Have you ever noticed the weird compulsion in people, a lot of people, to pretend that they are the opposite of who they obviously are? Jussie Smollett would be one example, but it's everywhere and it is especially prevalent in politics. It's ubiquitous in the Democratic Party[1].Just a few weeks ago, one Democratic politician who had worn blackface demanded the resignation[2] of another Democratic politician for the crime of, yes, wearing blackface. That's more than hypocrisy, it's really an escape and evasion scheme. You escape scrutiny and evade punishment by accusing other people of doing exactly who you, yourself are doing, but on a much grander scale. The people calling you a thief are picking your pocket. The ones calling you an adulterer are hitting on your wife. The ones claiming you are immoral are themselves deeply worried about spending eternity in flames, and probably for good reason.It's the Bill Clinton[3] as a feminist scam. We could give you a million examples, but the living embodiment of this syndrome, the all-time Grand Prix, a triple gold medal winner in the category turns out to be running for president of the United States. It's Kirsten Gillibrand -- the junior Democratic Senator from New York.CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM TUCKER CARLSON[4]Now Gillibrand is interesting not because there's a chance she will become the president, she won't.  Gillibrand is fascinating because she so perfectly embodies the attitudes and the vanities of the modern Democratic Party and of a ruling class more broadly.If you want to know what they're thinking in the faculty lounge at Wesleyan, or out in Silicon Valley or in Hollywood, watch Kirsten Gillibrand.  She is who they all are. Like all of them, Gillibrand rarely utters a sentence anymore without some form of moral judgment. She appears to have retired from politics, actually.  She's

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