The increasing personal nastiness toward people who work for President Trump reflects the left’s understanding that they are losing. Nastiness reflects desperation not strength. They can’t win the argument so they use nastiness. Sad and dangerous.
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Replying to @newtgingrich
The nastiness is on both sides of the aisle. The people who are saying it only goes one way are part of the problem - whether in politics or not. The real problem is both political parties push the nastiness and the sheep that can't see reality proliferate it.
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Replying to @jdaz78 @newtgingrich
And I am old enough to remember that it's Newt we can thank for introducing "nastiness" into this arena. He was the originator. Eh,
@newtgingrich?161 replies 651 retweets 7,139 likes -
Replying to @PrairyFyre @newtgingrich
It doesn't matter who started it - nor do I care. Its about the fact it is ripping this country apart. Both political parties are responsible - and the Internet and the 7x24 news media just continue to proliferate it even more. People are nothing more than talking points.
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Ah, yes. The old “both sides” defense. Where have I heard that one before?
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There are good people on both sides. There are also people on both sides who will do/say anything to get elected and routinely put party before country.
274 replies 28 retweets 409 likes
In 2018, right here, right now, in the US, it is inarguable that one side is far nastier than the other side. It's led by a President for whom nastiness is one of his primary tools, veritable performance art. The whole "both sides" argument intentionally distracts from that.
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