By Cody Andrus Trump's VP: "he should never be president again" Trump's (other) VP: "he's America's Hitler" Trump's Secretary of Defense: "a 5th grader" Trump's (other) Secretary of Defense: " treasonous " Trump's National Security Advisor: "stupid ... nut job" Trump 's (other) National Security Advisor: "a dope" Trump's FBI Director: "morally unfit to be president" Trump's Secretary of State: "moron" Trump's Chief of Staff: "idiot ... unhinged" Trump's Attorney General: "shouldn’t be anywhere near the Oval Office" Trump's Chairman of Joint Chiefs of Staff: "fascist to the core" Trump's Joint Chiefs of Staff: "sickened [by] disdain for ... rights of a peaceful protest" Trump's personal attorney: "a cheat, liar, racist, predator, con man" Trump's (other) personal attorney: "graves...
By Cody Andrus I was a proud, devout conservative for 40 years of my life. I voted for Bush twice. I never voted for Obama. I spent 8 years writing conservative columns for a newspaper. I planned to vote for Trump over Hillary. But when the Billy Bush recording surfaced, I decided to show an ounce of class and not vote for either candidate. After Trump won, I was defensive of him for 4 years. I liked that he didn’t “put up with any crap with the media.” He might not be perfect but he was getting things done, etc. All the usual stuff. My feelings changed on January 6th. This is when I saw the true colors of (the vast majority of) conservatives. I realized for the first time that these wacky liberals I’ve complained about my whole life are now the reasonable ones. And (the vast majority of) conservatives simply don’t stand for anything. If you keep up with the news and consider yourself a well-informed person and you’re okay with what Trump did on January 6th, there is something fun...
Dave (1993) is a charming political comedy-drama directed by Ivan Reitman and written by Gary Ross. The film follows Dave Kovic (Kevin Kline), a mild-mannered temp agency owner whose uncanny resemblance to the President of the United States leads to an unusual job offer. When the real President suffers a stroke during an affair, White House aides secretly enlist Dave to assume his duties, hoping to maintain control while concealing the truth from the country. As Dave begins navigating the rituals of power—and the moral bargains that underlie them—he chooses to lead with the decency his counterpart never showed, forcing Washington to reckon with what honest leadership might look like. Shot in Washington, D.C., the crew had unusual access to the White House grounds, and the production built an Oval Office set so detailed and convincing that it went on to appear in more than twenty-five other films and television shows, including The Pelican Brief, In the Line of Fire, and Absolute ...