Charlie Harris

3.5K posts

Charlie Harris

Charlie Harris

@VertiCon1

Right wing liberal

Katılım Kasım 2013
921 Takip Edilen78 Takipçiler
Chad Leistikow🆑
Chad Leistikow🆑@ChadLeistikow·
One last time (this season): 3-word headlines?
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John Ziegler
John Ziegler@Zigmanfreud·
Trump’s superpower is he’s actually SO ignorant, and SO psychologically unqualified for his position, his fans understandably think it’s impossible for him to be POTUS 2x if that was really true. Consequently they concoct a narrative where he’s a genius & his critics are morons.
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Charlie Harris
Charlie Harris@VertiCon1·
@DavidBahnsen Texas Dems took a pass on Crockett, because Republican ads in the fall would've displayed her ridiculous personality. Talerico's measured personality coated in Christianese gives voters a feeling they have moderated in their vote, whist in reality moving to Crockett's left.
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David L. Bahnsen
David L. Bahnsen@DavidBahnsen·
Mike, I swear I read it. All the way through. And if all it said was, "one can have a different view of [immigration] or [some contemporary social or political issue] and still be a Christian," I would just shrug it off (because it would be true, and really not need to be said). But he doesn't do that. He pits traditional conservative views (the one David got famous advocating for) AGAINST a Christian view of feeding the hungry and healing the sick (a false dichotomy that David knows darn well is a manipulative ploy). He brushes off that illogical, manipulative device - even commends it - and then goes on to repeat the inane argument from silence that the Bible being written thousands of years ago means it doesn't really actually care about contemporary and practical issues (David and I both criticize the anti-intellectualism of MAGA, but that is the most anti-intellectual asininity I can imagine). David's critique of MAGA's hypocrisy and selectivity is not the focus of my criticism of David's article. He is spot on there, and the MAGA defense of Paxton should be blasted. But so should any attempt to defend Talarico. This is not mere "political" diversification (I fully accept that one can be theologically orthodox and politically progressive, even if I think it is rare). The issue David ignores is that Talarico is not remotely theologically orthodox. If what I am supposed to get out of his article is "being kind is good and Talarico is kind," I concur that kindness is a fruit of the spirit. But David is clearly whitewashing the grotesque, unorthodox universalism and social gospel works righteousness Talarico has repeatedly promoted. And I know that David knows better.
Mike Cosper@MikeCosper

Ok folks... needs to be said again. Read the article. Think about it, in pursuit of comprehension of the argument. Then respond.

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Charlie Harris
Charlie Harris@VertiCon1·
@DavidAFrench Texas Dems took a pass on Crockett, because Republican ads in the fall would've largely displayed her ridiculous personality. Talerico, OTOH, GOP ads will portray a man of the far left. He being fully compatible w/ the Squad, and more suited to Mandami's NYC than to Texas.
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David French
David French@DavidAFrench·
If the primary American divide is between right and left, then Talarico isn’t that interesting. There’s a long history of progressive religious activism in the United States, just as there is a long history of conservative religious activism. Yet if the primary American divide is between decent and indecent, then the equation changes. Talarico shines. nytimes.com/2026/03/08/opi…
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Charlie Harris
Charlie Harris@VertiCon1·
@EWErickson @rockmom Texas Dems took a pass on Crockett, because Republican ads in the fall would've largely displayed her ridiculous personality. Talerico, OTOH, GOP ads will portray a man of the far left. He being fully compatible w/ the Squad, and more suited to Mandami's NYC than to Texas.
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Erick Erickson
Erick Erickson@EWErickson·
@rockmom Oh FFS lady, I was hoping the Democrats would nominate him. I wasn’t lying when i said Crockett would be tougher in the general election because Dems hadn’t vetted the guy. But I’m responding to an actual piece in the NY Times.
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Erick Erickson
Erick Erickson@EWErickson·
It is not decent to twist scripture to lead others to hell. It is not decent to claim whiteness itself is like a virus. It is not decent to use Christ’s conception as a justification for abortion. It is not decent to reduce women to “neighbors with uteruses.” Only if you have been radicalized by your critics can you land at this position.
David French@DavidAFrench

