Political Weirdos

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A community dedicated to the weirdest people involved in politics.

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cross-posted from: https://slrpnk.net/post/14280888

The election is in three weeks, and Pennsylvania is a must-win state for both Trump and Kamala Harris, but during a rally last night in Montgomery County, northwest of Philadelphia, Trump got bored with the event, billed as a “town hall,” and just played music for almost 40 minutes, scowling, smirking, and swaying onstage. Trump is no stranger to surreal moments, yet this was one of the oddest of his political career.

This kind of behavior would have resulted in discussion of dementia and Alzheimers if it was a Democrat.

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Trujillo described how his lack of legal status made him feel uncertain about what he could accomplish, but how he “had to make the best of my life.” He said he graduated from high school, got married and had two children, now 12 and 5.

He opened a restaurant that he said is struggling due to the high cost of labor and goods, and said he was hopeful Trump would usher in better economic times.

“I’m happy with the opportunity that Trump has again to run and hopefully get us back on track,” Trujillo said. “I think there’s room to make America greater.”

But it's okay, he's a citizen now. It happened... let me check... before Trump was president.

"I've got mine, fuck you" once again.

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At some point, some "doctor" is going to make a bogus claim that yes, Trump weighs 215 pounds. Then, the political weirdos who were wearing literal diapers and putting gauze on their ears are going to start wearing fat suits.

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Weirdo loves circles. (www.mediaite.com)
submitted 6 days ago by FlyingSquid to c/political_weirdos
 
 

And then all of a sudden, you hear that they’re leaving Milwaukee or they’re leaving wherever they may be located. It’s very sad to see it. And it’s so simple. I mean, you know, this isn’t like Elon with his rocket ships that land within 12 inches on the moon where they wanted to land. Or he gets the engines back. That was the first I realized. I said, “Who the hell did that?” I saw engines about three, four years ago. These things were coming. Cylinders, no wings, no nothing. And they’re coming down very slowly, landing on a raft in the middle of the ocean someplace with a circle. Boom.

Reminded me of the Biden circles that he used to have, right? He’d have eight circles and he couldn’t fill ’em up. But then I heard he beat us with the popular vote. I don’t know. I don’t know. Couldn’t fill up the eight circles. I always loved those circles. They were so beautiful. They were so beautiful to look at. In fact, the person that did them, that was the best thing about his, the level of that circle was great. But they couldn’t get people, so they used to have the press stand in those circles because they couldn’t get the people. Then I heard we lost. Oh, we lost. No, we’re never gonna let that happen again. But we’ve been abused by other countries. We’ve been abused by our own politicians, really, more than other countries.

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At times, Trump has the narrative instincts of a hound in a fish store, following her nose from one exciting scent to the next, beginning anecdotes only to abandon them. More than once, I found myself flipping back and forth between Kindle pages, wondering if a paragraph had gone missing. She begins one section with, “It was a Saturday in October, a seemingly normal weekend, when my memories of 9/11 came flooding back.” There have been no memories of 9/11 discussed thus far in the narrative, though she does mention seeing the Twin Towers standing “proudly against the horizon” upon her 1998 arrival to New York. The anecdote to follow moseys first through an explanation of the difference between weekends and weekdays in the White House, and then a scene in which her husband invited her to the situation room during a mission to kill the ISIS militant Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi. (President Trump himself has seemed to conflate Hamza and Osama Bin Laden with al-Baghdadi.) It ends with Trump’s memory of giving a medal to the Belgian Malinois, Conan, but the 9/11 connection remains unexplored.

“It was not an easy process,” she writes of gaining US citizenship, declining to elucidate further. In a description of a trip to Japan she mentions that she doesn’t eat raw fish. Why not? I still don’t know. In a chapter detailing her experience of this July’s assassination attempt, she writes that “it had been a relatively quiet Saturday in Bedminster. Barron played sports outside. I was working on finishing my project.” Which project? Couldn’t say. Repetitions abound: “‘I think it’s very sexy for a woman to be pregnant,’ I told the readers of Vogue, making clear that I believe that a pregnant woman is very attractive.”

In at least one place, she has ripped language from previous interviews and statements without attribution: her description of her whereabouts on January 6 replicate, verbatim, an interview she gave to Fox News in 2022: “Several months in advance, I organized a qualified team of photographers, archivists, and designers to work with me in the White House to ensure perfect execution. As required, we scheduled January 6, 2021, to complete the work on behalf of our Nation.”

