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"Make America Great Again:" not buying it


The one-liner phrase that will probably go down in history as one of the worst campaign slogans of all time will be now president-elect's Donald J. Trump's motivation to lead this nation.

While these words may make up a good chunk of his vocabulary, along with "ban all Muslims," "bomb the sh*t out of them, nasty woman," and "deplorable."

Think about his speeches for a minute. How many times did that main phrase find its way out of his mouth, but without any plan of action.

That's why the majority of the people are worried about his presidency. We never got any answers in regards to how he's going to accomplish what he has promised the nation.

Now, yes, I do understand U.S. politics, and I know he can't do it alone. He has to be able to pass a bill through the House and the Senate, and on really big stuff, he has to get approval from us, the U.S. citizens.

But here's why I cannot stand by our president to be because of this phrase. Let's take a look at America through the decades, and see which one we would want to return to, making that above statement true.

We're living in the 2010s, but we're now more than half-way through the decade, so let's start there

2010s:

  • 2016:

January: The International Atomic Energy Agency announces that Iran has adequately dismantled its nuclear weapons program, allowing the United Nations to lift sanctions immediately.

September: The US and China, together claim responsibility for 40 percent of the world's carbon emissions, both ratify the Paris global climate agreement.

52 law enforcement officers shot dead in the line of duty by Nov. 20.

  • 2015

June: Charleston Church shooting

August: On air shooting in Virginia

European refugee crisis: Tens of thousands of people have tried to escape from Syria. Many are still trapped there, trying to escape their civil war.

June: The White House shows support for same sex marriage a huge step forward for the LGBT community in the U.S. The ruling that it should be illegal is overturned in the Supreme Court. Some states had already legalized it.

Greek Debt Crisis

IRS Hacked

And... of course, our lovely 2016 presidential candidate nominees announced they were running.

  • 2014

January: Colorado legalizes recreational marijuana.

James Holmes is sentenced to life in prison for the Aurora Theater shooting in 2012.

The 22nd Winter Olympic Games take place in Russia, and just months later, Russia invades Crimea, Ukraine.

In response to Russia's invasion of Crimea, NATO announces an end to cooperation with Russia.

The Islamic State is able to make tremendous gain in Iraq and Syria.

  • 2013

November: Nuclear pact with Iran is created, reducing tension between Iran and the U.S.

November: A 16-day government shutdown keeps Congress from making laws for the country because the House, the Senate and the President couldn't agree on anything.

President Obama comes up with the Affordable Care Act, creating a plan to get more Americans insured.

  • 2012

January: Iran undergoes an oil oil embargo.

November: Obama wins the Presidential Election and will serve a second term in office.

December: North Korea launches a long-range rocket, intensifying skepticism with the U.S.

  • 2011

September: Occupy Wall Street demonstration takes place in New York.

September: President Obama proposes a more than $400 million jobs plan to try and get Americans back to work.

Arab Spring protests spur protests in Tunisia, Libya and Egypt, among others. The U.S. applauds the uprisings in order to get powerful longtime rulers out of power.

U.S. forces kill Osama Bin Laden, the head figure of al-Quida

  • 2010

April: BP Oil Spill in the Gulf of Mexico

May: Times Square Bomber—A catastrophic terrorist strike in the heart of Times Square was narrowly averted this May when 31-year-old Pakistani immigrant Faisal Shahzad’s explosive-packed 1993 Nissan Pathfinder failed to detonate and a street vendor notified police of smoke pouring from it. An American citizen who received $15,000 and explosives training from the Pakistan Taliban, Shahzad was subsequently plucked off a Dubai-bound airplane at JFK International Airport and was sentenced to life in prison in October, while warning of more attacks in the future.

July: Wikileaks starts releasing classified government material, making its founder Juilan Assange, one of the most sought out men for the American government.

August: Protests over the mosque at Ground Zero start just before the 9-year remembrance of the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks that rattled the nation in 2001.

