>>36271
If you want isolationism then Libertarianism remained the correct answer of the time. I'll credit Trump for turning against the Trans Pacific Partnership, though in many regards he has been as hawkish as the rest of the candidates in the republican field and in every other part of his platform either wrong or lying. Even then though, it's uncertain whether his intent with opposing the TPP was a business interest, a ploy to pull in youth, or something actually genuine considering his previous pro-TPP stance. (Which, may I add, used to put him in support of an Obama-backed policy).
I'm not one to hold up nationalism as an inherent value. Jingo is a dangerous element to American nationalism, and exceptionalism has created more than it's fair share of problems. It's what pushed America into colonial ambitions, and it's what rallied Americans around the War on Terrorism. That little crusade has resulted in the failure of the Iraqi state as the fragile glue holding that part of the desert together was ripped asunder by invasion. It's also what allowed the American populace to sign their rights away through Patriot Act restrictions.
There is no balance between individual liberty and authority; you have one, or the other. You cannot have both, and the loss of rights has a greater degree of permanence, every time.
There is nothing wrong with isolationist policy. It is my belief however that as a globally invested billionaire, he has practically everything to lose in scaling back globalist policies and that in practicality he would not bite the hand that feeds him.
Lastly,
>underage
>wizard
None of these attributes apply, and ever will.
The Pirate Party was a tragedy of the European Left hijacking something good and decent, as well as a poor choice in branding. Peter Sunde was right, it needed to stop associating itself as a "pirate" thing a long time ago. Pirates just aren't cool. Not that much can be done at this stage though; Kopimi is here to stay.
As for the Cyber Party, yet another poor name for a decent platform.
>return to isolationist policy of nonintervention
>decriminalize marijuana federally, reduce criminal penalties for most drug offenses
>dismantle the TSA; use saved money to put armed federal agents on every flight
>massive public works projects to create jobs and rebuild aging American infrastructure
>efforts inside the government to promote digital literacy and awareness about the mechanisms of the Internet
>Pulling away FDA restrictions on a medical patient's ability to seek experimental treatment in this country
Face it, /pol/ abandoned it's skepticism and succumbed to a campaign which targeted it as a demographic. Trump proved that /pol/ could be as easily manipulated as any other group, given the right angle. Look at yourselves, spouting on about fucking "meme magic" because you don't even understand what memetics actually fucking is. Celebrating it as this power that's going to fix things for you instead of fixing them yourself.
It shouldn't have to be me to tell you it's pathetic.