I'm taking the over on that four weeks.It'll only take about four weeks of programming, you'll see.
I don't follow this. I certainly get the idea that phrases like "blue collar" often get used as a euphemism for rural and suburban white folks, but what I'm not following, is the notion that AOC can't also have grown up as part of the working class because she "grew up in a house". I also don't know about the idea that only white men can be workers. If we're speaking strictly in terms of race/ethnicity... surely Hispanic/Latino folks can be viewed as being able to be "working class". Remember Trump making those quips about "black jobs"? He didn't make those comments in a vacuum. He instinctively knew that his supporters would know what "black jobs" meant.All the "free thinkers" will start talking (all at around the same time) about how she grew up in a house, and isn't really from a working-class background because, implicitly, only white men can be "workers"
I'm not convinced voters are going to remember or even care about something like this. Why would they? Who is going to vote against AOC because she advised against replacing Biden so late in the race? Harris lost. So AOC looks like Nostradamus for warning against replacing Biden. At least that's how I think most voters will look at it, especially since most voters voted for Trump. AOC didn't want to dump Biden for Harris? So what? I mean if Harris had won, AOC would have some crow to be eating right about now... but Harris lost, so I think AOC is OK on that front.and how she is a "Democrat insider" who insisted that Joe Biden had to be the nominee even as his lifeless corpse collapsed into a pile of dust on live tv.
In fact, as I think I may have mentioned a while back... of all the possible outcomes, Harris losing is probably the cynical/strategic best for AOC, because now she doesn't have to kiss up to Harris for her backing Biden and she gets to run for POTUS in a completely open field in 2028, likely against J.D. Vance as the Republican nominee... that is of course, unless the unlikely happens, and the Republican party dumps the VP and nominates someone else... or, the more likely happens and Trump just installs himself as dictator for life, or concocts some other pretense to stay in office... which...
Maybe... although I think Pelosi has more discipline than Trump. My understanding is that the relationship between Pelosi and the Bidens is completely ruined however... which was one of the points I was making about what it was going to take in terms of a prominent Democrat willing to sacrifice themselves to "bite the one ring off Biden's finger".God only knows what Nancy Pelosi might have threatened him with (she said she will take their conversation to the grave, so I expect Bob Woodward to publish a book that will detail the whole thing in the next eight months).
Sure, Pelosi "forced" him out, but then, to my earlier point... why couldn't she have done so sooner. My view is that the Democrats, Pelosi included couldn't "force" Biden to do anything. They could yell, scream, make faces, threats, shame him on the news, whatever... but ultimately only Biden himself could make the decision to drop out. In 20/20 hindsight, I don't know that we are any better off from him dropping out. If he had gone scorched earth and sent Trump and Clarence Thomas to Guantanamo, cut Israel off from all weapons, launched a full scale US-led counter-attack in Ukraine and then lost the election... would the world be any worse off? I guess its nothing but a thought exercise at this point.But Biden didn't exactly 'give it up'; the circumstantial evidence certainly indicates that he was forced out.
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