This administration has established a number of firsts: First half-black, half African-half indonesian, muslim -loving, full communist, America-hating, completely incompetent (Carter was close), gay president. Could it be that the empty chair was simply because no one wished to sit next to another first? Not "First Lady" but "First Transgender"? At times she appears almost attractive, but when she allows her true personality to show in her face, she is less attractive than Bruce ("call me 'Caitlin' ") Jenner. Her obvious disdain for both America and the American people (even those who are black, like herself) make her countenance as unlovely as that of Clinton.
And the First Daughters were conspicuous by their absence, too (or so I was told, not having the stomach to watch it myself). I'm sure they refused to sit through all of his lies and posturing, having heard the rhetoric of the Teleprompter-in-Chief before. "Who's your daddy?" may have greater significance for them than for most other young ladies. Well, perhaps the same significance as those young ladies raised by a single black mother.
This administration has established a number of firsts: First half-black, half African-half indonesian, muslim -loving, full communist, America-hating, completely incompetent (Carter was close), gay president. Could it be that the empty chair was simply because no one wished to sit next to another first? Not "First Lady" but "First Transgender"? At times she appears almost attractive, but when she allows her true personality to show in her face, she is less attractive than Bruce ("call me 'Caitlin' ") Jenner. Her obvious disdain for both America and the American people (even those who are black, like herself) make her countenance as unlovely as that of Clinton.
ReplyDeleteAnd the First Daughters were conspicuous by their absence, too (or so I was told, not having the stomach to watch it myself). I'm sure they refused to sit through all of his lies and posturing, having heard the rhetoric of the Teleprompter-in-Chief before. "Who's your daddy?" may have greater significance for them than for most other young ladies. Well, perhaps the same significance as those young ladies raised by a single black mother.