First published at 14:09 UTC on October 13th, 2019.
We know that the position of US president is a largely ceremonial one, a human face for the military-industrial-financial apparatus that makes most of the important decisions in the American government. but you can tell a lot about that machine from…
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We know that the position of US president is a largely ceremonial one, a human face for the military-industrial-financial apparatus that makes most of the important decisions in the American government. but you can tell a lot about that machine from the figurehead it chooses to operate through. in this spirit, i interview independent journalist Dack Rouleau about the 2020 candidates & what their interstitial spaces (the vast majority of acts a person performs daily that are so minor they don't have names) might say about a ruling class that chooses them as their representative. we hear about the candidates' platforms & policy positions all the time, but once they take office, those platforms are usually thrown aside so business as usual can continue. the candidates' personal idiosyncrasies remain, however, yet they never make it into the media.
(before you comment indignantly, yes, i realize he who votes decides nothing, he who counts the votes decides everything. this is not a 'who to vote for' primer, & should not be taken in support of the delusion that voters actually have the power to choose their leader. there are a million other channels for that. say it with me now: "if voting could change anything, they'd make it illegal.")
like what you see? please share it as youtube is subtracting my view counts & hiding my videos. subscribe on Bitchute.com/helenofdestroy for the inevitable day this channel is removed. & if you really want to show your appreciation, you can pay my cat's vet bill https://paypal.me/velocirapture
visit helenofdestroy.com for moar analysis of American politics & culture & the forces pulling their strings, & Dack's website overwritten.org for a deep dive into campaign psychosis from a reporter on the front lines of PanderNation, New Hampshire.
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