It’s not “herd immunity,” it’s mass infection and deliberate exposure. But perhaps the term herd immunity can be instructive in one sense: A herd is a group of stupid, docile, domesticated animals. Like cattle. They’re herded into an area by those who control them and, ultimately, exploited for their milk and butchered for their meat.
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If you tell the public you don’t care about a president enlisting foreign aid to undermine an American election, do you think anything less will somehow matter? Hunter Biden? Hillary Clinton’s emails? Hey, Republicans, nobody cares. Nobody, anyway, except the people who already watch Fox News and are all-in on your politics of grievance, outrage, and resentment.
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Trump’s immovable “base” isn’t loyal to him so much as they’re desperately loyal to the idea of a vanishing white-majority nation. He’s made himself a symbol of that by pandering to white supremacists and defending Confederate symbols, so they’ve latched onto him as a potential savior. But the fact is that, despite their panicked fervor, they’ve never pushed Trump’s popularity into majority territory.
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So many things about the world today seem nonsensical. They seem antithetical to what I thought I’d figured out about the human nature. It turns out I don’t know as much as I think I did, which is too bad, because the stuff I thought I knew was a lot more encouraging than what I’m finding out. Here’s what I don’t understand.
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Why did Trump believe it was a good idea to drop out of the second debate? Because he believed it was a good idea to drop out of the second debate. It’s as simple as that. There’s no master strategy, no art of the deal, no nothing going on behind the scenes. It, and virtually every other action Trump takes, is the product of circular reasoning by a mind caught in the endless loop of its own self-delusion.
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Asking journalists to moderate a presidential debate is like asking ballplayers to umpire the World Series. Yes, they know the game, but no, they’re neither trained nor qualified to call balls and strikes. Even then, baseball umpires have a relatively easy job compared to, say, basketball referees. On the hardwood, refs have to deal with rapid-fire challenges and players who whine about every call they make.
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