Anonymous wrote:
How in God’s green earth can his wife even stand to be around him - much less sleep with him. Isn’t she terrified of the lesson her kids are taking from all this? Do you think she stays with him because she’s afraid of him being alone with the kids (not safety-wise but brainwashing). Do you think she fears for her own safety from MAGAs if she were to leave him? She can’t *possibly* be on board with his misogyny, can she???
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this stuff is bizarre.
Social skills (and eating donuts/cake) has not much to do with running our economy and keeping America safe and stable. We all know this know.
I am a female. At work I want people to treat me like a man. Pay me like one too. I go home and I am female again.
I literally tell people to have male expectations on me.
Part of running for any office, including the highest offices in the land, is convincing people that you're human. That you have some humanity. That you identify with them and their struggles. He's failing at doing something that is extremely fundamental.
There is currently no evidence about his ability to be a good executive, because his political experience consists of 2 years as a junior senator. So, we're essentially back to wondering if the guy even speaks human.
I am the same poster who wants to be treated male. I speak a couple of languages. A third one not that great (another I studied for spouse and kids). speaking human is not a thing.
I just think it’s over emphasized. W was / is an amazing human being, a lot of people say that about him. He basically is living the retirement dream now
I'm not sure what point you're making - but also W being someone people wanted to spend time with was one of his selling points.
Indeed it was! He was a very likeable person and Al Gore was a big stiff and a bore. It helped W's campaign a lot. It was often mentioned that people wanted to have a beer with W. His wife Laura was also very likeable and Tipper had a bad reputation because of her labeling rock music. Personalities matter a lot.
DP. I agree. I’ve long felt that I’d enjoy having dinner with George and Laura Bush — as long as we didn’t discuss politics. George passing candy to Michelle Obama was quite sweet.
And really, W should get credit for his assessment of Trump’s inauguration:
“Some weird s**t”
Yes, he nailed it!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this stuff is bizarre.
Social skills (and eating donuts/cake) has not much to do with running our economy and keeping America safe and stable. We all know this know.
I am a female. At work I want people to treat me like a man. Pay me like one too. I go home and I am female again.
I literally tell people to have male expectations on me.
Part of running for any office, including the highest offices in the land, is convincing people that you're human. That you have some humanity. That you identify with them and their struggles. He's failing at doing something that is extremely fundamental.
There is currently no evidence about his ability to be a good executive, because his political experience consists of 2 years as a junior senator. So, we're essentially back to wondering if the guy even speaks human.
Yes plus the vice president is expected to do more listening tours, funerals, meeting with constituents.
God, can you imagine Vance, who is, as he campaigns for the job, unable to hide his contempt for literally everyone? The guy thinks he’s the smartest guy in the room but he’s such a deflated whoopie cushion. There’s nothing there. He’s intellectually bankrupt. About the only thing consistent about him is his love of **cking couches and telling women how much he hates them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Republicans tend to be very sensitive about their lack of intellectual heft and pedigree. So there's effectively a pipeline to take mediocre young Republicans in the Ivy League and shepherd them into positions of prominence - JD Vance (Yale Law), Ron DeSantis (Harvard Law), Rafael Cruz (Harvard Law), Joshua Hawley (Yale Law), and a couple of others. These are fairly unremarkable men that have all the doors opened for them, from the Federalist Society to prestigious clerkships to introductions to prominent billionaires like Peter Thiel. Even introductions to suitable women who work for Big Law (Vance) or Goldman Sachs (Cruz). It's like the glided into their positions, but they were selected by the moneyed conservatives to be their vehicles and mediums for power - Mercer, Adelson, Walton, Griffin, Schwarmann and so on. Vance is clearly owned, and that's how one should regard him.
Thank you for your excellent post. I’ve wondered why people like these, perhaps eager for some stamps of approval, sought out these specific university environments — only to complain publicly about them because they themselves were bad fits for the very environments that they so eagerly chose.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this stuff is bizarre.
Social skills (and eating donuts/cake) has not much to do with running our economy and keeping America safe and stable. We all know this know.
I am a female. At work I want people to treat me like a man. Pay me like one too. I go home and I am female again.
I literally tell people to have male expectations on me.
Part of running for any office, including the highest offices in the land, is convincing people that you're human. That you have some humanity. That you identify with them and their struggles. He's failing at doing something that is extremely fundamental.
There is currently no evidence about his ability to be a good executive, because his political experience consists of 2 years as a junior senator. So, we're essentially back to wondering if the guy even speaks human.
Yes plus the vice president is expected to do more listening tours, funerals, meeting with constituents.
