Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell appeared to freeze again Wednesday, this time during a gaggle with reporters in Covington, Kentucky, stopping for more than 30 seconds after he was asked if he would run for re-election.

The Kentucky Republican froze in July at a news conference on Capitol Hill, going silent for 19 seconds before being escorted away from the cameras. McConnell, 81, returned shortly afterward and continued his news conference, telling reporters, “I’m fine.”

When it became apparent that McConnell had frozen again on Wednesday, an aide came up to him and asked, “Did you hear the question, senator?” McConnell continued to be unresponsive.

    • Nougat
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      1 year ago

      McConnell is a partisan hack and an absolute hypocrite, whose actions in the Senate have damaged the country in far-reaching ways.

      I aim to be better than him in every way, including not being happy about his physical pain or other complications due to medical issues.

      Edit: Really, setting aside the mild editorializing, McConnell did not choose to experience medical problems. We can disagree fervently with the choices he does make, and criticize in the context of those choices as much as we want. It is wrong to criticize or wish ill of people when those criticisms are in the context of something not chosen.

      That is rightly offensive when the context is race, gender, LGBTQ+, physical (mental should arguably be here, too) disability. It’s equally offensive when the context is illness or some other medical concern.

      • @EssentialCoffee@midwest.social
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        191 year ago

        This is sort of like saying a parent shouldn’t want a punishment on someone who murdered their kid because they need to forgive in order to cleanse their soul or some other religious bullshit.

        Perhaps if he weren’t an evil motherfucker, people wouldn’t wish ill of him.

          • @EssentialCoffee@midwest.social
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            11 year ago

            That’s not apples to apples at all. You’re talking about what consequences should happen for an overall system of punishment in a society where you’re detached as a whole.

            What an individual feels about someone who has directly harmed them is completely different. Arguing that you should forgive the people who hurt you because it’s the moral thing to do is what abusers do.

        • No not really but reading a thread of comments from parents about “what I’d do if they did this to MY kid” is VERY VERY disturbing and it makes it seem like being a parent is bad for the soul. Now go ahead and explain to me how mentally healthy it is to actual welcome the opportunity to torture another human being.

          • Nougat
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            1 year ago

            [R]eading a thread of comments from parents about “what I’d do if they did this to MY kid” is VERY VERY disturbing …

            Saying and reading those kinds of things gives your brain a bit of the experience of those things happening, without them actually happening, and that can be both personally cathartic and generally popular for the same reason. And it’s easy to fall into the trap of coming to believe that you actually would want those things if the opportunity were presented to you, when the opportunity has not been presented to you.

            There’s a bit of selection bias, too. It’s far less likely that someone is going to stand up and publicly say that they wouldn’t want vengeance against a child murderer, because the general public has a hard time separating the notions of “not wanting to torture people” and “wanting a just and safe society.” Human societies, to some degree, embrace violence. That’s why prison rape is “funny.” I would like to do better than that; I think that a just and safe society can be achieved without also embracing violence as a measure to accomplish it.

            I’m also willing to bet that a significant portion of the people who are doing the “what I’d do if they did this to MY kid” thing are not parents. A different significant portion are doing it as a kind of virtue signalling.

            Edit: Finally, imagine a scenario where Someone On The Internet says “I’d cut his dick off and shove it in his mouth.” Okay, the court determines that the appropriate punishment is for the person to have his dick cut off and shoved in his mouth by that Someone On The Internet. Go ahead now, actually do it. I think the number of Someones On The Internet who would actually follow through with that is vanishingly small.

            • I appreciate your thoughts out response, but I still think the descriptions I have read and heard aloud come from a place of bloodlust. And no not all of us have that.

              • Nougat
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                21 year ago

                Surely some of them do, and I didn’t intend to cast aspersions on your position. It is correct to take note and be wary of expressions of bloodlust, with disregard to why that bloodlust is being expressed. I personally think that there are elements of human psychology and cultural momentum also at play, and I tend towards being a very skeptical and “I’m gonna call your bluff” kind of person. That may well backfire on me someday.

                • I understand. Thanks for this response as well.

                  This reminds me of conversations I have had with someone specific in my past. When a seemingly crazy person on the street tells me they want to stab me, I don’t care if they probably are just saying stuff. I hustle out of there and maybe call the cops. Someone I once knew did the opposite. Always assume they won’t do anything and pity them. I can still pity them, but I’m not taking any chances there.

                  I’m not saying you’re like that person, I’m only saying that if someone tries to express ill will, I’m likely to take them at their word, out of caution if nothing else.

          • @boywar3@lemmy.world
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            11 year ago

            Welcome the opportunity to torture another human being

            Nobody is torturing him (well, except maybe the people who are continuing to prop him up for political gain). It’s the greatest justice there is: nobody is doing anything and he’s still suffering.

            I dont need to do a damn thing. I simply need to do nothing and watch as a person who has active contempt for those worse off than him gets a small taste of what his actions have put thousands of people through. Just as I dont feel bad Hitler blew his brains out or Stalin died of a stroke and couldn’t be saved because of his paranoid doctors, I don’t give a damn about someone who has actively caused direct harm to thousands of innocent people.

        • Nougat
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          -101 year ago

          No, it would be like a parent whose child was murdered wanting a severe punishment because the perpetrator was a “fag.”

          If someone deserves punishment, it should be on the basis of what they choose, and not because of something they didn’t choose.

              • Blooper
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                31 year ago

                He made tons of choices guaranteeing my absolute contempt for him. I’m not going to carry an ounce of guilt for the schadenfreude I’m experiencing now. There’s no shame in taking personal joy from bad things happening to bad people. A wild, rabid alligator could have appeared out of nowhere during the news conference and bit the man in the dick right there in front of the podium - I’d still have no sympathy to spare. He’s done meaningful and lasting damage to all corners of society during his shameful life and his suffering inevitably brings lots of people great joy.

                • Nougat
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                  01 year ago

                  There’s no shame in taking personal joy from bad things happening to bad people.

                  I would feel shame if I did that.

                • There’s no shame in taking personal joy from bad things happening to bad people.

                  “There’s no shame in the best possible textbook example of shameful behavior”