Seems like it's kind of working, weirdoOn no.
It's the "Word of the month" my friend. You know it, you hear it!
It'll change when it doesn't work for the umpteenth time
Seems like it's kind of working, weirdoOn no.
It's the "Word of the month" my friend. You know it, you hear it!
It'll change when it doesn't work for the umpteenth time
Funny y'all didn't cover this for Biden's turnouts.
They were very low, and not worth highlighting in a political contest.Funny y'all didn't cover this for Biden's turnouts.
The 80s are backWeirdo, So 1980's!
Uh maybe it's because Tulsi isn't really a Democrat?
Something Fishy is Going on with Kamala Harris, and Joe Rogan Can Smell It
He’s baffled by how Kamala Harris went from being “the least popular vice president of all time” to a celebrated “hero.”
“Try googling a negative story on her. You won't find one.”
But Rogan didn’t stop there; he took another interesting turn.
He asked why the Democratic party is so hellbent on pushing candidates like Kamala Harris when people like Tulsi Gabbard exists.
JOE ROGAN: “Well, it just shows you that what they're looking for is not what they say they're looking for.”
MICHAEL MALICE: “Yes.”
JOE ROGAN: “Because she [Tulsi] is a strong woman. She is a person who served overseas twice in a medical unit. So she got to see people blown up by the war. She was a congresswoman for eight years.”
MICHAEL MALICE: “Yeah.”
JOE ROGAN: “She is a person of color. She's everything you want, all those things you want, and you don't want her...
MICHAEL MALICE: “because she's not for war.”
JOE ROGAN: “Yes, well, she's also just not willing to play ball. There's a game that's being played, and if you're like, hey, you're not supposed to f—king move the ball. Like, oh, look at this bitch over here. Like, get out of here. You're gonna f—k up our game. It's not real democracy. It's controlled parties.”
Tulsa is a real Democrat. The radical left are not real dems. They are communist as shown by the attack on scotus.Uh maybe it's because Tulsi isn't really a Democrat?
Please humor me with a list of real democrats.Tulsa is a real Democrat. The radical left are not real dems. They are communist as shown by the attack on scotus.
No true Democrat would support anyone other than Donald Trump, obviously.Please humor me with a list of real democrats.
It's the only logical conclusion that a real American could make.No true Democrat would support anyone other than Donald Trump, obviously.
For once I just want TigerPurrs or ThiccPiggy or anyone else to explain what they think communism is, beyond a rote 'everything I don't like is communism, and the more I don't like it the more communism it is.'It's the only logical conclusion that a real American could make.
Not a big fan of this. Reminds me of the "deplorable" talk. While I certainly find the hats and hero worship and ridiculous tshirts strange, I don't think alienation and mocking are the way forward. Personally. Possibly a ridiculous analogy, but almost feels like kink shaming to me. Like, don't break into a government building, sure, don't harass people online or in public, etc sure. But criticizing what they choose to wear, etc, feels elitist. Even borderline hypocritical from the crowd that would support drag queens etc (for the record, I am that crowd, or at least I support the right for that group to exist and be who they feel they are). At the end of the day, both wearing a wig/makeup and a red hat/tshirt with a photoshopped Trump on it are both strange to me and not my thing. So not sure this is the area I'd like to see "liberals" fight fire with fire.
Blossom Lyons
@sportkite1
·
5m
And look! They all look normal. They aren't wearing WEIRD CLOTHES/HATS and carrying WEIRD SIGNS
I get your point here. But I'll counter with in 2016 the country hadn't been exposed to 8 years of extreme maga weirdness. I think it's working the way we need it to.Not a big fan of this. Reminds me of the "deplorable" talk. While I certainly find the hats and hero worship and ridiculous tshirts strange, I don't think alienation and mocking are the way forward. Personally. Possibly a ridiculous analogy, but almost feels like kink shaming to me. Like, don't break into a government building, sure, don't harass people online or in public, etc sure. But criticizing what they choose to wear, etc, feels elitist. Even borderline hypocritical from the crowd that would support drag queens etc (for the record, I am that crowd, or at least I support the right for that group to exist and be who they feel they are). At the end of the day, both wearing a wig/makeup and a red hat/tshirt with a photoshopped Trump on it are both strange to me and not my thing. So not sure this is the area I'd like to see "liberals" fight fire with fire.
The whole campaign deal using "weird" feels very younger generation to me and I'm not sure its going to reach the crowd they actually need to win over.
Anyway, when you're not responding to an attack in kind, you often respond thoughtfully to people if they do so to you, so would just encourage you to think about the above.
I’m not even saying it’s not weird tbh. I think it is. But there is just a whole heck of a lot of things I find weird and don’t understand. But part of the whole reason I think we are where we are (sides forming and becoming more and more entrenched) is calling the other side weird and “other” and letting something being “normal” influence how we feel about each other and more importantly treat each other. Because at the end of the day neither a weird hat or a crazy wig are hurting anyone.I get your point here. But I'll counter with in 2016 the country hadn't been exposed to 8 years of extreme maga weirdness. I think it's working the way we need it to.
I definitely agree with the last point.I’m not even saying it’s not weird tbh. I think it is. But there is just a whole heck of a lot of things I find weird and don’t understand. But part of the whole reason I think we are where we are (sides forming and becoming more and more entrenched) is calling the other side weird and “other” and letting something being “normal” influence how we feel about each other and more importantly treat each other. Because at the end of the day neither a weird hat or a crazy wig are hurting anyone.
I think a feeling of elitism from the left (or the uniparty for that crowd) is one of the key reasons in the rise of MAGA from my point of view. And there is a point there. Just want us to learn from it.
Ha, that last sentence makes me feel like you expected me to respond rudely, but I don't bite as long as you don't use trigger words like " dumb" lol.Not a big fan of this. Reminds me of the "deplorable" talk. While I certainly find the hats and hero worship and ridiculous tshirts strange, I don't think alienation and mocking are the way forward. Personally. Possibly a ridiculous analogy, but almost feels like kink shaming to me. Like, don't break into a government building, sure, don't harass people online or in public, etc sure. But criticizing what they choose to wear, etc, feels elitist. Even borderline hypocritical from the crowd that would support drag queens etc (for the record, I am that crowd, or at least I support the right for that group to exist and be who they feel they are). At the end of the day, both wearing a wig/makeup and a red hat/tshirt with a photoshopped Trump on it are both strange to me and not my thing. So not sure this is the area I'd like to see "liberals" fight fire with fire.
The whole campaign deal using "weird" feels very younger generation to me and I'm not sure its going to reach the crowd they actually need to win over.
Anyway, when you're not responding to an attack in kind, you often respond thoughtfully to people if they do so to you, so would just encourage you to think about the above.
And this