barmar, on 2017-July-08, 14:01, said:
And so was JFK, and that doesn't stop him from being revered.
The difference is that for these other Presidents, their womanizing seemed to be an aberration, they were otherwise pretty decent people. In Trump's case, it's just one more serious character flaw. He was also a notoriously dishonest businessman, and his business accumen was supposedly one of the reasons people voted for him.
http://www.cnn.com/2...tion/index.html
Please review this list and the outcomes including settlements paid. I would submit that there is a pattern to this behavior. Watch our actions, for they become habits. Watch our habits, for they become character.
This is not just an aberration... it is a habitual act that reveals a serious character flaw in terms of honesty, fidelity, accountability and self-discipline. It's unfair to compartmentalize these flaws and disassociate them from the greater leader. They are part and parcel and can not be surgically or ideologically removed from the man.
However, the populace tends to overlook these peccadilloes and abuses of power in office because he is articulate, charming, charismatic, and has solid consensus-building skills. Also, his accomplishments in office overshadow this character issue. Even when he lied about the affair to the nation, he was impeached and still remained in office thanks to partisan votes in the Senate.
Nobody likes to be called a bad judge of character. So even if Clinton's past caught up with him with Lewinsky, most people didn't want to see additional evidence of this character flaw aka "aberration". Many said this was a marital issue even when the sexual acts occurred in the White House and with a paid White House intern and even when the subsequent lying and cover-up under oath were all politically calculated, yet morally flawed choices.
To me, that suggests being a womanizer and adulterer in office and lying about it and obstructing justice has consequences, but forcible removal from the Office of President isn't one of them. Long story short--we are principled RELATIVE to the person who is the hot topic and relative to the type of political capital the accused has accrued when he commits despicable acts. There are shades of gray when it comes to character.
Is that a good thing or a bad thing?