Blink Four Times': MSNBC's Jen Psaki Suggests Usha Vance Needs to Be Saved From Husband JD Vance in Shocking Comments
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Blink Four Times': MSNBC's Jen Psaki Suggests Usha Vance Needs to Be Saved From Husband JD Vance in Shocking Comments
"I think the little Manchurian candidate, JD Vance, wants to be president more than anything else, opined Psaki. I always wonder what's going on in the mind of his wife. Like, are you okay? Please blink four times, we'll-, come over here. We'll save you. I mean, he's scarier in certain ways, in some ways. And he's young, and ambitious, and agile in the sense that he is a chameleon who makes himself into whatever he thinks the audience wants to hear from him."
"None of these guys can win a general election, the cult will completely fall apart, so they have to consolidate in the executive, go full tilt authoritarian so that Lil' Smokey can come in and execute this crazy plan that these weirdos Peter Thiel and this guy named Curtis Yarvin have that they have decided we no longer should have a democracy, added Welch."
"This isn't the first notable commentary from a prominent MSNBC personality about Vance or his wife. Last year, Rachel Maddow suggested that the name of Vance's venture capital company, Narya, was a nod to the word, Aryan,' while Alex Wagner deemed Vance's expression of his hope to be buried in a family plot an easter egg of White nationalism, as well as a slight to his wife. Watch above via I've Had It on YouTube."
Jen Psaki suggested that Second Lady Usha Vance might need rescuing from her husband, Vice President JD Vance, during remarks on the I've Had It podcast. Hosts compared efforts to concentrate executive power to an authoritarian consolidation and invoked figures like Peter Thiel and Curtis Yarvin as proponents of abandoning democracy. Psaki characterized Vance as a youthful, ambitious chameleon who adapts to audiences and speculated about his wife's situation. The segment framed Vance as intensely presidentially ambitious and potentially dangerous. The commentary followed prior MSNBC observations linking Vance's venture firm name and burial remarks to nationalist themes.
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