one major reason i burnt out of working in politics in my early 20s is because of how much sexual harassment I experienced, mostly from incumbent politicians who had been in power for decades. When I finally reported one particularly bad incident to my bosses, they apologized and took me off the campaign, but didn’t drop the politician as a client. I quit shortly after.
The industry of politics has always existed in a culture of pervasive abuse, much like the wider world surrounding it. A man who lost a civil rape trial, is named thousands of times in the Epstein files, and has dozens of allegations against him sits in the oval office. A man who sexually harassed 13 women and then engaged in illegal retaliation against his victims just ran for mayor of NYC last year.
Anyone inclined to believe Eric Swalwell and dismiss the credible allegations against him is at best, in denial of the reality of endemic abuse, and at worst, intentionally complicit in protecting Swalwell from accountability
>Submits an AI-written draft order to the trial court with 5 fake cases.
>Unhesitatingly lies about it on camera before the state supreme court.
>When caught, pretends not to have any idea what the judge is talking about.
The next step will be blaming a law clerk.
Remember when we learned that our wealthiest and most powerful people were connected to a guy who ran a literal child sex trafficking ring? And then that guy died mysteriously in a jail? And now we just don't talk about it.