Exactly. That's what I was saying earlier - some see Trump as positive; some see him as negative. Some ONLY look at the positive and discard the negative; others ONLY look at the negative and discard the positive.
I can't speak for people like Jamie or Drtooth or anyone else here with similar views, but speaking for myself, it's not that I completely discard or disregard anything positive about Trump, it's that I
don't see
anything positive about Trump whatsoever, and it goes beyond his being in Office right now, and beyond when he was campaigning . . . I can remember eons ago when him running for President was still something of a joke/meme that people like the Simpsons and others would put out there: I'd see the jokes and such like, "Hey, what if Donald Trump of all people ran for President one day in the future?" And I'd see Trump on talk shows or giving other interviews (even back when Bush was still in Office) talking about how, "America had the chance to be the greatest country in the world, and it failed." And even back then, I felt like if anything like this ever came true that he would be a terrible President, because even back then, he seemed so out-of-touch with the common people, and I just knew if he became President, it'd probably be more for his own ego, or the sake of having the title of POTUS, or just to prove he could do it; anyone who has never known anything other than wealth have no idea what the real struggles of working class and lower-income are like, and as such, they're usually the worst ones to try to trust stimulating said classes. And again, even way back then, Trump always seemed to be more interested in, well, Trump, than anyone or anything else, and that's definitely something that seems to have never changed - in fact, it seems to have gotten just a little more extreme what with this whole, "I'm President now, which means I can do anything and everything I want, and nobody can sue me because being President means automatic immunity," thing going on.
On a slightly different (and arguable maybe more light-hearted) note, I've recently come to realize something: there's shocking similarities between Trump and his supporters, and Taylor Swift and her fans. I mean Trump is an egotistical narcissist who thinks he's the best thing the world has to offer, and if things don't go his way, he has little childish temper tantrums and whines on Twitter about it; Taylor Swift is an egotistical narcissist who thinks her songs are the best music the world has to offer, and if she doesn't get the recognition she feels she deserves (like when she didn't win a Grammy), she has childish meltdowns and rants on social media about it. Trump does things like sign Executive Orders to undo everything Obama does, spends more time in Mara-lago on vacation than he does in the White House, belittle and demean certain groups of people the GOP doesn't like, and yet his supporters praise him for doing a great job as President and making America great again; Taylor Swift does things like hook up with a guy, dumps him, writes a song about him in a vicious cycle, and yet her fans praise her for "being so smart" because she "doesn't settle." If naysayers say anything critical about Trump, his supporters take it personally and attack said naysayers for being disrespectful to "the President of the United States;" if naysayers say anything critical about Taylor Swift, her fans attack said naysayers for being disrespectful to one of the greatest and most powerful musical artists of all time.