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Otherwise known as 98% of the population of the US and for all intents and purposes, almost the entire electorate.
I.e. the people whose opinion actually matters.
There is a difference between (a) not lying about reality and (b) needlessly volunteering information nobody asked for which you know your audience does not possess the context to properly understand.
In case it wasn't clear from the responses from everyone else in the thread, doing the latter, means you're an Grade A moron.
Yea, I don’t have a strong opinion on her putting the dog down, but these were my points as well. First, most people won’t ever get the full context of her words, and even if they did, most these days simply cannot relate to something like this, even if it is normal in a farm, or even normal for most people a few decades ago. So just stupid to volunteer putting something out this in the public.
Especially with how partisan politics are these days, and how little, out of context things can be weaponized.
Apparently the dog was only 14 months.
In my experience, full grown but not totally mature.
I thought 14 months also, could be wrong. Dunno if you saw my post, but I am pretty sure in the book she says one of the last straws was it killed someone else’s chickens. Not sure how hard behavior like that is unlearned through training.
Isn't the "hard nosed, independent, country woman" her brand though?
I don't know anything about the woman, but that's the impression I got from her tweets.
Yes, it is her brand. It is funny because she is not that well known outside of being anti-lockdown and a big supporter of Trump. This book coming out was kind of supposed to be her extended introduction to the public and test waters with book sales to see if she has any sway to be VP to bring in white women voters.
What a swing and a miss