Oh, That’s Well Thought Out

January 07, 2019 By: Juanita Jean Herownself Category: Uncategorized

I am told that Fox News had a discussion this morning of who could win the presidency in 2020.

Not Beto O’Rourke, that’s for sure.

Fox News host Kennedy Montgomery on Monday asserted it would be dangerous to elect former Texas Democratic Rep. Beto O’Rourke as president because he lacks the necessary experience.

She even went on to suggest that …

“What the hell is he going to do and say?” Montgomery quipped. “I think there are actually people like Kim Jong-un who are just waiting so excitedly for someone like Beto O’Rourke because they know it would be more strategic patience and another person to push around.”

Yeah, not like Trump at all. Kim is scared of Trump and all his experience.

By the way, wikipedia lists Kennedy Montgomery’s occupation as:

Political commentator
Game show host
Television personality

Also of note: she is 46 years old and has just now discovered Ayn Rand.  Oh dear.

Thanks to S Gray for the heads up.

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0 Comments to “Oh, That’s Well Thought Out”


  1. I don’t understand how she got a job at Fox Noise. She’s not (as far as that picture shows) a blond!

    Somebody screwed up.

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  2. Yeah, Beto probably doesn’t have any more experience in government than, oh, that Abe Lincoln guy, and look how he turned out. Look, at this point, Lassie would be an improvement.

    I like how she let the truth slip out there– “another person to push around.”

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  3. Jane & PKM says:

    Not comedienne? Her quip about “lack of experience” rattled the irony meter. Oh, you mean she’s serious and not writing for The Onion. OK then … Sean Hannity can remain as Fux Not the News most unfunny supposedly funny person.

    Is it true? Reruns of Fox have been shown to sex offenders with great success. Offenders report that kills their urge to gawk up skirts.

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  4. Pancho Sanza says:

    “Beto O’Rourke’s relationship with Kim Jong-un: ‘We fell in love’ after ‘beautiful letters'”

    Yeah if President O’Rourke ever said any stupid shit like that he should be impeached, for damn sure.

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  5. Pancho Sanza says:

    One other thing, when I was watching MTV in the 90’s, I never could have predicted the downfall of America to the point where “Kennedy” was not only still on TV, but now expecting to be treated with seriousness as a political commentator. Hahah.

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  6. This just seems more and more like (Superman’s) Bizarro World. Everything is the opposite of what I see.

    Faux Corp needs to be sued for destruction of reality..

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  7. Her name is Kennedy Montgomery?
    If she’s on Fox shouldn’t she change it to something more appropriate, like Burns Montgomery? Then the network would get a twofer, a commentator and subliminal advertising for The Simpsons.

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  8. slipstream says:

    I don’t believe this. Fox News has a female host who is not blonde?

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  9. Who are they recommending? Aren’t these the same folks that gave us Trump, Bush/Chaney and Sarah Palin? A bloody endless war, terrorist attack, collapsed economy, the rise of world salad etiquette, and a terror tweet Traitor?
    Are they selling a bridge in Brooklyn by any chance as well?

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  10. I’m ashamed to admit it, but I discovered Ayn Rand when I was 14 (I’m 65 now). Read Every. Single. Book. By the time I was 17, I was ashamed to admit that I had read a single one. So there is that.

    But I can’t imagine ‘discovering’ her at 46. I’d think surely by that age you’d have outgrown that adolescent belligerent-superiority semi-psychosis.

    But then, Stephen Miller is a walking, talking (er, shouting) Any Rand book, and he’s only 33. Maybe Kennedy could change her name to Dagny, or Dominique, and wear a Reardon Metal Bracelet and carry a horsewhip.

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  11. uh…correct that to ‘Ayn Rand,’ not ‘Any Rand,’ although….

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  12. I didn’t seriously pay attention to politics or political ideologies until my 30s (I’m 55 now).
    And I read Atlas Shrugged around the same time, based on the suggestion of a friend thinking it was just another novel. Having not formed opinions on so many issues, it just read like a novel that I only finished to find out the surprisingly cool ending, only to be disappointed.
    So I never read any more of her books.
    Several years later after identifying as a liberal, I heard people talking about Ayn Rand and realized what I had read earlier was a conservative manifesto.
    Eewwww.

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  13. I was and am a vociferous reader. As a kid, I would stay up all night reading a book if it was interesting.
    Ayn Rand was a cure for insomnia with me. By the time I read 30 pages, I was nodding off.
    Not even Marx and Engels put me to sleep that fast.

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  14. @rsginsf #10:

    Yeah, well I read (to the best of my knowledge) all of L. Ron Hubbards’ SciFi books. Thankfully I have no predilection towards wanting to join Scientology.

    Though I did check out EST…

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  15. VAPID.

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  16. Another truth in the Dunning Kruger effect, and I would bet my pocket lint she doesn’t know what that is!

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  17. She needed to “discover” Ayn Rand to keep her job?

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  18. @maggie
    Without Dunning Kruger effect us mere mortals would have no plausible explanation for neither the sitting president nor Bush 43, Reagan, Nixon, and prolly Hoover.

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  19. I had forgotten just what Dunning-Kruger meant, so I looked it up and whose picture appeared next to the explanation? Alfred E.Newman! Talk about a picture and a thousand words…..

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  20. Kim Jong-un has enough fun with Trumpster!

    Besides Dunning-Kruger is not smart enough to be a “Kennedy”!

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