How does one identify the idiots in the room? Unless you want to take the time to review the list of Umair Haque followers, all you need to do is say “Trump”. Like Pavlov’s dogs, the idiots in the room instinctively leap forward, slobbering and frothing at the mouth, and spew programmed hate, all the while lapping up the identical drivel spewed by others.
Here’s just one example. In the March 28 Washington Post a writer by the fitting name of Bump bemoans a statement from Trump regarding his recent hole in one. The writer is apparently obsessed with Trump’s public statements, even though, in his own words “there is no reason for me to be sitting at my desk writing about a statement released by a former president that’s completely detached from anything of any significance happening in the world”. But the rich part is the comments from the Post’s many astute readers.
If you’ve got a beef with Trump, that’s fine. I do too. He should have told the people storming the Capitol to go home much more promptly than he did. His post-election conduct in general, once it became clear there was no substantial evidence of widespread fraud, was unacceptable. With just a little more self-control and Presidential “stuff”, he would not have lost the election to a man who couldn’t string two coherent thoughts together and never left his basement during the campaign.
Trump haters — as difficult and counter intuitive as it may be to you, please, for your own good, please try and break the cycle of classical conditioning you have fallen under and get some help. Ron DeSantis is standing by to take your call.
Donald Trump just released the most Donald Trump statement ever — The Washington Post