Weekly Opinion Editorial
WEIRD
by Steve Fair
I never set out to be weird. It was always other
people who called me weird. ―Frank Zappa.
Webster defines weird as: strange, extraordinary, odd, bizarre
eccentric, queer or unusual. Democrats
are using the word ‘weird’ to describe President Trump and Vice-Presidential
candidate J.D. Vance. This is a deliberate
shift from their painting Trump as ‘a fundamental threat to democracy.’ Seems that message was too complicated- and
false- for most voters to absorb. “Weird
is a word regular people use in their everyday lives,” Democratic operative
Martha McKenna claims. A simple message
for low information voters. Three
observations:
First, weird isn’t
always bad. There is a difference between being
creepy/strange weird and just being quirky or different than everyone
else. Very often, those branded ‘weird’
are creative, intelligent, innovative game changers. Those weirdos refuse to follow the crowd, run
with the pack, go with the flow or play the game. Because of their non-conforming attitude, they
change the world. Jesus was branded ‘weird’
by the Pharisees. Edison was considered
quirky. Mozart unorthodox and strange. Zappa was a musical genius, but eccentric. What
the world called ‘weird,’ God used to change the world.
Second, the
weird strategy is weird. The Democratic
Party has more unconventional, unorthodox people in it than the Republicans. Biden’s Secretary of Transportation, Pete
Buttigieg, is openly gay. Assistant
Secretary of Health Dr. Rachel Levine is transgender. Many Americans, conservative and liberal, see
their lifestyle as ‘weird.’ The risk of alienating like-minded voters by
calling their views ‘weird,’ is one McKenna says Democrats are willing to take
to win the election.
When a person
uses the word ‘weird’ to describe another person, they are judging the values
of that person as compared to their own- aka value judgment. Democrats have said for years no one has the
right to ‘value judge’ another, but they are practicing it by calling another’s
values ‘weird.’
Third, calling
Trump/Vance ‘weird’ avoids policy debate.
That is the real strategy. Politicos
of all stripes create a diversion when they can’t run on their track record. So,
the opponent becomes ‘weird,’ and often the public buys it. Google searches for ‘weird’ in association
with MAGA/GOP/Vance are up +32% in the past week from three months ago, so curiosity
is being piqued.
But the real end
game of labeling Trump/Vance ‘weird’ is to distract voters from checking past
performance. i.e.: Biden/Harris economic
policy isn’t working. July marked the
highest jobless rate in the U.S. since October 2021. The Dow Jones Industrial Average closed 600
points lower in the July. Inflation has
Americans paying +20% more for gasoline and groceries than they were four years
ago. In battleground states, President
Trump continues to poll 15 points higher than Vice President Harris on economic
issues. If voters get weirded out with the ‘weird’ distraction strategy, Harris
wins.
Dr. Seuss said, “We are all a little weird and life’s a little weird, and when we find someone, whose weirdness is compatible with ours, we join up with them and fall in mutual weirdness and call it love.” America could use some mutual weirdness in politics.
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