He "doesn't like talking about politics" (with women, because it always leads to him being ghosted).
He doesn't agree with either side, but admits he likes that Trump tells it like it is.
When Trump was running for president the first time I always said that the "good" thing about him was that he said what he thought and so you always knew what he was thinking, but the bad thing was that everything he thought was insane and terrifying and full of hatred.
and it turns out that his verbal diarrhea of interior monologues are massively influential to a vocal minority of intolerable people
when other nation's wannabe dictators started quoting him, shit got scary
I think you need to have a lobotomy before you're able to effectively quote Trump.
You need to remove the part of the brain that's in charge of ensuring that a sentence actually conveys some meaning. Even if you're lying the lie should at least be moderately believable in the sense that it's comprehensible by people who haven't had 30 whiskey sours.
You also have the problem if him not knowing what he's thinking.
First time being 2016 or 2000? https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donald_Trump_2000_presidential_campaign
Barbie was a woke movie!!!
I mean Barbie was a woke movie...
In the best way a half movie half advertisement could be. It argues against citizen's United in the first 5 minutes of the movie ffs.
Bunker For Two: A Patriot's Christmas Story
It's all fun and games until he tries the cyanide pills on the dog.
Running the small business duh, those drugs aren't going to sell themselves oh wait I shouldn't have said that.
Image Transcription: Bluesky Post
Doug, @friendoflwaxana.bsky.social
Ladies: before you quit your high paying ad exec job in the city and move in with the handsome charming flannel-wearing Christmas-loving man who runs an adorable small business in your hometown, remember to ask where he was on Jannuary 6đź‘€
For context:
Small Businesses Boycotted After Owners Attend Capitol Riot | Time
Across the country, small business owners who attended the pro-Trump event are facing backlash and in some cases boycotts as their images circulate online. Some of those who didn’t storm the Capitol but simply attended the event or were in Washington D.C. to support Trump are also facing fallout, a sign of a shift in consumer behavior. In an era of ideological polarization and economic hardship, people don’t just care about the products a business provides; they care about the politics behind the business, and thanks to social media, that’s easy to figure out.
“Firms are made up of people, and individuals want to buy from firms or use the product that can represent them,” Pinar Yildirim, an associate professor of marketing at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, tells TIME. “We want to buy from firms that share our values, that represent us, that seem to see a future for this country, for the world, or for ourselves, the way that we do.”
Even some of those who didn’t storm the Capitol but simply attended the event or were in Washington D.C. are also facing fallout. After Donald Rouse, Sr., a Louisiana businessman and retired CEO and co-owner of the grocery chain Rouse’s Markets, was spotted on social media at the rally, there were widespread calls online to boycott the stores bearing his name. Rouse later issued a statement saying he had left before the riots began and condemning the violence. In Chicago, Thien Ly, the general manager of the restaurant Tank Noodle, posted a photo of himself on a plane, as well as a plane ticket to Washington D.C., on social media, leading to a deluge of negative Yelp reviews, calls online to boycott the restaurant, and even a virtual protest. In an interview with NBC Chicago, Ly said that he and his family were in D.C. to show support for Trump but were not near the Capitol building; since the riots, they have received death threats, harassment and intimidation at the restaurant, he said.
Owner of Northside Chicago restaurant Tank Noodle, Thien Ly, took a trip to DC to take part in the riots.
University of Chicago professor of political science Robert Pape has spent the past year gathering information about the insurrectionists and their co-ideologues. According to Pape, 26 percent of the rioters charged were business owners; an additional 28 percent were white-collar workers.
"There are relatively more business owners in the insurrectionist pool than in America," Pape notes. The composition of those charged with a crime -- with 716 individuals studied by Pape thus far -- undermines what "we're used to thinking about far-right violence and extremism." This was a heavily white-collar riot -- a businessperson's riot -- which is in some ways unsurprising because the protest that set it off was fomented, as President Joe Biden just reminded us, by the businessman/president who lost his bid for reelection.
I met a flannel wearing man named Colton. Even though he was in Vermont... I could definitely envision him @ Jan 6 boondoggle.
Very relevant video if anyone would like some good Hallmark trashing entertainment: https://youtu.be/HoIWa7hbiws?si=GNnh2_yooYm96MyA
Link without the tracker:
Is there a way to make Firefox copy links without tracking by default?
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