Mike Pence is no hero. Period. He did the bare minimum that any sitting VP should have done - certify the electoral college vote. That he did so under enormous pressure and with Trumpistas trying to kill him that day is to his credit - and we're all grateful for it. But we shouldn't lose sight that all he did was what every previous…
Mike Pence is no hero. Period. He did the bare minimum that any sitting VP should have done - certify the electoral college vote. That he did so under enormous pressure and with Trumpistas trying to kill him that day is to his credit - and we're all grateful for it. But we shouldn't lose sight that all he did was what every previous Vice President did.
His attempt to blame the Lincoln Project for J6, his continued failure to testify before the J6 Committee - and many of his underlings have done, and his continued failure to denounce Trump and the cult he created shows him to be a weak, pathetic, potted plant of a man.
Reading through his own words in Amanda's piece, he sounds exactly like a middle manager in a company run by crazies who goes with the flow to keep the paychecks coming. He was the COO, and should have made it his business to find out just what was being planned and acted to avert it. Failing that, he should have testified in full to the J6 committee and not saved it in hopes of making a profit off the book and preserving his own political ambitions. Cheap in every way.
Yeah, well these days Christian seems to be pretty much synonymous with hypocrite. History will not view Pence kindly. At this point, Giancarlo the pool boy appears more courageous.
I would argue bucking over 200 years of precedent, on live tv before the nation and the world, would have required more courage, certainly more chutzpah, than his ultimately following the law. It's very good that he did it, but I don't think he should get any medals for it.
I also think his refusal to get in the car was because he knew TFG was after him and he feared the SS driver would dump him into the mob. I don't think it was a determination to do the right thing that kept him there as much as immobilizing fear.
Mike Pence is no hero. Period. He did the bare minimum that any sitting VP should have done - certify the electoral college vote. That he did so under enormous pressure and with Trumpistas trying to kill him that day is to his credit - and we're all grateful for it. But we shouldn't lose sight that all he did was what every previous Vice President did.
His attempt to blame the Lincoln Project for J6, his continued failure to testify before the J6 Committee - and many of his underlings have done, and his continued failure to denounce Trump and the cult he created shows him to be a weak, pathetic, potted plant of a man.
Reading through his own words in Amanda's piece, he sounds exactly like a middle manager in a company run by crazies who goes with the flow to keep the paychecks coming. He was the COO, and should have made it his business to find out just what was being planned and acted to avert it. Failing that, he should have testified in full to the J6 committee and not saved it in hopes of making a profit off the book and preserving his own political ambitions. Cheap in every way.
Not very Christian!
Yeah, well these days Christian seems to be pretty much synonymous with hypocrite. History will not view Pence kindly. At this point, Giancarlo the pool boy appears more courageous.
And his latest "A VP never has to talk to Congress if he doesn't want to" is equally disgusting.
We've had sitting presidents testify before Congress, e.g., Gerald Ford explaining his pardon of Nixon. Pence is being an ass.
The man and the fly: a modern allegory
During the time
of COVID
a fly
landed
on the
snowy white
head
of
Mike Pence
on tv
I would argue bucking over 200 years of precedent, on live tv before the nation and the world, would have required more courage, certainly more chutzpah, than his ultimately following the law. It's very good that he did it, but I don't think he should get any medals for it.
Hear! Hear!
I also think his refusal to get in the car was because he knew TFG was after him and he feared the SS driver would dump him into the mob. I don't think it was a determination to do the right thing that kept him there as much as immobilizing fear.
If he would testify, he could be asked why.
And conveniently all the SS texts were erased.
Why isn't the Jan 6th Committee investigating this?