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What HBO’s campy Sarah Palin movie ‘Game Change’ might be able to teach us about JD Vance & the 2024 election

couch mouth since the RNC. Some folks are already writing the “elegy” for his short stint on the campaign trail.And then there’s the Democrats, who have a new spring in their step ever since President Biden ended his bid for re-election, throwing his full support behind VP Kamala Harris.

As she vets a number of swing-state politicians—who are largely older, white men—to find her Veep, it’s a little like watching a high-stakes version of The Golden Bachelorette play out in the public forum.Vance, who turned his back on a transgender friend, has an apparent interest in women and dolphins. Yes, these are unprecedented times… except they kind of aren’t! If you can remember back long, long ago to 2008, our country was similarly going through an election cycle with an outsized focus on potential VPs—namely former Alaska governor Sarah Palin—and our heads are still spinning to this day.In fact, the story of Palin’s rollercoaster ride along the campaign trail was such a doozy that it was turned into a movie just a few short years later.Director Jay Roach’s Game Change premiered on HBO on March 10, 2012, and it saw the great Julianne Moore don the half-hearted beehive and rimless glasses of the one-time vice-presidential hopeful.

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In JD Vance’s warped imagination, it’s 1983 & certain ethnic groups are more prone to catching HIV
Kamala Harris' open borders, there is a rise of HIV cases in Springfield, Ohio, pic.twitter.com/X7jVPHcIfiStay woke with our briefing while staying informed on all things LGBTQ+ entertainment, life, and more!According to Bruce Vanderhoff, Director of the State Department of Health, there has been no “measurable or discernible increase” in the spread of disease since the Haitian influx into Springfield.The department’s website also regularly publishes data about numerous infectious diseases in the state and hasn’t seen any noticeable rise in new HIV cases, despite Vance insisting that it’s happening because, according to him, someone “on the ground” told him so.Meanwhile, Gov. Mike DeWine–who, like Vance, is a Republican–said the reports the VP wannabe appears to be citing are based on debunked misinformation that first started circulating on social media.And Clark County Health Commissioner Chris Cook called his remarks complete “nonsense,” noting that new reported cases of HIV in Springfield went from five per 100,000 people in 2020 to nine per 100,000 people in 2022, but that number is about on par with the average of seven new reported cases per 100,000 in the rest of Ohio.In a statement, Equality Springfield’s Executive Committee called Vance’s comments on HIV “dangerous and baseless.”Equality Springfield unequivocally denounces the dangerous and baseless claims that our Haitian population has led to “skyrocketing” cases of HIV in Springfield.
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