Tax cuts. Remember when he helped pass a $1.5 trillion unfunded tax cut for the wealthy then resigned? That was the only issue he cared about, and he cared more about that than about being honest about Trump's behavior
I feel like politicians are taking advantage of how short the average U.S. person's attention span is. (Mine included)
"LOOK OVER HERE" politician says, as they do a bad thing in the opposite direction
"Hey, wait a minute..." Some people
"HEY LOOK AT THAT GUY" politician to one of the people noticing
And the heads just keep turning, the pitchforks keep coming out, and soon it's a jumbled mess of misinformation, distraction, confusion and in-fighting.
You can start by paying attention to who the bad guys are and remembering their names, or at least their party affiliation. The same ones turn up over and under most of the time, so it's not as big a task as you would think.
As for fixing the attention span of people who just can't be bothered, I have no idea.
It doesn't really matter when he willfully overlooked so much to even make this assertion, and then to follow through with it as well. He KNEW what he was when he made this statement, same as the new statements.
You know, one thing I'll give Liz Cheney and Kinzinger, they weren't afraid to speak the truth while still in office. Spineless fucks like Paul Ryan here might've actually been able to do something if they had.
Populism, in the American context, was a proto-leftist movement with a "fuck the bankers" vibe. I believe it had the most traction during the depression with dust bowl era farmers, but someone can correct me if I'm wrong on that. Regardless, it was a popular bottom up political movement, which is why it's been vilifed by the ruling class and media ever since.
Yes, I know there are people who label themselves as right wing reactionary populists, but letting them freely co-opt that political movement is akin to letting the National Socialists co-opt a socialist movement.
Donald Trump is “not a conservative”, the former Republican House speaker Paul Ryan said, but “a populist, authoritarian narcissist”.
He was speaking to Kevin Kajiwara, co-president of Teneo Political Risk Advisory, in a podcast interview recorded in November but widely noticed this week.
Voices on both sides of the main political aisle have criticised Ryan for not strongly opposing Trump when he ran for the Republican nomination in 2016, or through four chaotic years in the White House that ended in the deadly January 6 attack on Congress.
Kajiwara asked Ryan how he thought history would judge Kinzinger and Cheney, conservative Republicans from Illinois and Wyoming who stood against Trump and sat on the January 6 committee before being forced out of Congress.
Historians searching for the roots of Trumpism have generally looked to the 1990s, when another Republican speaker, Newt Gingrich, turned Congress into a scorched-earth battleground; to the rise of Fox News; or to opposition to Barack Obama, the first Black president, particularly through the Tea Party movement.
Ryan, an economic conservative who was Mitt Romney’s running mate in 2012, continued: “There has to be some line, some principle that is so important to you that you’re just not going to cross, so that when you’re brushing your teeth in the morning, look yourself in the mirror, you like what you see.
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