TragicMonkey
Poisoned Waffles
How is he doing these days?
Francisco Franco? I'm not sure, but he hasn't had any singles on the Top 40 in pop music in a while. Maybe he's switched to country music? I don't follow that.
How is he doing these days?
How is he doing these days?
Or it's being used to undermine confidence in one's abilities. Legacy admission. Trust fund baby. Etc etc. This is not new. Plenty of complaints about unearned rise in life. The only way these are dispelled is through countering with success. Why is that not being done?
And has some...ideas...about women's careers.
Trump campaign is saying that Walz wants to allow convicted felons to vote, which they believe is bad.
I guess they don't want Trump to vote either.
Weird take since people in red states actually vote for restoring voting rights for felons
You are not currently incarcerated for a felony conviction under the laws of this state, another state or the United States. Source
"High yellow" perhaps?On the one hand they're racist enough to use those terms, on the other hand do they have the vocabulary to even know those terms?
And about an Abortion Patrol.And has some...ideas...about women's careers.
It's not uncommon. Biden, Gore, and Bush Senior were VPs. It's not a career dead end, but it's also not a guaranteed progression upwards. I think the successful VP-to-Pres examples happened because enough voters liked the corresponding president and were voting for "more of the same" rather than anything new and different they might bring.
You know what would help? Not ignoring half of what I said.
But we're not talking about hiring your kid. In fact, it is very much the opposite of what we're talking about.
You mean like pointing to Harris' experience as DA in San Francisco and AG of California? The point of throwing out a phrase like "DEI hire" is not to discuss the qualifications or accomplishments of the person in question. It is to dismiss all of that outright. And any success that person claims will just be written off with "I bet a white guy could have done it better".
For a non-US person why do people become VP? Apart from the slim chance of becoming president by virtue of an assassin, what is in it for an ambitious politician. Do VP usually get chosen to be the next presidential candidate? Clearly Biden got a stinking pension out of it, and IMHO should have retired and not stood for the presidency. But what do VPs do after VPing? The only one who I can think of who has made a mark for themselves is Quayle.
One downside I think is that if you have a 2-term Prez, it makes it that much harder for that VP to get the gig. Bush Sr. did it, but he's the only one that comes to mind.
Nixon - no
Ford - wasn't elected
Bush Sr. - yes
Gore - no, but yes I know the circumstances
Biden - didn't run until 4 years later
But Biden and Nixon eventually became President
and
Nixon and Gore lost extremely narrow elections.
Being VP certainly isn't a guarantee but there is no such thing. But being VP provides a national profile that is hard to develop as one of 50 Governors or 100 Senators or 435 Congress people.
Yeah, and Nixon after flaming out for Governor no less. I agree with what you're saying, but the list is a lot smaller than I originally thought - only 4 sitting Vice-Presidents have been elected! Then Nixon, Biden and the 9 others by death/resignation.
How is he doing these days?
It's like you're not understanding what I'm saying. I'll spell it out super clearly for you... [snip]
Thanks for your responses everyone. I found it easy to understand why a presidential candidate would choose a VP to balance their political appeal. But i found it less easy to understand why someone would want to be VP. But in a way Harris demonstrates it; she went from being unimportant on a federal scale to being significant and then to being a presidential candidate. If I had a vote I'd vote for her, but I recognise her executive experience is minimal, whilst Trump has been the CEO of a major multinational ego, and a successful (NOT) POTUS. Her VP pick at 60 clearly feels he has another 20+ years to become president.
I don't agree that CEO of any corporation is a good qualification to be POTUS. In fact, I think it should be counted against any candidate, as CEO is not a position leading over any democratic organization.
I know this is an obvious question, by why does no one that supports DEI as an initiative want people associated with the use of it? "This is obviously good policy." "How dare you call them a DEI hire!" I can't really think of another comparable scenario in policy that mirrors it.