Having called Trump an ‘idiot’ and a potential ‘American Hitler’, the Republican senator now fawns over him

People think they know Vance, because they know his narrative: growing up in poverty in Appalachia and making it to Yale Law School and Silicon Valley, only to then turn into political champion of blue-collar folks. Josh Hawley et tutti quanti might have more impressive credentials (Yale and Stanford), but only Vance has spawned a Netflix series. Why opt for a cold rightwing technocrat when you can have the rock star of “national conservatism”?

Vance has perfected what, on the right, tends to substitute for policy ideas these days: trolling the liberals. Mobilizing voters is less about programs, let alone a real legislative record (Vance has none; his initiatives like making English the official language of the US are just virtue signaling for conservative culture warriors). Rather, it’s to generate political energy by deepening people’s sense of shared victimhood.

The point for the rightist trolls is not that Democrats have all the wrong goals, but that they are hypocrites who say one thing and do another. Vance faults Trump’s opponents for pontificating about the rule of law, but in practice only caring about power – an update of the “limousine liberal” slogan for an age of rightwing autocracy.

  • @just_another_person
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    4 months ago

    I don’t he’s clever enough to be a troll. He’s just kind of an idiot who says incredibly decisive things, then massages it to seem like there was subtext. Essentially feeding weaker minded people who follow him that he has a plan, and he’s actually really clever in his subversion of…some…thing?

    He’s not. He’s exactly what he seems like. An adult with symptomatic Arrested Development that thinks he still has something to prove to everyone to be liked. He’s like a kid that thinks he’s getting back at someone who slighted him but doesn’t want to show embarassment. The weird part is that he actually seems desperate to be liked and adored, which is SUPER fucked up if you really think about what lengths he would go to in order to get that feeling.

  • @runjun
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    84 months ago

    I voted against this POS. His Ads were basically ‘I like Trump’ so him being selected wouldn’t surprise me.

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    24 months ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    A number of Republican candidates for running mate, from the endlessly self-humiliating Tim Scott to the nondescript Doug Burgum, are vying for what surely looks like a political suicide mission: they must know that Trump betrays everyone eventually, yet they seem to think that their fate as a faithful no 2 will be different.

    People think they know Vance, because they know his narrative: growing up in poverty in Appalachia and making it to Yale Law School and Silicon Valley, only to then turn into political champion of blue-collar folks.

    Mobilizing voters is less about programs, let alone a real legislative record (Vance has none; his initiatives like making English the official language of the US are just virtue signaling for conservative culture warriors).

    Vance faults Trump’s opponents for pontificating about the rule of law, but in practice only caring about power – an update of the “limousine liberal” slogan for an age of rightwing autocracy.

    Few others would try to impress readers of the New York Times with an invocation of the Nazi legal theorist Carl Schmitt, who, in the 1930s, claimed that liberals were either weaklings or prone to betray their own ideals.

    As with so many self-declared rightwing champions of the working class, economics isn’t ultimately where the action is; much more than factory floors, “elite campuses” feature in an increasingly feverish Maga imagination.


    The original article contains 923 words, the summary contains 227 words. Saved 75%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!