Massie treated the Constitution like it was delivered from Mount Sinai in a Pelican briefcase carried by Moses. No improvisation. No fingerprints, no smudges, no coffee stains.
Meanwhile, Donald Trump treats politics like a Formula One pit crew during a tire change.
For the record, Massie is no dummy. This guy is the kind of smart where you almost resent him on sight. MIT degrees in electrical engineering and mechanical engineering. Started a biotech company. The man probably fixes particle accelerators with a butter knife and some duct tape he bought at Tractor Supply. He’s got conservative credentials too. Lifetime ratings that make constitutional scholars swoon like teenage girls at a Beatles concert.
But here’s the problem with purity in politics: sometimes the tiniest grain of sand jams the whole transmission.
[X] SB – Ed Gallrein on taking advantage of history…
And Massie is a purist.
Not originally a Republican. Libertarian. Different animal entirely. Republicans tend to say, “Well, this isn’t perfect, but let’s move the ball.” Libertarians say, “If the ball moves one inch outside the exact constitutional boundary envisioned by James Madison on a rainy Tuesday in 1789, burn the stadium down.”
That’s the split.
[X] SB – Massie votes against President Trump
Tried to buy my vote for 14 years.
Take the border wall. Massie said he supported the wall. Fine. But when Trump used executive authority to fund portions of it because Congress was moving slower than a DMV sloth on Ambien, Massie objected. Constitutionally, he had an argument. Congress controls the purse strings. That’s textbook civics.
But Trump supporters weren’t watching “Schoolhouse Rock.” They were watching a country collapse at the border while politicians held symposiums on procedural etiquette.
That’s the disconnect.
Massie looked at the process.
Trump supporters looked at the outcome.
And Americans are exhausted with process people. We’ve had process people for decades. America is drowning in process people. Every failed city in America had excellent process. Detroit had process. California has process. The Titanic had a committee.
Trump came along and said, “I don’t care which drawer the wrench is in. The engine’s on fire.”
That changes voter psychology completely.
Then came the Iran dispute. After U.S. strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities, Massie argued Congress should authorize military action. Again, constitutionally coherent. Congress declares war. Presidents have accumulated too much unilateral military power. Endless intervention overseas bleeds the country dry. There’s intellectual consistency there.
The country didn’t elect Massie. A district in KY did. And the idea that his district dictates Trump’s worldview is ridiculous.
But Trump’s worldview is completely different. Trump approaches geopolitics like a New York landlord walking into a negotiation with a baseball bat wrapped in velvet. The point is uncertainty. The point is leverage. The point is making adversaries think, “This guy might actually do it.”
And Trump allies saw Massie publicly objecting during a standoff with Iran as weakening the president in real time.
Now whether people agree or disagree with either side is almost secondary to the larger political reality unfolding in front of us.
Because this wasn’t just a disagreement over policy.
It was a disagreement over the operating system of conservatism itself.
Massie represents constitutional restraint first.
Trump represents national survival first.
Massie says:
“The rules matter most.”
Trump supporters say:
“What good are rules if the country collapses while we’re admiring them?”
And that’s why this divide got so emotional.
See, conservatives spent years watching Republicans surrender elegantly. Nobody lost with more dignity than old-school Republicans. These people could lose all three branches of government and still hold a press conference congratulating themselves on bipartisanship. Republicans became the Washington Generals of politics. Professional losers in expensive suits.
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