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Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
1 y

Deep Purple, '=1': Album Review
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ultimateclassicrock.com

Deep Purple, '=1': Album Review

Three-fifths of classic Mark II lineup returns for the band's 23rd album. Continue reading…
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Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
1 y

The Neil Young Song Inspired by Charles Manson
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ultimateclassicrock.com

The Neil Young Song Inspired by Charles Manson

"Once you've seen him, you can never forget him," Young would later say. Continue reading…
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Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
1 y

Steely Dan Tell Trump Cover Band to Cover Their Anti-Trump Song
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ultimateclassicrock.com

Steely Dan Tell Trump Cover Band to Cover Their Anti-Trump Song

Message suggests Sixwire should perform ‘Tin Foil Hat,’ by Todd Rundgren and Donald Fagen. Continue reading…
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
1 y

Why Did Trump Give a Bad Speech?
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www.theamericanconservative.com

Why Did Trump Give a Bad Speech?

Politics Why Did Trump Give a Bad Speech? There may be more to the former president’s turn at the RNC than meets the eye. Donald Trump filibustered his own nomination Thursday night—and Friday morning, too: His 90-minute acceptance remarks didn’t finish until well after midnight Eastern time. Pundits were astonished. If President Joe Biden can’t speak for fifteen minutes without mangling names and slurring his words, Trump can’t discipline himself to get his point across in less than an hour. Democrats who had been feeling hopeless heard Trump and, for the first time in weeks, thought he could be beaten, maybe not by Joe Biden but by someone under 70 with an average amount of political talent. Yet Trump knew exactly what he was doing. The speech was prepared well in advance, even if ad-libbing added quite a bit to its length. Trump wanted to accomplish something with these remarks. But what? The speech itself was bland, but for its opening section about the July 13 attempt on Trump’s life. Trump recounted his inch-away-from-death experience and praised the heroism of Corey Comperatore, who died shielding his daughters from the assassin’s bullets. Comperatore was a volunteer firefighter, and his uniform was displayed on stage. Trump kissed its helmet. After that, however, the speech had little focus. This was not a unity speech, although unity did get passing attention: “I am running to be president for all of America, not half of America, because there is no victory in winning for half of America.” Trump recapitulated many of the convention’s standard Republican themes: tax cuts, energy independence (now reconceived as “energy dominance”). Immigration, and the policies of countries which cut their crime rates by sending their criminals to the United States, came in for extended criticism. But no single thread tied the 90-minute monologue together. Nor did many lines stand out as particularly memorable.  Several commentators noted afterward that if nothing else Trump proved he has sheer physical stamina—and mental acuity—that Joe Biden lacks. Trump may be only a few years younger than Biden, but Trump has the energy of a much younger man. And maybe that’s what he intended to show off. This speech was not just about striking a contrast with Biden, however. It was a rebranding for Trump, and a neutralization of another Donald Trump, the one Democrats have tried to establish in voters’ minds.  That Trump is an angry, hateful man linked to political violence, above all the January 6, 2021 riot at the U.S. Capitol. He’s a figure whose harsh rhetoric inflames the nation’s divisions. Trump, as described by his enemies, is dangerous. The Trump who delivered such long-winded acceptance remarks at the convention, on the other hand, is not dangerous. Trump was genial and jokey the whole time he gave his speech—no anger, no thunder. His remarks weren’t utterly anodyne; he used much of his familiar boilerplate about immigration, for example, rather than softening his words. But with so many words flowing from his smiling face, the speech’s effect was to convey moderation even if the language didn’t do so explicitly.  In short, Trump was drowning his own infamy in a sea of words, without repudiating any of his policies or greatly moderating his language. Those moves could have cost him support—not much, perhaps, but enough to matter in a close election like 2016 or 2020. Trump knows that 2024 is likely to be close, too. He can’t afford any defections from the right, but he can’t let himself be seen as an ogre by undecided voters either. A prolix acceptance speech, rather than an ideologically watered-down one, would reassure “normies” without demoralizing conservatives. That’s important, considering the damage to conservative morale already inflicted by the changes Trump demanded to the Republican platform.  Some of the same liberal commentators puzzled, or pleased, by Trump’s excessively lengthy acceptance speech were similarly perplexed by his choice of J.D. Vance as his running mate. Vance supposedly brings nothing to the ticket that Trump himself doesn’t already bring. And by choosing Vance, Trump missed the opportunity to win over more black, Latino, or women voters with a minority or female VP pick. According to this thinking, Trump should have chosen a Republican Kamala Harris. The reality, however, is that white voters who turned away from Trump between 2016 and 2020 cost him his re-election. And for Trump to win this year, he needs to maximize his share of the working-class white vote in states like Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Wisconsin. All three of those states received many mentions in Vance’s acceptance remarks. They’re the places he was put on the ticket to win. Savvy electoral calculations figured into Vance’s speech on Wednesday, and Trump’s Thursday speech was no less strategic. Trump had to disarm impressions of him as a radical or destabilizing leader. He had to do the opposite of firing up the base—three nights of RNC programming had already accomplished that. The final night’s speech needed to give the audience at the convention what it wanted (above all, simply more Trump, in this case much more) while also diluting Trump’s image as a troublemaker. The acceptance speech was a speech for a candidate already ahead in the polls, one more in need of negating his weaknesses than inspiring his already enthusiastic supporters. The post Why Did Trump Give a Bad Speech? appeared first on The American Conservative.
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
1 y

