It's funny because it's true.
I think it's so damn funny that this is what seems to be tipping things. It shouldn't have taken this long, but I think there were a lot of people just trying to justify the situation as best they could. Particularly why he was picked as the Republican nominee over the, what, 11 other actually not totally abysmal candidates?
"Oh, he's a business man first, of course he would use the tax breaks. That's not bad, he clearly knows where the tax loopholes are. That's a good thing!"
"He's not a career politician, he's different. So he says things as he thinks of them, no filter. He's got a different platform - this means we'll get some changes!"
I think this was the first thing that really couldn't be defended, since that's why Trump himself apologized for the first time...at least in this campaign, but probably in his goddamned life. Not any good way to spin this - "oohhh...Bill Clinton is a man whore look at him instead" doesn't really work. I mean, we knew this for a while (and anyone who took half a second to look would have figured it out earlier - this is the era of the internet, people, not that hard to find stuff). It's really frustrating that it got this far.
Agreed about the media - this election (and previous elections have been building up to this one) is way too focused on sensationalism - it's so hard to find non-idiotic media coverage. How about we talk a bit more about policies and the like? There's a reason the founding fathers (was it Adams? I can't remember for sure) said that we should have multiple parties, not a 1-2 party system, which leas to situations like this.
Really hoping Johnson makes a big impact here. And that the Republican party gets a hell of a reform.