Aweek ago, the Republican Party’s nominee for the United States Senate from Georgia explained his opposition to the Green New Deal. Given the decades of Republican denials, obfuscations, and outright falsehoods on the subject of climate change, it would be difficult for nearly any G.O.P. candidate’s erroneous comments to stand out. It was a challenge Herschel Walker, a former N.F.L. star, was ready to meet. He explained, “Since we don’t control the air, our good air decided to float over to China’s bad air, so when China gets our good air, their bad air got to move. So it moves over to our good air space. Then, now, we got to clean that back up.”
Fighting climate change, in Walker’s telling, is as productive as trying to sweep sand off the beach. Amid the tide of criticism that his remarks generated, his campaign resorted to a dodge that Donald Trump’s team had often used in response to his most indefensible campaign comments: they were just a joke. If there is a joke being told, though, Walker almost certainly is not in on it. Yet in some polls he currently trails his opponent, the Democratic senator Raphael Warnock, by just a few points, and it seems that, no matter the final outcome, Walker will receive the votes of millions of Georgians this fall.
The tale of how Walker came to be the Republican nominee is a clear example of the warping effect that Trump has had on the Party nationally. Having lost Georgia in the 2020 election, he launched a crusade to invalidate the results there, famously pressing the secretary of state, Brad Raffensperger, to “find” him more than eleven thousand votes—an act that is now the subject of a criminal probe—while he insisted to supporters that the state’s election had been rigged. He did so irrespective of the impact that such claims could have on other Republican candidates, including Georgia’s two incumbent senators, Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue, who faced runoff elections against their respective Democratic opponents, Warnock and Jon Ossoff. A Trump supporter in Marietta asked Ronna McDaniel, the Republican National Committee chair, “Why should we vote in this election when we know it’s already decided?” After Warnock and Ossoff won, Trump, in a fit of internecine score-settling, pushed Perdue, a viable contender to take on Warnock this November (Warnock’s victory was in a special election), to run as a primary challenger to Brian Kemp, the Republican Governor, who had also rejected Trump’s entreaty to throw out the 2020 results. Kemp easily beat Perdue, and Trump’s grievance left an open lane for Walker to pursue the Senate seat.
During three seasons with the University of Georgia Bulldogs, Walker, who is now sixty, recorded more than five thousand rushing yards. In 1982, he won the Heisman Trophy. These are his primary qualifications for representing Georgia in the Senate. He has also cited his work in law enforcement, his graduation from U.G.A. in the top percentile of his class, and his success in running businesses, including one of the largest minority-owned food-service companies in the country. These claims would be impressive, if they were accurate. (The Atlanta Journal-Constitution found that he had never worked in law enforcement, that he did not graduate from college, and that he has exaggerated the size of his various business ventures.) The state G.O.P. had a long list of potential candidates to challenge Warnock. Walker, however, had effusively praised and diligently defended Trump during the 2020 election and after it. Trump looked at the unqualified newcomer, who was prone to rambling disquisitions on subjects he knew little about, and saw in him a winner. Game recognizes game.
Trump’s endorsement helped Walker become the nominee despite a devastating ad from a primary opponent pointing to Walker’s alleged history of domestic violence, including an incident years ago in which he is said to have pointed a firearm at his now ex-wife. (He has said that he does not remember that episode, citing a struggle with dissociative-identity disorder, and has denied accusations from other women.) His personal life has continued to prove complicated. A frequent commentator on the perils of “fatherless” households in Black communities, he has highlighted the role he has played in the life of his twenty-two-year-old son, Christian. In June, though, the Daily Beast reported that Walker was also the father of a ten-year-old son, whom he had not publicly acknowledged, and that the boy’s mother had sued him for child support. Walker then admitted that he had fathered a daughter during his college years, and also that he had another child, a thirteen-year-old son. Hypocrisy has seldom been less of a political liability than it is now, so it’s not particularly shocking that a candidate for high office would rail against men shirking their paternal responsibilities while evidently evading his own. Yet Walker also appears not to have told his campaign staff the truth when he was asked directly how many children he has; an unnamed adviser told the Daily Beast that Walker lies “like he’s breathing.”
Walker has not spoken much on matters of policy, but his statement about air quality was not an outlier. (At the same event, he said that China had created the coronavirus, which he had previously said could be killed by a “dry mist.”) Asked how he would prevent needless gun tragedies such as the Uvalde massacre, he said, “What I like to do is see it and everything and stuff.” In response to a similar query from Fox News, he replied, “What about getting a department that can look at young men, that’s looking at women, that’s looking at social media?”
