On the eve of the vice presidential debate, Rachel Maddow took to MSNBC to talk about the fundamental right-wing political philosophy that energizes Republican candidates. Senator J.D. Vance.
“I’ve been wondering if I should talk about this on my show because I want to and it’s annoying,” Maddow said, adding, “But this is an important thing to know about the Republican vice presidential nominee.” I also feel that this is the case,” he said. And what he has to offer and why he was accepted on the ticket. ”
Mr. Maddow played a clip of Mr. Vance attacking the government and institutions of higher education. “Deceit and lies, not the truth”” She laid out some of his many calls to “take control of the institutions of the left.”
In the first half of her long monologue, she explained how Vance’s rhetoric and the right’s general attacks on higher education reflect pro-fascist activities. Nazi supporter Elizabeth Dillingalso known as “Female President” of the 1930s and 1940s.
“[Vance] It comes solely from a very, very obscure and eccentric right-wing subculture of tech billionaires, and his association with this eccentric pro-authoritarian philosophy in Silicon Valley has been fairly widely discussed in print. Maddows says, shifting the focus to Vance’s dedication to society. His cauldron of radical far-right ideology Benefactor Peter Thiel And other tech billionaires.
She highlights Vance’s quote about Curtis Yarvin.Fascist right-wing blogger loved by Teal and the tech fraternity movement.. Vance cited Yarvin as someone who wrote about the radical solutions needed to overthrow and replace our government.
Maddow played a clip of Yarvin explaining a simple plan of action he dubbed “RAGE—Retire All Public Employees.” Yarvin believes the country should be run like a Silicon Valley company. “We need a CEO,” Yarvin told an audience in 2012. “The national CEO is what we call a dictator.” “There is no difference between a CEO and a dictator. Americans want to change their government. They must overcome their dictator phobia.”
“They will have to overcome their ‘authoritarian phobia,'” Maddow reiterates. “Now that you have this level of radicalism trying to take over Washington and trying to convince the far right that they have to stop being afraid to exercise this kind of power in this way, what do you do? What are you going to do about this in tomorrow’s debate and on the campaign trail in general?” Maddow asks.
She added, “I don’t know, but we had to do something about this.”