J D Vance Trump VP pick

"Former GOP adviser Mark McKinnon said...that a recent quip by...JD Vance...about Diet Mountain Dew at a rally was 'cringe.'

'Really cringe, cringe moment there, and...we’re hearing more and more...that Trump campaign’s really having second thoughts...'"
I suspect most Americans are far more concerned about what Trump and Vance are going to do about the inflated cost of Diet Mountain Dew and more important things in life than worried over whether drinking it is racist or not.

“I had a Diet Mountain Dew yesterday, and one today, I’m sure they’re gonna call that racist too but — it’s good,” Vance said.
 
I suspect most Americans are far more concerned about what Trump and Vance are going to do about the inflated cost of Diet Mountain Dew and more important things in life than worried over whether drinking it is racist or not.

“I had a Diet Mountain Dew yesterday, and one today, I’m sure they’re gonna call that racist too but — it’s good,” Vance said.
I've never heard of Diet Mountain Dew being a racist stereotype... is that really even a thing?
 
I wonder if Vance will demand his forward be removed before it gets published. And I wonder if any Republicans who still say they support Project 2025 will be defeated in November, though probably in most Red States, Republicans can stand for most any far-right thing they want and still win. However, after what happened in Enid being associated with standing up for conservative Christian Nationalism is going too far.
 
JD Vance calls for taking away voting power from “people who don’t have kids”: “Doesn't this mean that non-parents don't have as much of a voice as parents? Yes. Absolutely”

 
GOP leader doubles down on JD Vance's message that only people with children should be allowed to have a say in US politics: https://www.politico.com/news/2024/07/25/blake-masters-political-leaders-children-00171216
LOL, it rings hollow considering how much Republicans are quite deeply opposed to the government helping families once the fetus is born. To all too many Republicans, single mothers are quite a parasitic drag upon society while holding down other people, including the rich. To a number of Republicans. regulating the sex lives of people is the solution. Once again, they need to worry to death about their own damned sex lives!!
 
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My question is, do I still only get one vote or do I get more say if I have more children. By their logic wouldn't a family with like 8 kids have more stake in the country so they should get 5 votes per parent (assuming married household).

Also, doesn't this mean that elderly should lose their right to vote because they won't be around and therefore have less at stake.

No. I don't believe this, just helping point out it's super dumb.

Fyi. Elon Musk jumped on this train last year too. But he's all about fighting "under population".
 
My question is, do I still only get one vote or do I get more say if I have more children. By their logic wouldn't a family with like 8 kids have more stake in the country so they should get 5 votes per parent (assuming married household).

Also, doesn't this mean that elderly should lose their right to vote because they won't be around and therefore have less at stake.

No. I don't believe this, just helping point out it's super dumb.

Fyi. Elon Musk jumped on this train last year too. But he's all about fighting "under population".
From what I recall he only wants Married couples who have Children have the right to vote.

Each Kid in the family gets a vote but the father controls how they all vote until they are adults. So the more kids and larger your family is (as long as your married), the more powerful your family is and the more voting power you have. and Males who lead Large and still intact Families would be the most powerful figures as they would potentially control multiple if not 10-20 votes for ONE person.
 
Ohh and he wants Childless people to pay MORE taxes

Vance argued for higher tax rate on childless Americans in 2021 interview

As former President Donald Trump's new running mate, JD Vance, faces renewed scrutiny over his previous comments criticizing childless individuals, an unearthed 2021 interview shows the Ohio senator advocating for higher taxes on Americans without children.

The comments came in a 2021 episode of The Charlie Kirk Show podcast, where Kirk, the CEO of the conservative student organization Turning Point USA, was discussing how Republicans could shift public perception of certain conservative ideas from "unthinkable" to accepted policy.

"So JD ... what are you going to do to change this conversation? Everything we have to do should be about moving ideas from unthinkable, to sensible, to popular, to policy," said Kirk, according to a video of the interview obtained by ABC News.


In response, Vance, who at the time had not yet officially launched his 2022 Senate campaign, suggested that the country needed to "reward the things that we think are good" and "punish the things that we think are bad" -- before suggesting that individuals without children should be taxed at a higher rate than those with children.

"So, you talk about tax policy, let's tax the things that are bad and not tax the things that are good," Vance said in the interview, which is no longer public on Kirk's channel. "If you are making $100,000, $400,000 a year and you've got three kids, you should pay a different, lower tax rate than if you are making the same amount of money and you don't have any kids. It's that simple."



In response to Vance's comments, Vance spokesperson William Martin told ABC News, "The policy Senator Vance proposed is basically no different than the Child Tax Credit, which Democrats unanimously support."

Vance made the comments during a March 2021 appearance on Kirk's show, but the YouTube page for the episode now reads, "This video has been removed by the uploader," and the interview is also no longer accessible on Kirk's podcast Rumble account or on other podcast services.


The video appeared to be public as recently as February of this year, but it was no longer accessible by Wednesday, according to Internet Archive's Wayback Machine. ABC News located an audio version of the interview that remained online, but not on a website run by Kirk.

A spokesperson for Kirk told ABC News that earlier this year, multiple long-form videos on Kirk's channel were removed due to a reorganization of the page and that the removal of Vance's 2021 interview had nothing to do with his selection as vice president.



In recent days, Vance has faced criticism over other previous public comments he's made, including comments made in 2021 in which he questioned Vice President Kamala Harris' leadership due to her not having biological children -- despite Harris having two stepchildren.

"We are effectively run in this country via the Democrats" who are "a bunch of childless cat ladies who are miserable at their own lives and the choices that they've made, and so they want to make the rest of the country miserable, too," Vance said in the 2021 interview on Fox News.

As examples, Vance cited Harris, Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, and U.S. Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, who adopted twins in 2021.

In response to criticism over his "childless cat lady" comment, Vance spokesperson Taylor Van Kirk said the senator's words have been "twisted."


"Once again, the leftwing media have twisted Senator Vance's words and spun up a false narrative about his position on the issues," Van Kirk said. "The only childlessness we should be talking about are the childless parents who lost their kids to the murderous thugs and deadly fentanyl coming across Kamala's southern border."


Speaking at a conservative organization called the Intercollegiate Studies Institute in 2021, Vance also argued that parents should have the ability to cast additional votes on behalf of their children.

"A lot of people are unable to have kids for very complicated and important reasons ... there are people, of course, for biological reasons, medical reasons that can't have children -- the target of these remarks is not them," Vance said, prefacing his argument.

"Let's give votes to all children in this country, but let's give control over those votes to the parents of those children. When you go to the polls in this country as a parent, you should have more power -- you should have more of an ability to speak your voice in our democratic republic -- than people who don't have kids," Vance argued.

"Let's face the consequences and the reality: If you don't have as much of an investment in the future of this country, maybe you shouldn't get nearly the same voice," he said.

Vance, who was announced as Trump's running mate last week, has three children with his wife Usha.
 
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