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Why Donald Trump is the monster from 'Stranger Things'

Screen Shot 2016 08 12 at 9.06.49 AM
Screen Shot 2016 08 12 at 9.06.49 AM

(Netflix)

SPOILER ALERT: This post contains details about the plot of "Stranger Things." If you have not completed the series and do not want the details spoiled, DO NOT read further.

Donald Trump may not be an actual monster, but some people are saying he has similarities to the one featured in "Stranger Things."

The Netflix summer hit, set in a rural Indiana town in the 1980s, is centered on a reptilian creature that the Dungeons and Dragons-loving protagonists name the "demogorgon." The monster descends from a dark, twisted, shadow version of the world, called the Upside Down, into our own and preys on targets throughout the series.

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Like the monster, Trump too descended from the Upside Down world of politics. He hails from the shadow world of the trade where money is used to purchase influence. He plays dirty, takes no prisoners, and is immune to traditional methods of attack.

Just as the Republican field threw everything it had at Trump, the targets in "Stranger Things" employ conventional methods of defense to protect themselves from the menacing beast. But it's all to no avail.

The first victim in "Stranger Things," 12-year-old Will Byers, does the obvious when the demogorgon hunts him — he runs home, locks his door, and, like Jeb Bush, calls out for help from his parents. It doesn't work. The monster draws upon its mysterious powers and effortlessly gains entry. Byers is taken by the bloodthirsty creature into the Upside Down.

As the monster wreaks more havoc upon the world, extreme measures are taken by the startled members of the town, who realize the situation must be taken seriously. Two of the main characters, Nancy Wheeler and Jonathan Byers, put aside former discord to team up and take on the demogorgon. (Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz, anyone?)

The duo set up an ambush and, when the monster shows up, they use every trick in the book to destroy the creature. After luring it into a bear trap, Wheeler unloads a revolver in the monster. It does nothing. In an act of desperation, Jonathan sets fire to the hallway the creature is in — and while that chases the monster away, it still fails to cause crippling damage.

Somewhere along the line, it becomes obvious that the monster cannot be destroyed — at least not by occupants of the town.

In the season finale of "Stranger Things," it ultimately takes the show's female lead, a powerful test subject with supernatural powers named Eleven, to use her unworldly abilities to slay the beast.

In the face of Eleven, the same monster that casually brushed off a slew of attacks from previous opponents was suddenly left powerless and unable to compete. Staring the creature in the eye, Eleven confronted the monster and turned it into dust.

If the polls are any indicator, it appears we are about to see the same act play out with Hillary Clinton. Trump may have easily annihilated the contenders within his own party, but his primal powers don't seem to be effective against Clinton.



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