August 5, 2024 |
Kamala Harris is set to unveil her running mate by Tuesday morning. And one of the top contenders for the spot is Tim Walz, the Minnesota governor who is widely popular among progressives and has an impressive record of flipping red districts. Walz is also the reason the Democratic Party finally has an effective insult: "weird." "These guys are just weird," Walz said about his Republican counterparts, namely JD Vance, during a recent appearance on Morning Joe. The slogan has since deeply resonated among voters and the Democratic Party's top brass. So why has it been so effective? My colleague Jacob Rosenberg has an excellent analysis of the politics of "weird" and how it reverses the right's message to Americans that their racism and hatred are shared and broadly accepted. As Jacob writes, "weird" rejects that hatred and, more crucially, calls it deeply strange; people are tired of it. I wholeheartedly agree with this take, and very much enjoyed Jacob's thought-provoking piece that touches upon the supposed silent majority, what's normal and what isn't, and how "weird" aptly describes the right's disturbing thoughts on sex, babies, and more. I encourage you to read it. —Inae Oh
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