These days, you could just tweet, "What an incredible shitshow," pretty much any time, without any context, and people would assume they knew what you were talking about, and that you probably weren't wrong.
Trump didn't do the thing he's accused of doing, but if he did it was fine, and in fact that's exactly what he did, get over it, because it's not only fine, it's precisely what we want from a president, and can you believe that Biden did the same thing, shame on him.
Today was a hard day.
I lost my best bud, my biggest puppy pal, my spirit animal, my familiar, my constant companion.
The Extremely Large Dog is no more. He was a good boy. He was the very best dog.
Almost as if putting the vast majority of high-stakes cultural decisions in the hands of nine unelected judges, who effectively act as congressional supermajority, while the democratically elected Congress increasingly fails to do even the bare minimum job, has been bad.
thing about Norm MacDonald is he was so obviously incredibly smart
so smart, in fact, that he managed to play a naive idiot successfully enough that you'd forget that he was so smart, and the whipsaw between the two created this constant tension that made him funny
The problem has always been remarkably straightforward: Donald Trump was never fit to be president. The question was what to do about that.
Unfortunately we ended up spending most of the last few years arguing about the first proposition rather than the question it implied.
"Had the Chinese authorities been open even three weeks sooner, a study by U.K's University of Southampton assessed, the number of corornavirus cases could have been reduced by 95 percent and the world may well have been spared a pandemic."
reason.com/2020/03/30/the…
If you play a lot of video game RPGs, you quickly realize that even the most sophisticated games are scripted so that the non-player characters only say a limited number of pre-scripted things no matter what you do.
That's roughly how I feel watching the VP debate.