which don t have a great history, i think, in politics across the world. but then i say to myself, well, look, you know, i remember conservatism criticized barack obama for throwing these huge rallies and would say he s a rock star and brought out greek columns and i remember many democrats and progressives who wanted him to keep doing events like that during the aca fight who got mad at him for not doing it. what s the difference with him touching base with who his political base is? i think it would have been inconceivable for obama to do a bunch of rallies in the states that voted for him. you think that s the thing that botherses the whole posture is kind of one of both rallying the people who voted for him and also kind of menacing and threatening the majority who didn t, right, with these sort of menacing asides, they re on our side, they just don t know it yet, you know, we re going to like what we have in store. it s i don t think that i m reading too much into this.
yeah. well, i think it s very clear that trump wants the wedding and not the marriage and the fact that s a funny way to put it. a very funny way to but it. he wants the big pageantry and that s it, he doesn t want the long term sort of like putting in the hard work. that s for pence to do, why pence is actually going to the briefings, you know, trump went to two and he s now ditching school. so this is what he enjoys and as michelle says, this is where he gets his energy, this is where he gets his confidence and so he already said, you know, when he was campaigning, like, this is what he wants to do. he want to go out, make america great again and convince people that he s doing that. all right. let me play devil s advocate here. there s one level which i have a sort of instinctual aversion to the mode of the trump rally. particularly after he won because it feels like it feels not that far from, you know, rallies for the leader which don t have a great history, i think,