And I will get back to you when I see you exhibit an open minded attitude towards Biden and Harris.
Although I'm not American, I think I'm beginning to see a couple of basic themes in all of this:
1. There is a very large contingent of Americans who actually have an irrational fear of the "left," presuming that they must be communists or "socialists." (Many don't seem able to see the difference between Socialism and Capitalism with a social conscience. Most of the happiest countries on earth are actually in the latter category -- they are not Socialist with a capital S, but rather they embrace Capitalism AND a need to participate in the well-being of all -- not just the strong, smart, rich or lucky. Thus, many of them (and especially on the Republican side) don't actually like Trump, nor DeSantis nor Ramaswamy, but they will vote for anything rather than risk this great fear they have of the left.
2. This will be a more controversial observation, but it does seem to me that Trump validates the darker side of many Americans: their racism, their hatred of "the other," their fears that somebody is trying to "replace them." Under the leadership of basically decent people (the Bushes, Obama and Biden), they feel as if they should be ashamed of, or hide, those hatreds and fears, but Trump gives them full permission to feel good about themselves as they are.
Adam Hochschild's book "American Midnight" describes another very dark period in America, just about exactly 100 years before the darkness of the Trump Administration. He suggests that the years 1917-1921 have a special place in infamy, and this was most certainly true for many quarters of the American left. During those years, the US experienced rapidly mounting patriotic frenzy and political repression unrivalled throughout most of its history. President Woodrow Wilson’s terror campaign against American radicals, dissidents, immigrants and workers makes the McCarthyism of the 1950s look almost subtle by comparison. His administration started
the police raids, surveillance operations, internment camps, strikebreaking and legal duplicity that would become part of the repertoire of the American state for decades to come. Remember when Donald Trump as candidate in 2016 called for Hillary Clinton to be "locked up," and his followers made that part of their mantra? Well, in the end he didn't "lock her up, but Wilson actually took such action: He jailed his charismatic Socialist opponent, the 63-year-old Eugene Debs, for opposing America’s descent into the carnage of the First World War, with the liberal press in lock step. “He is where he belongs,” Hochschild quotes The New York Times declaring of the imprisoned Debs. “He should stay there.” The Red Scare was well underway.