Nebraska Sen. Ben Sasse is standing firm in his non-support of presumptive Republican nominee Donald Trump calling for an 'adult' third-party candidate instead.

After tickling the internet last night by asking whether an official RNC tweet, which commended the GOP candidates, was from a parody account, Sasse switched social mediums and penned a 1,400-plus word Facebook post entitled 'an open letter to majority America.'

In it, Sasse smacks both Washington and the parties' two likely nominees, Trump and Democrat Hillary Clinton saying, 'there are dumpster fires in my town more popular than these two "leaders."'

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Nebraska Sen. Ben Sasse wrote a 1,456 word letter to Americans and posted it to Facebook suggesting a third-party option may be the best route to go

Sen. Ben Sasse also sassed the Republican National Convention's Twitter account for suggesting that the GOP primary was a good thing

He noted that Washington was so broken and the political parties so petty that 'they're like a couple arguing about what color to paint the living room, and meanwhile, their house is on fire.'

This after mocking the Republican National Committee's Twitter account for writing, 'Thank you to the entire Republican field for a hard fought race. The Party is better for your efforts.'

'I assume this is a parody account,' Sasse said last night, before posting his Facebook diatribe.

On Facebook, Sasse suggested that perhaps the American people eschew the parties and the two candidates.

'Why shouldn’t America draft an honest leader who will focus on 70 percent solutions for the next four years? You know...an adult?' Sasse wrote.

Sasse didn't name names, but had a few ideas of who would fit the mold and what they might accomplish.

First he suggested that he or she shouldn't have young children.

'Such a leader should be able to campaign 24/7 for the next six months,' Sasse suggested. 'Therefore he/she likely can't be an engaged parent with little kids.'

The reason why third-party challenges don't usually get far off the ground is because getting ballot access in all 50 states is a substantial hurdle and said candidate would be way behind in fundraising as well.

Sasse said he didn't want to see the candidate go through an ideological purity test because such a person would likely be more conservative than both Trump and Clinton anyway in order to be viable throughout the United States.

Sen. Ben Sasse laid out a number of issues that a third-party president could tackle after he or she committed to just serving one term

'Imagine if we had a candidate,' the senator mused. 'who hasn't spent his/her life in politics either buying politicians or being bought.'

'Who didn't want to stitch together a coalition based on anger but wanted to take a whole nation forward,' he continued.

'Who pledged to serve for only one term, as a care-taker problem-solver for this messy moment,' Sasse suggested.

The Nebraskan also pushed the idea that the leader would focus on three or four big national problems during those four years.

Sasse had suggestions for those too.

First the president would come up with a national security strategy to take out jihadist groups like ISIS.

On the domestic front the president would tackle the budget and entitlement reform, along with passing some of the responsibility back to local and state governments to fix the K through 12 school systems.

Finally Sasse suggested that this dream president deal with 'incumbency protections' that would limit lifelong politicians staying power on Capitol Hill, including their ability to lobby.

'This really shouldn't be that hard,' Sasse said.