We have learned the hard way that, in American politics, integrity is optional. We’ve seen the wreckage that unqualified leadership yields. Yet Walker’s deficits are not the only cause for concern here. Warnock and Ossoff were elected on January 5, 2021. The next day, a Trumpist mob laid siege to the United States Capitol. We are not yet beyond that moment. Trump will reportedly announce a 2024 run for the Presidency ahead of this year’s election, when a Walker victory could return control of the Senate to the Republicans. A number of state legislatures have made their systems less amenable to fair elections, and next year the Supreme Court may assist those efforts. No one in the G.O.P. leadership can possibly believe that Walker is fit to hold a Senate seat, but the hope—as dangerous as it is cynical—is that he may be able to win one. And that joke would most certainly be on us. ♦
Link: https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2022/07/25/herschel-walkers-deficits-are-not-the-only-cause-for-concern?utm_source=nl&utm_brand=tny&utm_mailing=New+CampaignTNY_Daily_071722&utm_campaign=aud-dev&utm_medium=email&utm_term=tny_daily_digest&bxid=5bea11f524
deflected, whatabouted, danced but not once did anyone of you make your case for Walker as a solid choice for
the US Senate.
You've made your case against M. Waters (sort of) and AOC and even some hate on Biden but not once did you address
the article or the issue it brings up.
Says a lot about who you are.
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you'll be sure to let us know, yes?
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Team wouldn’t let him play today or more likely, he sucks and just keeps score. Not sure the exact reason but he’s cranky.
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Easily offended.
Absolutely full of shit.
Their say. The fact that you keep running this guy down says a lot about you.
I'm listening.
I had to say that again because you obviously didn’t read the first response.
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I don't know what you're defending, and I don't know why you're defending another's post when you should be defending
your knuckleheaded posts. Think about that for a minute. Yeah.
And, you showed that I was right. Have a good night!
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a taint tongue in an invigorating spot for you. Don't worry.
You are starting to creep me out, so this will likely be my last post today with you.
I just did some board searching to figure it out this Dorothy thing you have consistently mentioned for years.
I finally googled "friend of Dorothy," which is a term you use a lot, but I had never caught as a general phrase. Per wikipedia, use of that phrase is gay slang. Gays use it to refer to gays without letting non-gays know what they are talking about. For a gay man, you sure do like to use gay insults. I find that slightly bizarre.
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so at least she's got that going for her...how did you do?
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or not support him? Maybe question the article or in some way, address the topic at hand and not
do the same dance you do in every thread.
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And they are:
Dayan Li (Greenbelt, MD)
Philip Vidal Streich (Platteville, WI)
Dmitry Vaintrob (Eugene, OR)
What does "second place" mean when she wasn't one of the top three winners? Was she "2nd" in her high school...this is a high school science project we are talking about, after all. You kind of make it sound a bit better (2nd in an international competition), but it doesn't look like she advanced to the "International" competition level, much less the national competition level. Strangely, the ribbon in her photo was a rainbow colored ribbon...not the usual color for 2nd place. Looking forward to a link to an actual list of the winners, not her publicist saying she got second place when she isn't listed in the top three. I'm not saying you are wrong...I'm just saying your contention is not yet supported by any evidence that didn't come from her...and we know she wasn't in the top three, so the burden is on you to back up your claim now.
feel the need to hurry, either ;-)....meanwhile, I'm impressed with the work AOC did...and the obvious 'Above Average' intelligence it took for her project...I'm still waiting to see evidence of Lance's best effort...you can submit yours as well, if you'd like...
I'm done for now. From what I can tell, she was in the top 108 contestants.
you and others should not 'expose' your own inadequacies when taking her on. Policy differences are absolutely fair game...it's why we have Conservatives and Liberals...all natural...and IMO essential...let's just be smart about them and keep our eyes on finding ways to move forward...together...as hard as that might be.
I didn't even say you were wrong. I just asked for more info than wikipedia copying here statement in an interview.
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Maybe she got 2nd just in her divisional discipline? I'm still looking for something to back that up. I assume the list is out there somewhere. Let me know if you find it.
Link: https://newsroom.intel.com/kits/education/isef.htm#gs.6ls8jt
He doesn't want to show up AOC.
I've been doing a little digging. Looks like she was a "finalist" in that high school competition. Not really sure what that means. I've so far identified 108 finalists. So, maybe the top three are "first place," and the next 105 were "second place."
Einstein than Mr. Walker, or a lot of posters here, which is basically the gist of this subthread...but maybe I'm wrong about you...
'
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a Mic-drop by Ty.
Just a note, if ya don't know, don't wade into the water. There might be a rip current waiting.
As far as your computer degree - how did you fair at the science fair?
You'd think my green energy project would have garnered some extra points, but back then, scientists were worried about a coming ice age, not global warming.
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I forgot that little ditty. Thanks for the reminder.
Link: For Lance and all those who hate AOC
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That means you.
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Good stuff.
What a perfect Trumpie this guy is.
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Walker will be great.
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If he can't even measure up to Ms. Waters, this country is in big trouble.
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World of politics. Their not racist at all though. Oh and all the Dems they support are brilliant thinkers. Except AOC, she is on the “fringe”.
our US Senate.
That'll show .... somebody, I guess.
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ideas - H. Walker, he can't string two words together let alone calculate a full sentence. But then, you voted
for one of the biggest buffoons ever in Trump, why not take a step down and support Walker.
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let's see what sort of characters Georgia's voters are.
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Richard Blumenthal, Cory Booker, Tammy Duckworth, Mazie Hirono, Raphael Warnock, Richard Durbin, Chuckie Schumer, Liz Warren.
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