superchuck500
U.S. Blues
Offline
The fact that Donalds is even on this list shows you how bonkers American politics have become.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Here is the district map.The congressional district that includes Butler County was what he was referring to, not the county. He was the one who won that district, so I would imagine he remembers the votes for it.
How close is that to Kent? I have a good friend that grew up in Kent.Here is the district map.
Here is the vote breakdown.
Butler county is in district 8.
Butler 62%, Prebble 77.5%, Darke 80.9%, Miami 71.6%, Clark 61.3%, Mercer 80.9%
Warren Davidson is the Representative(R)
So you must be talking about my buddy Greg. Who is District 1, Hamilton County 42% Vance and Warren County 64.5% Vance. Not an inch of Butler County. So Greg is talking about the Hamilton county part of his district where Vance has his Ohio home, in a very ,very liberal area. Not where Vance grew grew up, Butler County.
I’m surprised Vance got 42% in my area.
So when he met the lady with the Yale shirt he thought that his choices were to admit to being educated and having no substantive conversation, or pretend to be uneducated and deal with the aftermath? He's suggesting that he could not be honest about his education and background. That is bull. Don't hillbilly parents teach their kids that honesty is the best policy? I suspect most do. Maybe his parents didn't, but I suspect it isn't the fact that he was raised by dishonest hillbillies, but rather than he chose not to heed their advice. He's a hypocrite and I agree with his opponents that he is exploiting his education to pretend to be what he is not to gain power, rather than someone that earnestly wants to bridge the divide.On a trip home to Ohio soon after starting at Yale Law School, JD Vance stopped for gas and noticed a woman in a Yale T-shirt. When he asked about it, she said her nephew attended the Ivy League school — and asked whether Vance did, too.
“I had to choose: Was I a Yale Law student, or was I a Middletown kid with hillbilly grandparents?” Vance recalled in his memoir, “Hillbilly Elegy.”
If he admitted going to Yale, he and the woman “could exchange pleasantries,” Vance wrote. But if he denied his Yale ties, the woman would deem him one of “the unsophisticates of Ohio [who] clung to their guns and religion.” An unbridgeable gap would open: The woman would move to “the other side of an invisible divide,” Vance wrote.
His fear in that moment has since become a theory he often repeats: that America is a divided nation, split between liberal elites and regular, conservative people. It was a keynote theme of his best-selling book, which earned national acclaim, became a movie and paved his way to the U.S. Senate — and, this summer, helped him earn the vice-presidential nod from Donald Trump.
In a speech accepting the nomination at the Republican National Convention this month, Vance sounded the same note, lamenting the “divide between the few, with their power and comfort in Washington, and the rest of us.” Then he promised to surmount it: “I will be a vice president,” he said, “who never forgets where he came from.”
It was his years at Ohio State University and Yale Law that taught Vance to see America as divided, and how to use that division, according to a review of his public and private writings at Ohio State and Yale, as well as interviews with more than a dozen of Vance’s friends, former classmates and professors. At first, Vance pitched himself as an author who could explain the divide, people interviewed said. In later years, he became a politician who would build his appeal around it.
A spokeswoman for the Vance campaign declined to comment.
Opponents allege that Vance is drawing on skills and insight gained through his privileged education to exploit national division for personal and political gain.
“He is using his tremendous intelligence and thoughtfulness to deliberately choose contempt as a political strategy, as opposed to building the bridges he used to talk about building,” said Josh McLaurin, a Democratic senator from Georgia who was Vance’s roommate at Yale and is an outspoken critic of his politics.
Supporters agreed that school made Vance more aware of the country’s political, cultural and socioeconomic split. He used that knowledge, and his experience with the working and wealthy classes, to reach people on either side, they said...............
I’m sorry - this is a very weird take.I had to choose: Was I a Yale Law student, or was I a Middletown kid with hillbilly grandparents?” Vance recalled in his memoir, “Hillbilly Elegy.”
If he admitted going to Yale, he and the woman “could exchange pleasantries,” Vance wrote. But if he denied his Yale ties, the woman would deem him one of “the unsophisticates of Ohio [who] clung to their guns and religion.” An unbridgeable gap would open: The woman would move to “the other side of an invisible divide,” Vance wrote.
and it may be one of those stories that never happenedI’m sorry - this is a very weird take.
Well color me surprised- MAGAs RAIL against "corporate overlords" in favor of "billionaire tech overlors"
Here is a quick 20 post thread on just who JD Vance REALLY is.....
im sure this will garner NO REPLY from @SaintForLife because, well, as we all know, its "ok when WE do it"
In today's #vatniksoup, I'll introduce an American propagandist, Florida Man and ex-cop, John "Badvolf" Mark Dougan (@RealBadVolf). He's best-known for his battle against the Palm Beach County Sheriff’s Office, and for his propaganda work for the Kremlin.
1/21 pic.twitter.com/pM2LOGCfrU
— Pekka Kallioniemi (@P_Kallioniemi) April 19, 2023
Kamala is best known for her questionable actions as a prosecutor.
"Kamala Harris said something to the effect that I have no loyalty to this country. Well I don't know Kamala. I did serve in the U.S. Marine Corps and build a business. What the hell have you done other than collect a check from her political offices? I guess we have to give her credit: She did serve as 'border czar' during the biggest disaster open border we've ever had."