Most people don't get close to staying away from lashing out emotionally or using ad hominem and other fallacious arguments.
By personal assertion I assume you mean calling your statements an analogy and nonsense. Is this a personal attack or stating that your point was nonsense?
When you defined analogy, did you add a word to the definition, or did you paste that definition from some uncited source?
When you applied logic to what you said, did you do so simplistically ignoring context that more than one poster here pointed out to you, or did you stand on your simplistic point?
When I asked you how your logic would work adjusting it for context, did you ignore me?
What fallacious arguments are you making when you assert I'm throwing a tantrum?
What was your purpose in all of this? Are you attempting to assert that Trump is stupid, or are you being hyper-critical of a man under extreme hostilities who didn't state something as clearly as he could have and then ignore the entire situational and narrative context of the discussion?
It's my perception that it's a "tantrum" because when pointing out valid points (some in which his biggest supporters even concede), it's taken and/or assumed I must have a personal dislike or agenda against Trump. It couldn't possibly be there are things I wish Trump addresses and changes to get an even bigger following. People throw tantrums when they wander off from fruitful discussion and instead want to make personal assertions.
I'll bite on the "analogy" you think I made once more. I used the definition I've always known for "analogy" to make my case I didn't make one. For this response, I'll give you a link to a definition that fits the one I gave:
Definition of Analogy
analogy
noun
anal·o·gy
ə-ˈna-lə-jē
pluralanalogies
Synonyms of analogy
1a
: a comparison of two otherwise unlike things based on resemblance of a particular aspect
b
: resemblance in some particulars between things otherwise unlike
: similarity
2
: inference that if two or more things agree with one another in some respects they will probably agree in others
3
: correspondence between the members of pairs or sets of linguistic forms that serves as a basis for the creation of another form
You can even look up "metaphor" and "simile" in case you think I somehow made one of those. Using Trump's explicit definition of what a "Black job" is, I applied the definition to determine if the position of POTUS is in fact a "Black job". Clearly, it does match his definition. You told me my analogy was "nonsense".
What analogy did I make exactly? <-- this is not a rhetorical question
As for my reasoning why I wanted to discuss this topic, I wanted to see if people actually believe this type of "nonsense". In my mind, he deliberately used the term "Black jobs" because he was pandering to a crowd of Black people. He isn't the first to pander to race, I am not making this point. I view this as cheap tactics to state illegals are "stealing Black jobs". In his case, it backfired astronomically because the interviewer asked him what a Black job is. That was an alpha move that checkmated him. He couldn't give an honest opinion of what a "Black job"... so he gave one of the dumbest descriptions of what a "Black job" is. His nonsensical definition of a "Black job" would render the POTUS as a "Black job". That isn't an analogy, a metaphor, nor a simile. That is simply applying HIS definition to the position of the POTUS.