  • 2000s

November 2000: George W. Bush wins the U.S. presidency by a very, very narrow margin. Bush won Florida by a narrow margin of 527 votes. Bush won 271 votes in the Electoral College, while Gore held 266. Bush won the presidency despite losing the popular vote. (Flash forward to where we are in 2016, please. Just saying.)

September 2001: Terror hits the nation. Two commercial airliners fly into the Twin Towers in New York. Another crashes into the Pentagon in Arlington, Virginia, and one crashes in a field in Pennsylvania after it is rumored that plane is heading for the White House. President George H.W. Bush is reading to a group of children in Texas when he receives the news and reports back to watch with the rest of the nation as horror strikes.

October 2001: The U.S. military, along with its British allies, carry out an attack in Afghanistan, starting the War on Terror.

March 2003: Iraq invasion by U.S. military

July 2004: On Independence Day groundbreaking of the Freedom Tower begins at Ground Zero in New York.

October 2005: The War of Terror continues. With elections in Iraq to confirm a new constitution vying with internal terrorism amid the U.S. military presence on October 15, eleven days later a statement from the Iranian President, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, calls for the destruction of Israel and condemns the peace process.

2006: North Korea Conducts it's first nuclear test.

October 2006: U.S. passes legislation to build a border fence between the U.S. and Mexico (sound familiar, at all)

June 2007 - A terror plot to blow up JFK International Airport in New York City is thwarted when four terrorists are arrested and charged with its plan.

July 2007 - The fifty star flag of the United States of America becomes the longest flying flag in American history after flying over forty-seven years.

October 2009 - The economic recession continues to deepen as jobless claims climb above 10.0%, reaching 10.2% with October's monthly figures.

  • 1990s

August 1990: Iraq invades Kuwait, Gulf War begins.October.

1990: East and West Germany reunified.

January 1991: US begin Operation Desert Storm to stop Iraqi occupation of Kuwait.

May 1991: U.S. and Soviet Union sign Arms Control Treaty

1992: Official end of the Cold War

January 1993: Europe eliminates trade barriers and becomes a single market.

February 1993: World Trade Center bombing.

September 1994: U.S. invades Haiti to "restore order."

January 1995: World Trade Organization is established on Jan. 1.

1995: O.J. Simpson Found Not Guilty of Double Murder

September 1998: The United States Congress passes legislation, the Iraq Liberation Act, that states the U.S. wants to remove Saddam Hussein from power and replace it with a democracy.

1998: U.S. President Clinton Impeached.

January 1999: January 1, 1999 - The Euro currency is introduced as a competitive tool to stem the power of the dollar and maximize the economic power of the European Union nations.

August 1998:Attacks on two United States embassies in Africa, in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, and Nairobi, Kenya kills two hundred and twenty-four and injures four thousand five hundred.

April 1999: School shooting at Columbine High School in Colorado kills 25.

  • 1980s

1980: Failed U.S. Rescue Attempt to Save Hostages in Tehran

1980: John Lennon assassination

1980: Establishment of CNN

1981: Assassination Attempt on the Pope

1981: Assassination Attempt on U.S. President Reagan

1981: New disease identified as AIDS

1981: Personal Computers (PC) introduced by IBM

1983: Reagan announces defense plan called "Star Wars"

1983: Soviets Shoot Down a Korean Airliner

1983: U.S. Embassy in Beirut Bombed

1985: Hole in the Ozone Layer discovered

1985: Terrorists Hijack TWA Flight 847

1985: U.S. Singers Record Charity Single "We Are the World"

1985: Wreck of the Titanic Found

1986: Space shuttle Challenger explodes

1986: Chernobyl Nuclear Disaster

1986: U.S. Bombs Libya

1986: U.S.S.R. Launches Mir Space Station

1987: DNA first used to convict criminals

1987: New York Stock Exchange suffers huge drop on "Black Monday"

1987: West German pilot lands unchallenged in Russia's Red Square

1988: U.S. shoots down Iranian airliner

1989: Berlin Wall falls

1989: Students massacred in China's Tiananmen Square

1989: World Wide Web invented

  • 1970s

1970: Beatles break up

1970: Palestinian group hijacks five planes

1970: Kent State shootings

1972: Terrorists attack at the Olympic Games in Munich

1972: Watergate Scandal begins

1973: Roe vs. Wade legalizes abortion in the U.S.

