“Every time he talks, he’s talking about the enemy within.”
“I am Austin from Colorado and I voted for Donald Trump in 2016. I come from an evangelical background, and so it’s just kind of assumed if you’re evangelical, that you’re a Republican and that you’re going to vote for the Republican candidate. So naturally I voted for Donald Trump even though when the primaries happened that year, he was not my first choice.
“I didn’t think he was a good person to be honest, but when he was the nominee and when my option was Trump or Clinton, it was obvious we go with, you know, the one who God wants to be in office. But it didn’t take long for me to regret that decision because it turns out he was not very good at leading.
“He didn’t seem to know what he was doing. And when COVID hit the way he handled it or rather. The way he didn’t handle it, was pretty much this final straw for me. When the 2020 election came, I felt so conflicted ’cause I didn’t, I was a Republican. I would never vote for a Democrat, but I couldn’t in good conscience vote for Trump again.
“So I sat that one out. That was the first election since I was 18 that I did not participate in. Now here we are again. Trump is looking to be president for the third time, and I am horrified that someone who now recently has been using Nazi propaganda, every time he talks, he’s talking about the enemy within.
“That sounds familiar, vermin, that also sounds familiar. Please do your research, look this up. So in a million years, I would never vote for him again. So this time I’m not sitting this election out. I am proudly supporting Kamala Harris.”