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DOUBLE, DOUBLE TOIL AND TROUBLE! | WHISTLE BLOWER

I’m a ‘Weird’ Sister from Portland, Oregon

It’s hip to be weird, but not always

Debra G. Harman, MEd.
Whistle Blower
Published in
4 min readAug 1, 2024

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Photo by Devin H on Unsplash

If you’re not living under a rock, you know the Harris campaign strategy of calling DJT and his oddly-chosen running mate JD Vance “weird.” It’s a strategy that’s apparently working.

In an article by Meg Kinnard with the Associated Press, she discusses the W word to describe the Republican duo. Harris supporters use it with “gusto,” she notes.

In Kinnard’s article, the use of “weird” is a smart political strategy, according to David Karpf:

“I don’t know who came up with the message, but I salute them,” said David Karpf, a strategic communication professor at George Washington University.

If you watch CNN for any period of time, you’ll hear “weird” sprinkled around like talcum on a baby’s butt (or flea powder on a cat, depending on your gender?).

It’s now a campaign strategy. As much as I hear “weird” used, it could be a drinking game. Turn on any network news, and settle in with your friends!

There is truth to Trump and JD Vance being outside of the norm, which is one definition of weird. And they say things far outside.

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Debra G. Harman, MEd.
Whistle Blower

Boost Nominator | Publisher | Writer | Editor --Welcome to my world! I came to Medium as a writer, and things got bigger fast. Parasol Publications.