God, can you imagine Vance, who is, as he campaigns for the job, unable to hide his contempt for literally everyone? The guy thinks he’s the smartest guy in the room but he’s such a deflated whoopie cushion. There’s nothing there. He’s intellectually bankrupt. About the only thing consistent about him is his love of **cking couches and telling women how much he hates them.
Disagree. Vance knows he's not the smartest in the room. I actually see him as an incredibly insecure imposture syndrome fraud. He was the dumbest student at YLS and it's not even close. He was the dumbest person in Thiel's orbit. He's dumber than his wife and acts subservient to her.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this stuff is bizarre.
Social skills (and eating donuts/cake) has not much to do with running our economy and keeping America safe and stable. We all know this know.
I am a female. At work I want people to treat me like a man. Pay me like one too. I go home and I am female again.
I literally tell people to have male expectations on me.
Part of running for any office, including the highest offices in the land, is convincing people that you're human. That you have some humanity. That you identify with them and their struggles. He's failing at doing something that is extremely fundamental.
There is currently no evidence about his ability to be a good executive, because his political experience consists of 2 years as a junior senator. So, we're essentially back to wondering if the guy even speaks human.
Yes plus the vice president is expected to do more listening tours, funerals, meeting with constituents.
God, can you imagine Vance, who is, as he campaigns for the job, unable to hide his contempt for literally everyone? The guy thinks he’s the smartest guy in the room but he’s such a deflated whoopie cushion. There’s nothing there. He’s intellectually bankrupt. About the only thing consistent about him is his love of **cking couches and telling women how much he hates them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this stuff is bizarre.
Social skills (and eating donuts/cake) has not much to do with running our economy and keeping America safe and stable. We all know this know.
I am a female. At work I want people to treat me like a man. Pay me like one too. I go home and I am female again.
I literally tell people to have male expectations on me.
Part of running for any office, including the highest offices in the land, is convincing people that you're human. That you have some humanity. That you identify with them and their struggles. He's failing at doing something that is extremely fundamental.
There is currently no evidence about his ability to be a good executive, because his political experience consists of 2 years as a junior senator. So, we're essentially back to wondering if the guy even speaks human.
I am the same poster who wants to be treated male. I speak a couple of languages. A third one not that great (another I studied for spouse and kids). speaking human is not a thing.
I just think it’s over emphasized. W was / is an amazing human being, a lot of people say that about him. He basically is living the retirement dream now
I'm not sure what point you're making - but also W being someone people wanted to spend time with was one of his selling points.
Indeed it was! He was a very likeable person and Al Gore was a big stiff and a bore. It helped W's campaign a lot. It was often mentioned that people wanted to have a beer with W. His wife Laura was also very likeable and Tipper had a bad reputation because of her labeling rock music. Personalities matter a lot.
DP. I agree. I’ve long felt that I’d enjoy having dinner with George and Laura Bush — as long as we didn’t discuss politics. George passing candy to Michelle Obama was quite sweet.
And really, W should get credit for his assessment of Trump’s inauguration:
“Some weird s**t”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this stuff is bizarre.
Social skills (and eating donuts/cake) has not much to do with running our economy and keeping America safe and stable. We all know this know.
I am a female. At work I want people to treat me like a man. Pay me like one too. I go home and I am female again.
I literally tell people to have male expectations on me.
Part of running for any office, including the highest offices in the land, is convincing people that you're human. That you have some humanity. That you identify with them and their struggles. He's failing at doing something that is extremely fundamental.
There is currently no evidence about his ability to be a good executive, because his political experience consists of 2 years as a junior senator. So, we're essentially back to wondering if the guy even speaks human.
Yes plus the vice president is expected to do more listening tours, funerals, meeting with constituents.
God, can you imagine Vance, who is, as he campaigns for the job, unable to hide his contempt for literally everyone? The guy thinks he’s the smartest guy in the room but he’s such a deflated whoopie cushion. There’s nothing there. He’s intellectually bankrupt. About the only thing consistent about him is his love of **cking couches and telling women how much he hates them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this stuff is bizarre.
Social skills (and eating donuts/cake) has not much to do with running our economy and keeping America safe and stable. We all know this know.
I am a female. At work I want people to treat me like a man. Pay me like one too. I go home and I am female again.
I literally tell people to have male expectations on me.
Part of running for any office, including the highest offices in the land, is convincing people that you're human. That you have some humanity. That you identify with them and their struggles. He's failing at doing something that is extremely fundamental.
There is currently no evidence about his ability to be a good executive, because his political experience consists of 2 years as a junior senator. So, we're essentially back to wondering if the guy even speaks human.
Yes plus the vice president is expected to do more listening tours, funerals, meeting with constituents.