Councilwoman Who Allegedly Bit NYPD Cop, Gets Arrested, Speaks Out [VIDEOS]
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Councilwoman Who Allegedly Bit NYPD Cop, Gets Arrested, Speaks Out [VIDEOS]

Police brutality and Asian hate?
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
1 y

A Third Of Democrats Are ‘Assassination Attempt Deniers’ New Poll Shows [VIDEOS]
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www.rvmnews.com

A Third Of Democrats Are ‘Assassination Attempt Deniers’ New Poll Shows [VIDEOS]

A Third Of Democrats Are ‘Assassination Attempt Deniers’ New Poll Shows [VIDEOS]
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Fun Facts And Interesting Bits
Fun Facts And Interesting Bits
1 y

15 Intriguing Facts About ‘You’
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www.mentalfloss.com

15 Intriguing Facts About ‘You’

The series’ fifth and final season is expected to hit Netflix in 2024. Here’s what you should know.
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AllSides - Balanced News
AllSides - Balanced News
1 y

Trump tramples unity theme in two-act convention speech
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www.allsides.com

Trump tramples unity theme in two-act convention speech

The "new" Donald Trump soothed and silenced the nation for 28 minutes last night. Then the old Trump returned and bellowed, barked and bored America for 64 minutes more. Why it matters: Despondent Democrats were reminded why they had long believed, before President Biden melted down in last month's debate, that Trump is a flawed candidate — and eminently beatable. Zoom in: A bandaged, somber, subdued Trump opened his nomination speech by recounting his...
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AllSides - Balanced News
AllSides - Balanced News
1 y

A Tale of Two Trump Speeches
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www.allsides.com

A Tale of Two Trump Speeches

Rarely has the appearance of a party’s nominee on a convention stage been as intensely anticipated as that of Donald Trump in Milwaukee. Nearly assassinated last Saturday and still bandaged from his wound to his ear, Trump was rapturously greeted each time he entered the convention hall this week, and his speech was tantalizingly teased as completely reworked after the shooting last weekend. The emotional centerpiece of the address, of course, was Trump’s riveting account of his...
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AllSides - Balanced News
AllSides - Balanced News
1 y

Trump comes out fighting after rally shooting: 5 takeaways from RNC’s last night
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Trump comes out fighting after rally shooting: 5 takeaways from RNC’s last night

Former President Trump turned the 2024 Republican National Convention into a campaign rally in his first speech since surviving an assassination attempt, claiming God was on his side during the shooting and calling for his party to unify to “save this country.” Trump divulged the details of his near-death experience as he addressed thousands in attendance in Milwaukee and formally accepted the GOP presidential nomination. Here are the five big takeaways from the last night...
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