I suspect a certain type does, but I've yet to meet one.
Here's one you might know. I know his type.

I suspect a certain type does, but I've yet to meet one.
Here's one you might know. I know his type.
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Public displays of cowtowing is indeed an art form over here and apparently carries no negative connotation.On a related note; it will never cease to amaze me the extent to which Abe went out of his way to stick his nose up the President’s ass.
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/02/24/opinion/sunday/donald-trump-evangelicals-president.html?
Finally, why in the world wouldn’t evangelicals get behind and support a man who not only is in line with most of their agenda but also has delivered time and time again? The victories are numerous: the courts, pro-life policies, the coming Embassy in Jerusalem and religious liberty issues, just to name a few. He easily wins the unofficial label of “most evangelical-friendly United States president ever.”
[...]
Does Mr. Trump have moral failings? Yes. Critics will suggest a hypocrisy coming from evangelical leaders who are quick to denounce the ethical failings of others who don’t have an “R” next to their name. But the goal of evangelicals has always been winning the larger battle over control of the culture, not to get mired in the moral failings of each and every candidate. For evangelicals, voting in the macro is the moral thing to do, even if the candidate is morally flawed. Evangelicals have tried the “moral” candidate before.
Jimmy Carter was once the evangelical candidate. How did that work out in the macro? George W. Bush was the evangelical candidate in 2000: He pushed traditional conservative policies, but he doesn’t come close to Mr. Trump’s courageous blunt strokes in defense of evangelicals.
Evangelicals have found their man. It may seem mystifying to outsiders, but for someone like me, with a front-row seat to an inside view, it makes perfect sense. Maybe they’re taking their cue from Billy Graham, embracing presidents with moral failings rather than rejecting them.
We're all morally flawed, so the hypocritical stance would be rejecting someone because of that. His policies are a welcome change and I don't know any evangelicals who have been disappointed in a meaningful way by them. His character and behavior leaves plenty to be desired. I can't think of any other president who would be a more surprising champion for evangelical voters. It feels strange for me to agree so often with his policy positions and still be so lukewarm on him as President.
As ever, the deep problem is the policy preferences of so-called Evangelicals (read: not all Christians), not the individual morality of their agent du jour. But I suppose we shouldn’t expect better from a nation founded, in no small part, by holier-than-thou elitist utopian hyper-exclusive hypocrisy-riddled Puritans who fully internalised the vengefulness of the Old Testament but couldn’t seem to wrap their hearts around the grace of the New.