gone off the reservation. Here's what I mean by that. Anything that's worth writing about right now (and there's so much that is worth it) genuinely begins to make me angry when I start writing. I veer off, get a little bit partisan/spiteful/personal. I lose the tone that I'm trying to maintain.
The truth is that this election is bringing out the intellectual worst of me.
I think we all look around and see the most ridiculous spectacle in politics that we've seen in at least one, if not two, generations. Listening to CSPAN earlier, a guest equated the current insurgency on both sides to the Goldwater insurgency in the 60s. Interestingly enough, I do see a bit of truth in that. Similar to now, a counter-establishment candidate came along and riled the people up. Before the establishment knew what was happening and realized this was a serious threat, it was too late and Goldwater became the inevitable nominee. It was stated that the night Goldwater became the nominee for the GOP was the beginning of the 'modern era' of the Republican party, that is until now.
Donald Trump's rise and momentum is analogous to the movement 60 years ago, but Goldwater is certainly no where near the character that Donald Trump is. He certainly never had the luxury of social media and a 24/7 news cycle either. This leads us to the advent of the new Republican party, a marriage between populism and a persistent media with an injection of rabid anger. Things will be getting strange for the Party's elites for the remainder of this election cycle and the next few congressional cycles too until this new movement figures itself out.

Donald Trump is a bipartisan product that was conceived from a toxic environment of stagnation, political polarization, and a frustrating lack or results. I say again, a BIPARTISAN product. This is not solely the fault of the President's party or the controlling party in Congress. Their inability to work for America forced the American people to find the most disruptive candidate that gave the best chances for a hard reset they so desperately desired.
Now, on the Democratic side, that counter-establishment candidate in Bernie Sanders is fading but not gone. The Establishment will likely win out and award Hillary Clinton the nomination. While Sanders will not likely be in the national political conversation for many more weeks or months, his impact and the challenging of the status quo will certainly linger and be ever-present in the Democratic Party for some time, which will likely force any front-runner further to the Left to maintain support.
So, this is where we're at. I wrote a piece called the Hoberman Sphere Cycle, which argued that parties' candidates will expand out to the poles to win over the support of their party but contract back to the center during the General election. I'm not backtracking from that completely, but the current trajectory is not kind to my analysis. My hope is that both Mrs. Clinton and Mr. Trump make a very delicate dance back to the center, but their tidal wave of support is currently built on rage. It is a rage that symbolizes the entire 2016 election cycle and a rage that has been built to such a burning fury over the past several months that I doubt there is a legitimate means to quell the flames and return civility to the discussion.
Let's face it. As citizens and voters, we have been dealt a horrible hand this year. On the Republican side, the remaining legitimate contenders are a reality TV star/business mogul with overly questionable character attributes. There is a Texas Senator that has changed his position more times on key issues over the last several years than I care to count and has no friends in Congress Then there is a Florida Senator that cannot show up to work and doesn't have enough of an 'it factor' to be many peoples' first choice.
On the Democratic side, we have a bona fide socialist that, while well-intentioned, is completely out of his element and is largely a single-issue candidate. Then there is a candidate who is synonymous with scandal, questionable decision-making, and lacks an ability to be consistently honest.
This is what we have to work with. No wonder the anger is at a fever pitch in this country. We deserve better than this, we truly do. For months, the candidates have not even engaged in true policy discussions. Instead, there has been the same type of bickering and toxicity that is the cornerstone of the same Federal leadership and system the country has grown to abhor. So, even when we hope for something new, all we get is more of the same.
Truthfully, a third-party candidate would not solve this, it might even make it a more contentious and splintered environment. So, we need to work with the team we have right now.
I have always hated highlighting problems without providing a solution to consider. Yet, here I am, doing just that. I don't know what the solution is. It can't just suffice to tell the respective parties to 'do better', but I find that I'm a critical hope deficit at the moment. That is painful.
APN readers, I don't recognize my country right now, but it needs to go find itself in a hurry.