If the primary American divide is between right and left, then Talarico isn’t that interesting. There’s a long history of progressive religious activism in the United States, just as there is a long history of conservative religious activism. Yet if the primary American divide is between decent and indecent, then the equation changes. Talarico shines. nytimes.com/2026/03/08/opi…

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Charlie Harris
Charlie Harris@VertiCon1·
@Zigmanfreud You said a lot of reasons... The one on/in right leaning media is, the shift of the proverbial "Overton Window" since 1980. Back then, the concept "toxic masculinity" was cloistered away in the same academy inner sanctum as "CRT", and hadn't yet escaped into the wild.
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John Ziegler
John Ziegler@Zigmanfreud·
There are a lot of reasons why the 2026 USA Olympic Hockey Team is NOT going to make nearly the cultural mark the 1980 team did, but here are 2 you haven’t thought of… The 2026 final game averaged 18.6 million viewers live, with 26 million in overtime. The 1980 final game averaged 32.8 million viewers, in a country with at least 110 million fewer people! The “Miracle on Ice” game, on taped delay, averaged 34.2 million viewers! But also, because Sports Illustrated is dead, the 2026 team isn’t going to have nearly every sports fan in America receive these two iconic magazine covers in their mailbox between now and the end of the year. Culturally, we are paying a huge price for the massive fragmentation of our media. Iconic and unifying moments are almost impossible now.
John Ziegler tweet mediaJohn Ziegler tweet media
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Charlie Harris
Charlie Harris@VertiCon1·
@greggnunziata Trump's graciousness handicap aside. Part of this is Overton Window problem, stuff. The left side of the aisle can no longer cheer traditional examples of Americana.
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Gregg Nunziata
Gregg Nunziata@greggnunziata·
The president of the United States has three jobs: head of party, head of the executive branch, and head of state. The latter role calls for him to transcend politics and speak for the nation. Trump has never been able to do that, as was on full view last night.
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Charlie Harris
Charlie Harris@VertiCon1·
@noam_dworman @AbeGreenwald Noam, "Replacement" seems just a brute fact. Ideas about to what extent masterminds are conspiring about it, can lead people into all sorts of nutty cul-de-sacs. Still - better we should talk about that replacement, than cede the subject to unrestrained influencers.
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Noam Dworman
Noam Dworman@noam_dworman·
What irks me is this cliche-take that Tucker took his turn only after he left Fox. Was "great replacement" hidden behind some elaborate veil? The graveyards are full of people who listened to Tucker on COVID. He was also whacked out on Mueller, Ukrainian bio-weapons labs and more. People like Hazony made excuse after excuse for Tucker long after reality was obvious.
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Abe Greenwald
Abe Greenwald@AbeGreenwald·
Strange take from the man who says we failed to reveal Tucker’s anti-Semitism.
Yoram Hazony@yhazony

