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So last weekend in Las Vegas, Trump lambasted the electrification mandate for boats after telling a crowd about a conversation he had with a boat manufacturer: He asked, what happens if the boat sinks under the weight? And you’re on that boat and you have this very powerful battery.
Donald Trump: What happens if the boat sinks under the weight? You’re on a boat, you have a very powerful battery, but the battery is submerged in the water, and there’s a shark about 10 yards away. By the way, there have been a lot of shark attacks recently. Have you noticed?
Hold on, there’s a shark 10 yards from the boat. Will I get electrocuted?
Donald Trump: There’s a shark 10 yards away from the boat. 10 yards from here. If the boat sinks and the battery gets filled with water and the boat sinks, will I get electrocuted? If I stay on the boat, will I get electrocuted? Or if I jump past the shark, will I not get electrocuted? To be honest, he didn’t know the answer. He said no one had ever asked me that question.
Great question. Would you rather be electrocuted or eaten? [a] Sharks? Death row inmates should be given the choice. I like your thinking. Yes, I’m sure Trump said, “That’s a good question.”
Donald Trump: I said, “That’s a good question. I think there’s a lot of electricity in that water. But do you know what you would do if there was a shark or you got electrocuted? I would definitely rather get electrocuted. I wouldn’t go near the sharks.”
Trump appeals to Silicon Valley support, says tech leaders can’t empathize with “low IQs”; Biden: “My IQ is high”
I don’t blame him, and I’m sure Biden does too. Electric shocks are a way to restart his heart every day. Two electric shocks on a bolt in his neck. Speaking of Joe, he’s bleeding voters like Jesse sheds his hair follicles. All of a sudden, it’s Trump who seems capable of uniting the country. And this scares the hell out of the Democrats. They’re melting like Cher’s face in direct sunlight. Over the weekend, the LA Times ran a headline that read, “Trump Support Slows Up in Silicon Valley: Big Threat for Biden?” Tickets to a recent Trump fundraiser were reportedly sold for $300,000 a pop, and the event was sold out. Apparently Trump raised $12 million in one night, which is the same amount I offered Taylor Swift to stop calling me. For now, big tech money may still be flowing to the Democrats, but cracks are starting to form, and those cracks are deeper than the one in Pelosi’s face.
It’s no secret that the black and Hispanic vote, primarily the male vote, is leaning towards Trump. This is because smart national figures are now openly supporting him. Rapper 50 Cent, for example, has said that he sees black men “sympathizing” with Trump in the upcoming election because he was indicted for RICO violations. This means that Fani Willis’ fake RICO indictment against Trump could be the biggest backfire since Joe forgot his lactose pills after drinking a pint of Häagen-Dazs. But don’t take my word for it. The Las Vegas odds have Trump winning and Joe as the favorite to star in The Walking Dead. Meanwhile, talking lizard James Carville couldn’t help but whine that he didn’t think President Biden should run for reelection. He said this just before chomping down a plate of sauteed worms. So if all the smart money and people are going to Trump, who are the holdouts – public figures who are well-informed and know better, but still insist on supporting brain-dead Biden? I’ll tell you who they are: the rich and famous, numb to their own egos and looking at Trump with envy.
Trump promises to end tip taxes on hospitality workers at Las Vegas rally
Think about it. Imagine Robert De Niro, Stephen King, Howard Stern, and Jimmy Kimmel receiving a memo that says they are not the center of the universe. The memo is written on Donald Trump’s letterhead. It is not the working class that is being ignored, but the elite fools. Trump makes these powerful people who are successful in their own right feel inferior. As you may have noticed, Trump’s loudest critics are successful people who feel their insignificance in this new Trump world. They feel the same way I do when I’m taking my photo with Tyrus. It’s also why Liz Cheney, Michael Cohen, Anthony Scaramucci, and others from the past are so obsessed with defeating Trump.
They’re big players in this movie, and we’re waiting for scene-stealing moments to come. But the most obvious example? The man closest to Trump in temperament and personality: Howard Stern. As Trump rose to power, Stern retreated, coming to believe the gospel of the six-foot distance rule, and using COVID to justify morphing into Gloria Swanson, holed up in his 40,000-square-foot mansion and instructing everyone that it’s stupid and cruel not to have what he has. What do Stern and Jimmy Kimmel have in common? It’s a sense of demotion. They realize that the world doesn’t revolve around them.
If ego is everything, this is a shocking realization. Right now, Trump is more important than all of them combined, and that pains them. Meanwhile, smart but ego-filled people, whether they be Elon Musk, Vivek Ramaswami or me, don’t take it personally that Trump may be the most influential man alive, slightly ahead of Ryan Seacrest, of course. But that’s because these people can think bigger, they know this election, and in fact, this country is not just for them, and that’s why they stick their necks out for Trump and give the media the middle finger.
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Meanwhile, the egoists have become extras in the movie of their lives, and the people they once thought were extras are now playing the leading roles: the voters. They can’t believe that the public doesn’t listen to them, but instead listens to this new leading role. So they look at Trump and ask themselves why it can’t be them. That’s the one thing narcissists can’t stand: being ignored on the world stage.





