Sometimes I think that stupidity should be physically painful, it could be beneficial to humanity in an evolutionary sense.

Just today I thought this again, when @LaNaehForaday@universeodon.com wanted to prove a point using an animation on YouTube while pointing to the uniforms drawn in it.

⬆️ @notwithstanding

I get it that different people have different intellectual abilities. Some never grow out of a childish cartoon world, and they think they know everything.

I made the mistake of engaging her assuming that she would be as willing to look at information that I provided to her as I was in looking at the cartoon video she sent to me, but she decided to #DwellInTheWell of her own willful ignorance instead.

May her #SkyDaddy bless her and give her some wisdom 🙂

@LaNaehForaday@universeodon.com

⬆️ @notwithstanding @LaNaehForaday@universeodon.com

How a #cartoon could help a #clown and a #puppet win #Iowa’s caucuses 😱

“Making America Great Again starts one place on Earth, and one place only,” a deep-voiced narrator begins as video zooms into the middle of #US “Right here in Iowa.”

In a nearly 3-minute #SchoolhouseRock!-like video, an animated character named #Marlon, informs viewers of “everything you need to know about how to successfully #caucus for President #Trump.”

#MAGA

https://apnews.com/article/trump-iowa-caucuses-presidential-race-c5a9387c6c2c17f286ecb0bbe731032b

How the animated character Marlon could help Trump win Iowa’s caucuses

Donald Trump's campaign is hoping to generate a commanding win in Iowa's leadoff voting contest by attracting new caucusgoers. The campaign has been playing an instructional video before Trump events that explains how the quirky caucus process works. An animated character named Marlon informs viewers of what they need to know about how to successfully caucus for Trump. The get-out-the-vote efforts by Trump’s 2024 campaign are a nod to the lessons learned since 2016, when the Republican political novice acknowledged not knowing the first thing about caucuses. Still, many voters tell The Associated Press they're intimidated by the caucus process or have work or personal plans that will prevent them from participating.

AP News