My Contacts With Tucker Carlson About Anti-Semitism on His Show A few weeks ago, a mutual friend asked me if I’d be willing to speak to Tucker Carlson off the record. I agreed and Tucker called me three weeks ago to talk. I continued texting with him for eight days after that. But this past Friday, Tucker released a video in which he reported to the public on his off-the-record conversations with me. Inaccurately, of course. So here’s some additional information on my short-lived discussions with Tucker Carlson about anti-Semitism on his show. Tucker called me on Sunday, February 1. We talked for 1 hour and 23 minutes. Here’s what I noted down on my desk calendar right after the call: "8 am Tucker Carlson 83-minute call wanting to know how to end the charges of anti-Semitism against him. Trump told him to end it on Jan 11." As you can see, Tucker explained that he was calling because he had come under pressure from President Trump at his famous meeting at the White House on January 11. He told me the administration wants him to find a way to stop his high-profile fights with Jews and Zionist Christians. Tucker told me that he wanted my advice on “practical steps” he could take to change the impression that he is an anti-Semite. I thought he was asking me to host him in Israel. So I explained to him that I can’t do much to help him, because just about every Jew I know believes he’s been waging a savage campaign against Jews, Judaism, and Israel for the past 18 months—and that most think his aim is to drive Jews and Zionist Christians out of the Trump coalition and out of the Republican party. I said that even a year ago, quite a few Jews would probably have jumped at the chance to appear on the Tucker Carlson Show and to present an alternative point of view, but that this looked impossible to me now—and that it would stay that way as long as there’s no change of direction on his part. Tucker wanted me to explain to him why anyone would think he was an anti-Semite. I answered that question for more than an hour, giving him a series of examples of statements he and his guests had made on his show that seemed completely unhinged and motivated by a desire to slander Jews, Judaism, Israel, and Zionist Christians in order to do as much harm as possible. He kept expressing amazement that anyone would think he was an anti-Semite, and I kept giving him more examples of why I thought any fair observer would reach that conclusion if they were familiar with the relevant conversations he had hosted on his program. The conversation ended with my agreeing to continue the discussion. I didn’t feel he was open to dialing down the hostility toward Jews, Judaism, Israel, and Zionist Christians constantly being expressed on his program. But I also didn’t want to close the door to the possibility that the pushback from the administration would eventually get him to make a change. (Anyone who has been following Tucker’s program in the weeks since January 11 knows that, so far, there hasn’t been any such change.) On February 3, Tucker wrote to me asking if he could speak at the first Israeli National Conservatism Conference (NatCon), which is scheduled to be held in Jerusalem on June 8-10. I was taken aback that he would ask for something like that, given the content of our conversation two days earlier. But I did my best to draft a reply that would reinforce my previous description of what a great many Jews, Israelis, and Zionist Christians think of Tucker right now. Here’s what I wrote in response to his request to speak at the first NatCon conference in Israel: "Tucker, I appreciate the offer. But I need people to show up at this event. Realistically, Jews and Zionist Christians are not going to share a platform with you or come to hear you under the current circumstances. I’m just speaking descriptively about the situation: Much of the lineup will revolt if you join the program and that story will blow back on you [and other public figures] in addition to blowing up the conference. If you want to change this situation, there are things you can do unilaterally to shift the dynamic and I think that’s the way to move forward." I thought Tucker had finally gotten the message that he should stop asking me for favors, and instead consider how he could make unilateral changes that would help people get past the impression that he is one of the leading Jew-haters of our generation. But then on February 9, he wrote to ask me if I would set up a meeting for him with Prime Minister Netanyahu. I’m not sure why he thought I was the right address for that request. But I knew very well that if someone were going to contact the Prime Minister’s office with such a misguided idea, it wasn’t going to be me. Here’s what I wrote in reply to his request that I arrange a meeting for him with Bibi: "I don’t see how that could happen. It doesn’t serve any interest I’m aware of. It could only damage him." This was a perfectly honest answer, and Tucker could have thanked me for giving him my honest assessment of the situation he has created. But Tucker wasn’t happy with it, and he typed an agitated little speech into his phone to indicate that our conversation had come to an end. On February 20, Tucker released a peevish summary of the contacts between us as part of a wild video in which he also suggested that Israel might be trying to kill him and his family. That’s the story. I’ll just add one comment. Most of what I do in public life is building coalitions. That means I talk to a lot of people who don’t agree with me on all sorts of things, and sometimes that means meeting with people who don’t like me very much. I have these in-person, off-the-record conversations because often people turn out to be quite different in private. Sometimes, I’ve just misunderstood who they are from their public appearances. Sometimes, I’ve understood very well who they are, but it turns out they are willing to explore the possibility of making a change. And also: Even when nothing else comes of it, I learn a tremendous amount about people from these private conversations. In Tucker’s case, the private person turns out to be exactly who we’ve been seeing in public. As of now, I’m not seeing any sign that he is willing to play ball with the mainstream nationalist camp in the Republican party, much less that he has any regrets about who and what he has become since leaving Fox News in 2023. Whatever his motives for turning his podcast into what seems to be a circus of anti-Jewish messaging, right now that project is clearly more important to him than helping the administration keep its coalition together so it can govern effectively and win elections in 2026 and 2028.

