Stating the Obvious
Sure:
Tiassa,
yawn... are you going to get back to the thread topic?
Sure:
Mr. Welch might not be a Trump voter, per se, and we might certainly wonder at a man who just wanted to have a "closer look" and "shine some light" on a scandal he believed was true, who describes a change of plan, but who also came armed in the first place because he intended to intervene. And while not everything about that explanation can be simultaneously true, perhaps the more important thing here is that Maddison Welch is a tool.
Mr. Trump’s supporters do not seem to care; indeed, plenty happily play along, too, unwitting but complaisant assets to the machinations of international interests. This manner of mayhem and chaos is, ultimately, #WhatTheyVotedFor. Maddison Welch took up arms against Hillary Clinton, and in the process terrorized a bunch of people at a place that, just coincidentally, conservatives don’t like.
("The Pizza Post"↱)
This is one of those weird facets we might wish to pay some attention to. Overseas twitterbots are sufficient to move a soft-headed religious fanatic to terrorize a pizzeria as a means of taking up arms against Hillary Clinton; the lulzaholics ought to be proud, but what about the rest of Donald Trump’s supporters?
In the end, it’s all the same. They get played by Russian trolls, international misinformation bloggers, and botnets around the world because they want to.
It is easy enough to remind that it always has been about supremacism and lulz↱; as the excuses fall away, what else will be left?
("A Tragic Tale of Tools"↱)
Then again, theirs are astounding marks, such that one can suggest, as California RNC Committeeman Shawn Steel explained, that the "1% of Wall Street Bankers" were participating in a "massive Left Wing Conspiracy", and expect they will believe it. And it sounds even better, doesn’t it, given the outcome?
Thus we ought not be surprised to find master establishmentarian Newt Gingrich trying to pad Bannon’s résumé at Goldman Sachs. Yes, really, after all that talk of Goldman Sachs’ pernicious influence, it helps if one is a Republican, to overstate one’s involvement. Dan Primack used the occasion to point out a basic fallacy: "Gingrich seems to believe that having any one of those jobs is de facto proof that one doesn’t consort with white nationalists (it’s not)."
Nor should we pretend astonishment that pollster and Trump campaign manager Kellyanne Conway could be heard repeating the Goldman Sachs exaggeration the next day. Lobbyists and Wall Street and corruption, oh, my! Remember, as the excuses fall away like cold cinders, what remains; it’s been there the whole time.
("What They Voted For: Swamp"↱)
Mr. Trump’s supporters do not seem to care; indeed, plenty happily play along, too, unwitting but complaisant assets to the machinations of international interests. This manner of mayhem and chaos is, ultimately, #WhatTheyVotedFor. Maddison Welch took up arms against Hillary Clinton, and in the process terrorized a bunch of people at a place that, just coincidentally, conservatives don’t like.
("The Pizza Post"↱)
† † †
This is one of those weird facets we might wish to pay some attention to. Overseas twitterbots are sufficient to move a soft-headed religious fanatic to terrorize a pizzeria as a means of taking up arms against Hillary Clinton; the lulzaholics ought to be proud, but what about the rest of Donald Trump’s supporters?
In the end, it’s all the same. They get played by Russian trolls, international misinformation bloggers, and botnets around the world because they want to.
It is easy enough to remind that it always has been about supremacism and lulz↱; as the excuses fall away, what else will be left?
("A Tragic Tale of Tools"↱)
† † †
Then again, theirs are astounding marks, such that one can suggest, as California RNC Committeeman Shawn Steel explained, that the "1% of Wall Street Bankers" were participating in a "massive Left Wing Conspiracy", and expect they will believe it. And it sounds even better, doesn’t it, given the outcome?
Thus we ought not be surprised to find master establishmentarian Newt Gingrich trying to pad Bannon’s résumé at Goldman Sachs. Yes, really, after all that talk of Goldman Sachs’ pernicious influence, it helps if one is a Republican, to overstate one’s involvement. Dan Primack used the occasion to point out a basic fallacy: "Gingrich seems to believe that having any one of those jobs is de facto proof that one doesn’t consort with white nationalists (it’s not)."
Nor should we pretend astonishment that pollster and Trump campaign manager Kellyanne Conway could be heard repeating the Goldman Sachs exaggeration the next day. Lobbyists and Wall Street and corruption, oh, my! Remember, as the excuses fall away like cold cinders, what remains; it’s been there the whole time.
("What They Voted For: Swamp"↱)