Sure. I'm just not sure what I'm supposed to be optimistic about when it comes to Trump.
I am optimistic. So, perhaps, I'm a good one to explain. (Or perhaps that actually makes me poorly-suited to the task!)
Anyway, first: Trump is his own man, not a puppet. That's just a fact. So, that means: who knows what he'll do! He could do whatever! Literally. There are not the massive behind-the-scenes strings of lobbyists and puppet-masters controlling him. So he's a wild card. That certainly doesn't mean he'll do something good -- but it means that he
could.
Second: many, many of the things he talked about during the campaign are things that would be good for liberty. People tend like to stay in character. Politicians can't keep impossible promises, but they can and do stay true to the general ideological platform they set out during the campaign. Obama promised ObamaCare. Guess what? Delivered! Promise kept. Bush delivered on his promise to be a "compassionate" big-government conservative and to expand Medicare to pay for drugs. Presidents generally are pretty much -- or, often, exactly! -- the type of president anyone could have predicted them to be before being elected. Obama has been
exactly the type of President I would have expected him to be, based on who he was while campaigning. Exactly. Same with Bush.
Let's expand on this second point. Mr. Donald J. Trump has:
• Promised to put a freeze on all new regulations. This actually seems to be happening, by the way! To all appearances, this is his settled policy, his actual plan. It
realistically may happen once he is sworn in. If it does, this would be, by far, the best and most important libertarian victory on the Federal level in my lifetime. Probably, in fact, the hugest victory since the mass-liberalization following WWII.
• Proposed to pay off the national debt by selling off federal assets. This is the Harry Browne plan. That Mr. Trump proposed this shows, by the way, if nothing else, that he has listened to or read Harry Browne's policy proposals (or that he's a libertarian super-genius who came up with the same thing as Harry independently). That is a good thing, in my book. Now, it goes without saying, this is wildly unlikely to actually happen. If it does, we will all be so insanely happy we will forget about any problem we ever had with Trump and every libertarian in America will build a monument to him in his front yard and name or re-name all his children Donald... including the girls.
• Promised to appoint people to the (so-called) Supreme Court from a list of candidates who are conservative and largely small-government people (compared to the status quo). This is certainly not too hard to imagine happening. Seems very doable. Very likely he will deliver on this promise.
There are lots of other proposals and policy statements that could be listed, but three's a good number, people can wrap their heads around three. And those are three great positions Trump took on the campaign trail. Good for him.
Third: Both the House and Senate are Republican majority. Donald Trump will just be the President. A lot of what happens is determined by Congress. There are many items that are on the Republican agenda that are small-government pro-liberty items. With both houses and a friendly President, they could start to get through. Even some Rand Paul bills might get passed and signed. We'll see.
Anyway, I can't control what happens, so why not enjoy it? Why
not be optimistic? For the first time in my lifetime, there is actually some real, articulable reason to be optimistic! (no matter how slight.) So yeah, I'm optimistic, and then when nothing good happens and instead everything bad does, I can have my hopes crushed to pieces and dashed on the rocks and shake my fist at the betrayal!
It's all part of the fun!