Or so Far Right Thinks? It is pretty scary when Trump is the most knowledgeable and rational "person in the room". :-)
"Root praised the former president, saying he considers him a friend, before taking aim at Trump's vaccine comments.
"He needs an intervention from a friend, because he's the greatest president of my lifetime. I love him. I will always love him," Root said of Trump. "He's been right on everything except this issue. He's so horribly wrong on this issue."
Jones was also among those bashing Trump, saying on his show last week: "Hell, we're fighting Bill Gates and Fauci and Biden and the New World Order and Psaki and the Davos Group ... And now we've got Trump on their team!"
Who are these nut cases and why do people listen to them?
Trump approved funding for the vaccine rush, Trump claimed credit for the vaccines and now they think he needs an intervention because he supports the vaccines that he claimed as his own?
I keep praying that every nut case like this dies struggling to breathe... As the COVID virus destroys their lungs...
I know it is not very charitable or Christian, but please remember that I believe in Darwin's Theory of Evolution. And our gene pool will be much better off without people who are this "something"...
we're fighting Bill Gates and Fauci and Biden and the New World Order and Psaki and the Davos Group ... And now we've got Trump on their team!"
ReplyDeleteWhat are people saying when people say things like that?
One of the things I talk about way too much is how we remember things. Basically, I suggest that while we remember childhood, it's Beaver's childhood we remember. Recently, the Washington Post published an article about the Mayberry Andy Griffith cult. https://www.washingtonpost.com/arts-entertainment/2021/12/29/ted-koppel-mayberry-cbs-sunday-morning/
What I found amusing about this article were Koppel's blinders. He thought the Andy Griffith Show presented inaccurate view of it's times. It was of it's time. It was the thing or part of it. It couldn't be an inaccurate thing. Instead, Koppel presented a montage of news stories that were contemporary to that time. As a depiction of 1961, that was what was inaccurate, what it was accurate about was the time it was made, something Koppel isn't clear about.
People aren't always talking about what they are talking about. But they are just about always talking about something.
--Hiram
As I often say...
ReplyDeletePeople find what they are looking for.
And overlook what they do not want to see.
As I often say...
ReplyDeleteIt's usually under something.
--Hiram
Maybe this would help... :-)
ReplyDeleteI am a cluttered person, and so I have developed theories of clutter. Things you are looking for are generally under something else is one example. People do find what they are looking for, but cluttered people often find other things instead. Often those things are better than what they were looking for, and sometimes they simply distract from what one was looking for. Cluttered people often forget what they are looking for but usually remember what it was at some later point, often when they aren't in a position to find it. Cluttered people can be well disorganized. They don't have the urge to file things that they can never find later. Most of the things they need most or use most are near at hand. Cluttered people are good at Jeopardy but bad at parties, and are always in search of villages to which they can explain things.
ReplyDelete--Hiram