I hate to say I told you so, but I told you so.
I told you Donald Trump couldn't be trusted. I told you he was a showman. A salesman who sold only one product: himself.
Even his most die-hard supporters are coming to the realization that maybe they were wrong about the longtime Democratic donor from New York.
The author of the book, "In Trump We Trust," bombthrower Ann Coulter appears to have come to this realization.
In GOP primary, there were 16 absolute idiots being chased down street by men with nets, & 1 who wasn’t. Supporting Trump was imperative.
— Ann Coulter (@AnnCoulter) September 14, 2017
We did whatever a good quarterback does in the 4th quarter, down 3 pts, with 4 seconds to go. We threw a Hail Mary pass. It didn't work.
— Ann Coulter (@AnnCoulter) September 14, 2017
Would we have preferred a candidate w/ Trump’s positions more thoughtful & who wasn’t easily rolled? YES! But that person wasn’t running.
— Ann Coulter (@AnnCoulter) September 14, 2017
And then there was this one:
Let's play Jeopardy. ANSWER: An Easter egg. QUESTION: What's
the only thing easier to roll than Donald J. Trump?— Ann Coulter (@AnnCoulter) September 14, 2017
The response from National Review's Kevin Williamson might be the best "sick burn" in the history of Twitter.
Well, there's you, for starters. "In Trump We Trust" and all that. https://t.co/urBR0oxkJV
— Kevin D. Williamson (@KevinNR) September 14, 2017
It was pretty obvious to conservatives when Trump started running that he wasn't one of us. He didn't talk the talk. He had no serious intellectual grounding in conservatism. Should it really surprise anyone that he's making deals with Democrats, that he doesn't have to, when Republicans control both houses of Congress?
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