1973: U.S. Pulls Out of Vietnam

1973: U.S. Vice President Resigns

1974: Terracotta army discovered in China

1974: U.S. President Nixon Resigns

1975: Cambodian genocide begins

1975: Civil War in Lebanon

1975: Helsinki Accords signed

1975: Two assassination attempts against U.S. President Gerald Ford

1976: North and South Vietnam join to form the Socialist Republic of Vietnam

1979: Margaret Thatcher becomes first woman Prime Minister of Great Britain

  • 1960s

1960: The Birth Control Pill is approved by the FDA

1960: Walsh and Piccard become the first to explore the deepest place on Earth

1961: Bay of Pigs invasion

1961: Berlin Wall built

1961: Freedom Riders challenge segregation on interstate buses

1961: JFK gives "Man on the Moon" speech

1961: Peace Corps Founded

1962: Cuban Missile Crisis

1963: Buddhist monk sets himself on fire in protest

1963: "Hot Line" established between U.S. and U.S.S.R.

1963: JFK assassinated

1963: March on Washington

1963: Martin Luther King Jr. makes his "I Have a Dream" speech

1964: Civil Rights Act passes in U.S.

1965: Los Angeles riots

1965: Malcolm X assassinated

1965: U.S. Sends troops to Vietnam

1966: First Kwanzaa celebrated

1966: Mao Zedong launches the Cultural Revolution

1966: Mass draft protests in U.S.

1966: National Organization for Women (NOW) founded

1967: First heart transplant

1967:Six-Day War in the Middle East

1967: Three U.S. astronauts killed during simulated launch

1968: Martin Luther King Jr. assassinated

1968: Robert F. Kennedy assassinated

1969: Neil Armstrong becomes the first man on the moon

1969: Rock-and-Roll concert at Woodstock

  • 1950s

1950: Korean War begins

1950: U.S. President Truman orders construction of hydrogen bomb

1951: Truman signs peace treaty with Japan, officially ending WWII

1952: Polio vaccine created

1953: First Playboy magazine

1953: Joseph Stalin dies

1955: Disneyland opens

1955: Montgomery bus boycott begins

1955: Rosa Parks refuses to give up her seat on a bus and is arrested.

1955: Warsaw Pact signed

1957: Soviet satellite Sputnik launches Space Age

1958: Chinese leader Mao Zedong launches the "Great Leap Forward"

1958: NASA created

1959: International treaty makes Antarctica a scientific preserve

  • 1940s

1940: Auschwitz opens

1940: Battle of Britain

1940: Franklin D. Roosevelt elected to an unprecedented third term as U.S. President

1940: Warsaw Ghetto Established

1941: German battleship Bismarck sinks

1941: Ho Chi Minh founds the Communist Viet Minh in Vietnam

1941: Japanese attack Pearl Harbor

1941: Mount Rushmore completed

1941: Nazi Rudolf Hess flies to Britain on a Peace Mission

1941: Nazis begin killing adults and children with mental and physical disabilities as part of their Aktion T-4 program

1941: Siege of Leningrad

1942: Anne Frank goes into hiding

1942: Battle of Stalingrad

1942: Japanese-Americans held in camps

1943: Italy joins the Allies

1943: Warsaw Ghetto uprising

1944: D-Day

1944: First German V1 and V2 Rockets Fired

1944: Hitler Escapes Assassination Attempt

1945: Division of Korea Into North and South

1945: FDR dies

1945: First atomic bomb tested

1945: Germans Surrender

1945: Hitler kills himself

1945: Nuremberg trials begin

1945: A plane crashes Into the Empire State Building

1945: United Nations Founded

1945: U.S. Drops Atomic Bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki

1946: Jews are massacred in the post-Holocaust Kielce pogrom in Poland

1946: Winston Churchill gives his "Iron Curtain" speech

1947: Jewish refugees aboard the Exodus turned back by British

1947: Marshall Plan

1948: Berlin airlift

1948: State of Israel founded

1949: China becomes Communist

1949: First non-stop flight around the world

1949: NATO established

1949: Soviet Union reportedly has atomic bomb

1939-1945: World War ll

  • 1930s

1930: Gandhi's Salt March

1930: Stalin Begins Collectivizing Agriculture in the U.S.S.R.

