Accountability

I released this statement:

“Any company or individual that tries to exploit Americans in an emergency should know that the Administration is monitoring for allegations of fraud and price gouging and will hold those taking advantage of the situation accountable.”

Ok. That’s amazing. As it should be.

I mean, as long as the voters don’t think too much about it. ‘Cause it sounds good, right.

And as long as they don’t apply it to anything else, like.. in their voting decision, for example.

It’s just like… do we support people being held accountable? No. Not really.

If we did, then how could I ask for people’s votes? We would be not be worthy of votes. None. Because we would tell people to hold us accountable for:

— the $5-20k a year MORE that it’s costing average American families to live now, because we have let inflation run amok. I’m bad at math, but making people spend a lot more on everyday items like milk, gas, food seems like something we should be accountable for. While there is generally inflation each year, we set records for inflation. And that’s not good, by any kind of math.

— the border crisis. It effectively happened overnight, the day we took office. And it’s a disaster. But why? Real incompetence is the only logical conclusion.

— the Afghanistan withdrawal. It’s a good thing American’s have a short memory. I even bragged about my role in the decisions there. We abandoned $7.2 billion worth of equipment that the Taliban has taken full advantage of — using them and also selling them to terrorists around the world. Oh, and the 13 service members killed, Americans stranded in the region, and no women able to go to school anymore… brilliant? No. Very bad.

— our party of “joy” that still frequently takes opportunities to portray half the country as evil, anti-democratic monsters.

I don’t know. There is just so much I could list. And so little time. I need to look into whether I can go after some mom-and-pop hotels and restaurants charging more than I think they should. Priorities.

And, most voters are still just believing the main stream media. Unbiased, of course. ABC, for example — I think 100 percent of their stories about me have been positive. 100 percent. Overall, I think about 85 percent of media stories about me are positive stories. They “cherry pick” the good stuff and ignore the bad. There is that pesky Fox News. But, I can deal with that AFTER the election. Who needs freedom of speech or the press. Or the Supreme Court or the Senate, for that matter. And who needs parents to have a say in the way they raise their kids.

No. We good.

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