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Charlie Harris
Charlie Harris@VertiCon1·
@ScottDochterman Not shocked on Grono; not a high production season. A little surprised, tho, OTOH, because a notable finish vs. Nebby, Vandy, and the Shrine Bowl cherry on top.
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Scott Dochterman
Scott Dochterman@ScottDochterman·
Iowa will have 9 players at the NFL combine later this month. Invitees: C Logan Jones G Beau Stephens OL Gennings Dunker WR Kaden Wetjen K Drew Stevens DE Max Llewellyn LB Karson Sharar S Xavier Nwankpa CB T.J. Hall Not invited (yet): QB Mark Gronowski DT Aaron Graves
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Charlie Harris
Charlie Harris@VertiCon1·
@krystalball In the video, he looked more like an activist than a journalist.
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Charlie Harris
Charlie Harris@VertiCon1·
@AndrewCMcCarthy Andy, likely Trump Team knew we don't have the resources to physically remove all illegal aliens. Almost certainly from the beginning the plan was to get illegals to "self deport".
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Andy McCarthy
Andy McCarthy@AndrewCMcCarthy·
Not hard. Public strongly supports removal of hardcore criminal aliens. Majority supports *concept* of deporting other illegal aliens but now grasps and dislikes disruption to its own lives that hunting down every illegal alien would entail (if we had resources, which we don’t). nationalreview.com/2026/01/the-ro…
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Charlie Harris
Charlie Harris@VertiCon1·
@GretchenCarlson @Gibson5972 @CNN Gretchen, ICE "raids" wouldn't be needed (or, needed less often) if local law enforcement honored ICE detainers, and turned over offenders to ICE at safe places like inside courthouses, police stations, or local jails.
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Charlie Harris
Charlie Harris@VertiCon1·
@EWErickson Mike Waltz case indicates Trump's 2nd term reluctance to fire.
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Erick Erickson
Erick Erickson@EWErickson·
I don't think Noem will be fired. I think she'll be Tulsi Gabbarded, i.e. ignored and used as window dressing.
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Charlie Harris
Charlie Harris@VertiCon1·
@Zigmanfreud @bungarsargon You're correct in much of that. I'm not sure at what point they realized they couldn't physically remove everybody, but I think there was a point where they came to believe the most effective deportation strategy was creating incentive to self-deport.
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John Ziegler
John Ziegler@Zigmanfreud·
I get @bungarsargon point about the polling on immigration enforcement, but the problem is always most voters want a crackdown in THEORY, but in practice it becomes far too messy for moderates. Trump has created the worst scenario: Minimum deportation, maximum political damage.
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Charlie Harris
Charlie Harris@VertiCon1·
@brithume Democrats are an open borders party.
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Charlie Harris
Charlie Harris@VertiCon1·
@greggnunziata This assumes the Democrats will also once again return to classical liberalism.
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Gregg Nunziata
Gregg Nunziata@greggnunziata·
I hear from many principled conservatives who think we've lost, forever. Nonsense. We're a remnant, that can keep ideas alive. We can become a faction, that can influence a coalition. And we can become a majority again, that can advance law, liberty, and prosperity. Onward.
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Charlie Harris
Charlie Harris@VertiCon1·
@greggnunziata There are a lot of factors which set the table. Romney's 2012 face plant being maybe the straw which broke the camel's back. 2015 put the GOP base wide open and desperate.
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Gregg Nunziata
Gregg Nunziata@greggnunziata·
Trump is uniquely unfit for office. Conservatives and the GOP deserve blame (and ultimately electoral punishment) for elevating and celebrating such a man. But blame abounds for creating the conditions that made this awfulness possible and make it so hard to constrain.
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Dan McLaughlin
Dan McLaughlin@baseballcrank·
We need to recommit both to electing presidents of good character & to a federal government constrained by law. And as Republicans, we have to do it alone. Democrats will never be persuadable to either cause.
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