Trump strides easily through contradictions. “Despite Slovenia being part of communist Yugoslavia, the communism there was different from that of the Soviet Union. Growing up, I felt more connected to our neighbors in Italy or Austria than to other communist countries in Eastern Europe.” Later, she writes, “Growing up under a communist regime, the pervasive surveillance of the state shaped my childhood experience.” She takes aim at trans athletes before making the sweeping statement that, “as many of you may know, I fully support the LGBTQIA+ community.” Even her insistence on the “mess” of the 2020 election begins with a strange couching: “Going into November, I did not know if Donald Trump would win the election. In elections as close as this, it’s difficult to say,”

Her reluctance, in some instance, to use proper nouns renders various anecdotes strangely elliptical: “After lengthy negotiations, the CEO of a multinational investment bank decided to terminate discussions about a proposed ‘Melania Trump Technology’ Special Purpose Acquisition Company.” While writing about the Black Lives Matter protests, she doesn’t call George Floyd by name, instead describing him as “a Black Minneapolis resident.” Certain familiar figures, including former Vice President Mike and Karen Pence, are entirely absent.

She rehashes dull and years-old disputes, including a cosmetics distributor who flubbed a contract to put out the defunct skincare line, “Melania Caviar Complexe C6.” (For all her vague gesturing to “all we hoped to accomplish in a second term,” her most concrete goal described in the book: “I hope to have the opportunity to bring excellent skincare products to market in the future under more favorable circumstances.”) She quibbles with not being allowed to take measurements of the White House prior to moving in, and blames the “I really don’t care do u?” jacket incident on Stephanie Grisham, whom she refers to throughout only as “my press secretary.”

She describes the time, during the aforementioned trip to Israel, when video of the Trumps and the Netanyahus walking together showed Melania swatting—there really is no other word for what she calls “a minor innocent gesture”—her husband’s hand away as he reaches to take hers. She says it’s because all of them couldn’t fit on the red carpet they were walking down, and that she was happy to walk behind them. “When he reached out to offer his hand, I declined, indicating that I was perfectly content walking on my own.” It is a relationship that maybe exists outside the bounds of regular spacial laws, since contrary to the account, the video shows her picking up the pace to walk, definitely, next to him.

If the Trumps ever have meaningful conversations, you won’t find them here, though Melania continues to translate what was left unsaid. Of the 2016 election night, “When we finally returned home on election night, the hour was so late and my exhaustion so profound that any deep discussions about the momentous events—or our suddenly transformed future—seemed beyond reach.” When they do finally have a “private moment,” she remembers telling him, “‘Congratulations,’ I said. ‘What an achievement. All those other people…and you won. You’re the president of the United States of America.” He replies, “And you’re the First Lady…Good luck,” which Melania translates for readers as “I know you’ll excel. Let’s get started.”

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/20607081

Marjorie Taylor Greene appeared to double down on her Hurricane Helene conspiracy theory over the weekend, following up a baseless claim that “they” can control the weather with an assertion that such a scheme might involve lasers.


🗳️ Register to vote: https://vote.gov/

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This completely normal person also used to have a wooden sign in front of his house before Biden bowed out. It said "I'm pooped I'm gonna go" and had the general shape of a diaper under it that said "BIDEN".

But good to know he legitimately spent money on those cardboard cutouts of Harris and Walz. There used to be several more signs for the orange turd but I think he was asked to dial it back a little

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/20469066

South Western’s elected school board is making some strange decisions.

For the last two years, they’ve fixated on which bathrooms LGBTQ+ kids use. In 2023, officials in this Hanover-area district played musical chairs with school bathrooms in a misguided attempt to appease the loudest bigots among them — ending up with five different types of bathrooms.

After a low-turnout school board election in which several far-right members joined their ranks, they hired a Christian law firm, decided to begin banning books and reopened the bathroom issue. Board President Matthew Gelazela, who was elevated to his post after previously serving as the board’s most vocal bomb-thrower, pointed to Red Lion’s discriminatory policies as something to aspire to.

Now, upon the advice of that law firm — the Harrisburg-based Independence Law Center — the board approved spending $8,700 to cut windows so passersby can look into the so-called “gender-identity” student bathrooms.

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I wonder who "they" are in this case? The Jews with the space lasers?

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submitted 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) by FlyingSquid to c/political_weirdos
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