I just feel so, so lost.
Do you have kids, OP? How old are they? Would your husband's world view or that of his family impact them in any way? If so, I think you should consider divorce. These are not the people you want to have direct influence over your kids. File for sole custody. I am not even joking.
If you don't have kids and you still love him, then maybe talk through it and consider couples therapy to help you both find a way to move beyond this.
I know my advice may sound counterproductive, but really consider leaving if you have young children.
Wow Trump Derangement Syndrome is a real thing. OP do not divorce over this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband and I have been together for 22 years, married most of it.
I'm one of the posters from a previous thread that said if we met today I wouldn't go on a second date. He and his whole family (all very educated) are all in for Trump. In 2016 I chalked it up to not liking Hillary Clinton, which wasn't exactly unique. But we are in a whole other territory now - Flynn was railroaded, indictments for Comey, etc. are coming, refusing to denounce the killing of Heather Heyer, Antifa (don't get me started), and now, defending Kyle Rittenhouse and lauding him for his trigger control.
I wish I was joking or exaggerating. I am not. I don't even know the person I am married to anymore.
I just feel so, so lost.
Grounds for divorce—I’m serious.
Anonymous wrote:OP, I am in the same boat.
Kids are 10 and 13. It’s is so hard.
PPs stated “talk about something else.” Like what? Our kids for the millionth time? It is so hard to find a topic the talk about without it being incredibly superficial (weather, entertainment, etc)
Anonymous wrote:OMG OP I feel for you. The biggest concern I would have is that your kids are exposed to this on TV and radio constantly. This is going to do some damage to their worldview and not sure how you can effectively counter this. Can you put some boundaries on any discussion with your kids and how to control what they are exposed to?
I also wonder if your husband is depressed and maybe a reason for his beliefs?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why do people internalize this stuff so much? I am a leftist with conservative friends. Just don’t go there. There are a million other things to discuss.
I'm a leftist with conservative friends, but people who support Trump are not "conservative."
I make the same distinction. Conservatives, yes. Magas, I can't respect.