Let’s go Brandon.
5.56mm
Well done, Mom and Dad!
“Atlas Shrugged” was a work of fiction which included the phrase “Who is John Galt?” which, in the novel, swept the nation and became a symbol of hopelessness in the face of an out-of-control government. Of course, it wasn’t true hopelessness because once people realized what it really meant, they knew they had the power to remove themselves from the system and “go Galt” by not participating.
For us, I think “Let’s Go Brandon” serves a similar function. We recognize that we are repressed and not able to speak the truth. But we realize what the phrase really means and we know that we do have the power to speak the truth. We’re on to them.
I expect that a piece of scholarly word salad will be published soon, explaining how saying “let’s go Brandon” is actually racist, sexist, homophobic and anti-democratic. As bad as wearing a MAGA hat, maybe worse. After that, people could be arrested on hate crime charges for saying it.
bump
I’ve had to explain it to several people this past week, including one who should have known what it meant.
Democrats are supremely stupid and they’re running scared:
<><> the urgency displayed to deliver Bidens trillions shows Democrats’ fortunes taking a bleak turn
<><> 2022 midterms loom
<><> their schtick is childcare, climate, universal pre-k, asst giveaways to buy votes,
<><> not the border crisis, inflation crisis, supply chain crisis, fuel shortage crisis, or any of the other crises Biden has created.
The media gal who was just doing her job and covering for the powerful by lying about the NASCAR chant did not commit suicide. Let’s go Brandon!!
Bookmark
Trump needs to schedule a rally in Brandon (FL).
It would be like when Italians surrounded the La Scala opera house in the 1800s and shouted “Viva Verdi!” They could claim that they were cheering the opera composer, when in fact they were cheering Victor Emmanuel, Rei d’Italia [king of Italy]. All the people at the rally could chant “Let’s Go, Brandon!” and claim they were “giving it up” for the town, when everyone would know better but couldn’t say anything.