1931: Al Capone imprisoned for income tax evasion

1931: U.S. Officially Gets National Anthem

1932: Amelia Earhart becomes the first woman to fly solo across the Atlantic Ocean

1933: Adolf Hitler appointed Chancellor of Germany

1933: Assassination attempt on FDR

1933: First Nazi Concentration Camp Established

1933: Prohibition Ends in the U.S.

1934: Alcatraz becomes a federal prison

1934: The Dust Bowl

1934: The Great Terror begins in the Soviet Union

1934: Mao Zedong Begins the Long March

1935: Germany sssues the anti-Jewish Nuremberg Laws

1936: All German boys must join Hitler Youth

1936: Nazi Olympics in Berlin

1936: Rome-Berlin Axis formed

1937: Amelia Earhart vanishes

1937: Japan invades China

1938: Broadcast of "The War of the Worlds" causes panic

1938: Chamberlain announces "Peace in Our Time"

1938: Evian conference about Jewish refugees from Nazi Germany

1938: Hitler annexes Austria

1938: The Night of Broken Glass (Kristallnacht)

1939: World War II begins

1939: Einstein writes a letter to FDR about building an atomic bomb

1939: German-Soviet non-aggression pact signed

1939: Nazi's Euthanasia Program (Aktion T-4) Begins

  • 1920s

1920: Harlem Renaissance begins

1920: League of Nations established

1920: Prohibition Begins in the U.S.

1920: Women are granted the right to vote in U.S.

1921: Extreme inflation takes over German economy

1922: Mussolini marches on Rome

1933: Hitler jailed after failed coup

1923: Teapot Dome Scandal

1925: Hitler's Mein Kampf is published

1926: First assassination attempt on Mussolini

1926: Henry Ford announces 40-hour work week

1926: Houdini dies after being punched

1929: The Great Depression begins

1929: Stock Market crashes

1929: St. Valentine's Day Massacre

  • 1910s

1912: Sinking of the Titanic

1914: World War l begins

1917: The year the U.S. entered WWl

1919: Hitler Joins the Nazi Party

1919: Treaty of Versailles Ends World War I

  • 1900s

1902: The teddy bear is introduced

1902: U.S. passes the Chinese Exclusion Act

1903: Wright Brother's first flight

1909: Plastic is invented

  • 1800s

1803: Louisiana Purchase from France, making the U.S. territory larger

1815: Napoleon was defeated at Waterloo, and was exiled to St. Helena

1820: Antarctica was discovered

!840-42: Opium War, China ceded Hong Kong to United Kingdom

1848: Mexican American War, U.S. gained the modern Southwestern U.S.

1861-65: American Civil War

1867: U.S. buys Alaska from Russia

  • 1700s

1776: The colonies gain independence from Great Britain, becoming the United States of America

1765: The official documented start of the American Revolution. The war between the colonies and Great Britain lasted until about 1783.

And with that, my friends, I leave you to reflect on what Mr. Trump means when he uses that three-word phrase.

Let me be totally honest, here. I have not liked him from the start, and that's not likely to change anytime soon. But when I look back at the history of this nation, I cannot find a certain time, even a full year, when the U.S. was thriving like we all had hoped.

This nation was built on the fact that those wanting a better chance could come and get the help they needed. True, we're not perfect, and now the threat of terror has clouded our visions of working toward that "more perfect union," that was set forth for us and our now 240-year-old country.

My only hope is that our future president Trump (because I know the outcome of the election is not likely to change), continues to work for Americans toward that goal.

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