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Notes -
Maybe the lights are on -- but nobody's home!
Come on, I've seen videos od Joe Biden saying that America "could be defined in a single word," Hillary Clinton having a seizure, and Nancy Pelosi rambling about Sunday Morning. Hanania wants to pose with some tough love tells-it-like-it-is bravado, but it's all an act. He's clearly ignorant of what he's talking about.
Just because Hanania thinks that the Republican base is stupid does not mean that he thinks the Democratic base is smart.
One of his examples for how the Republican base is stupid is that they're imagining elder moments in Democratic leadership. But these moments aren't imagined, they're famous! He's wrong about basic things while he tsk tsks others. That's gaslighting or that's glib.
He wrote:
Note: "the real and imagined". Clearly Hanania agrees that some of the shortcomings are real.
And he also provides an example of an, according to him at least, doctored video that Republicans believed was real.
The "doctored video" was a short clip of Pelosi that underwent compression that few people saw until the press seized on it as a "doctored viral video". It's a silly story because Pelosi has had voluble senior moments already, and the "doctoring" in the "doctored video" was minor stuff.
It's a very weak argument. Hanania adduces one (exaggerated, I think) example to show that the Republican base is susceptible to fake news. And Hanania isn't?
Fair enough, if he used a bad example he used a bad example. It does seem pretty clear to me, though, that a pretty large subset of voters are gullible and have difficulty understanding how reality works. This includes both Democrats and Republicans.
And Richard Hanania as well (as evidenced by his bad example).
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