Trump's voters loathe Jeb Bush because their lives are falling apart, and they blame people like him.
“Trump's voters loathe Jeb Bush because their lives are falling apart, and they blame people like him.”
— J. D. Vance · Blame
The World Motivation
Trump's voters loathe Jeb Bush because their lives are falling apart, and they blame people like him.
“Trump's voters loathe Jeb Bush because their lives are falling apart, and they blame people like him.”
— J. D. Vance · Blame
Trump's voters loathe Jeb Bush because their lives are falling apart, and they blame people like him.
I have never felt out of place in my entire life. But I did at Yale.
On my first day at Yale Law School, there were posters in the hallways announcing an event with Tony Blair, the former British prime minister. I couldn't believe it: Tony Blair was speaking to a room of a few dozen students? If he came to Ohio State, he would have filled an auditorium of a thousand people.
When people read 'Breitbart' every single day and convince themselves that Barack Obama is a foreign terrorist, that is not a problem of government. That is a problem of community failure, and we have to recognize that.
You can't blame anyone for being cynical about politicians.
No matter how frustrated, disappointed and discouraged we may feel in the face of our failures, it's only temporary. And the faster you can stop wallowing in guilt, blame or resentment, the faster you can put it behind you.
In a sane, civil, intelligent and moral society, you don't blame poor people for being poor.
If the blame (if there is any) can be shifted from him to me, I shall help him and our cause by taking it. I desire, therefore, that all the responsibility that can be put upon me shall go there and shall remain there.
Raising children is like a hit and run. You've been hit, you can't flag the person down, you're wounded and you don't know who to blame, and no one helps you. And it's weeks, maybe months, before you find out what really happened.
I've always just felt a little out of place. I still feel out of place in San Francisco. It's this place where everything is going great, and everyone feels super optimistic about the world. It's a little different about how I grew up.