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There's this comedian Rachel Feinstein who really nailed something I've noticed over the past few years. In maybe 2021 or 2022, she posted a clip where she was complaining about her extremely liberal mother who is constantly ranting about Trump and how wretched he is. "She'll be like 'you know, he's not my President' - like yeah mom, he literally isn't!" It's a trend I've noticed: during his administration, people got so into the habit of ranting about how much they hated Trump and how awful he was, that they kept doing so several years after he'd been out of office, reduced to the status of a private citizen, an ordinary rich guy with no political power to speak of (and not even particularly rich when compared to Bezos, Musk etc.). When I pointed this out to them, they would get very offended and meekly offer the half-hearted rationalisation "well he's going to run for a second term so we have to keep the pressure on" or something to that effect. I really can't think of any historic precedent for this: the second Obama was out of office, Republicans largely stopped complaining about him (aside from the occasional joke about "Michael" Obama): I really cannot recall interminable ranting about how loathsome Obama is from conservatives throughout 2017-9, while their preferred candidate was in office. TDS is the wrong term for this - Trump just defined the Zeitgeist in a way that Biden did not. I'm sure in the future, a lot of people will "remember" Trump serving two consecutive terms starting in 2016, and will have to be reminded that he only served one (much like so many people "remember" Tim Burton directing The Nightmare Before Christmas, and have to be reminded that it was actually Henry Selick).
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