Ohio senator and Donald Trump’s running mate JD Vance has one after another firefighting to do as there’s no end to the skeletons tumbling out of the closet. First the rumor that he had sex with a couch, then his Mountain Dew comment followed by resurfacing of his past ‘childless cat ladies’ comment, then his email exchange with a friend where he slammed Trump and now his Venmo account which was left public and now his digital footprints lead us back to some weird blogs.
Washington Post has published a politician’s guide to tidying up the digital footprint instead of embarrassing one like JD Vance did. It said we all can learn something from JD Vance’s public Venmo account.
“I honestly can say that I felt more like a female than I think I ever have or will,” Vance wrote after what he described as an “incredibly emotional” day.
Wired reported that more than 200 people appear on Vance’s Venmo friends list including Amalia Halikias, government relations director at the Heritage Foundation — the think tank associated with the controversial Project 2025. Many on his friends’ list are openly anti-Trump.
JD Vance did little to remove his digital footprints and neither did he deny that he was anti-Trump. His campaign said his stand on Trump evolved over the years.
Vance had two blogs — the first one he started during his 2005 deployment to Iraq. It was called The Ruminations of JD Hamel. The second one was called the Hillbilly Elite that he started in 2010. After graduating from Middletown High School, Vance joined the US Marine Corps, where he served from 2003 to 2007 as a combat correspondent, with six months in Iraq. He then attended Ohio State University and then Yale Law School.
“I don’t know what to say. I returned from home yesterday to NC with the schedule of going to Iraq on my 21st birthday, August 2nd. Hopefully that will happen, I’m so bored and lonely here that I need something to get my mind back on the right track. I feel really weird right now, like I don’t want to hang out with anyone except for my closest friends or my family, and I have few really good friends here and no family,” he wrote on July 30, 2005.
“Needless to say it was a crappy day, and I hate airports, and yesterday was incredibly emotional for me. I honestly can say that I felt more like a female than I think I ever have or will,” the blog read. “Yesterday I cried twice, and along with the time my grandma died those are the only times I’ve cried since I was 13 years old. So yesterday was weird, and I read a lot yesterday, from a biography on Winston Churchill, one of my heroes, and the Bible.” he wrote.
Vance later on became a bestselling author with his memoir ‘Hillbilly Elegy’ published in 2016, months before Donald Trump became the president. His childhood stories are plagued by abuse, alcoholism and poverty. After he was named as Trump’s running mate, a renewed interest was generated for his book.
Washington Post has published a politician’s guide to tidying up the digital footprint instead of embarrassing one like JD Vance did. It said we all can learn something from JD Vance’s public Venmo account.
“I honestly can say that I felt more like a female than I think I ever have or will,” Vance wrote after what he described as an “incredibly emotional” day.
Wired reported that more than 200 people appear on Vance’s Venmo friends list including Amalia Halikias, government relations director at the Heritage Foundation — the think tank associated with the controversial Project 2025. Many on his friends’ list are openly anti-Trump.
JD Vance did little to remove his digital footprints and neither did he deny that he was anti-Trump. His campaign said his stand on Trump evolved over the years.
Vance had two blogs — the first one he started during his 2005 deployment to Iraq. It was called The Ruminations of JD Hamel. The second one was called the Hillbilly Elite that he started in 2010. After graduating from Middletown High School, Vance joined the US Marine Corps, where he served from 2003 to 2007 as a combat correspondent, with six months in Iraq. He then attended Ohio State University and then Yale Law School.
“I don’t know what to say. I returned from home yesterday to NC with the schedule of going to Iraq on my 21st birthday, August 2nd. Hopefully that will happen, I’m so bored and lonely here that I need something to get my mind back on the right track. I feel really weird right now, like I don’t want to hang out with anyone except for my closest friends or my family, and I have few really good friends here and no family,” he wrote on July 30, 2005.
“Needless to say it was a crappy day, and I hate airports, and yesterday was incredibly emotional for me. I honestly can say that I felt more like a female than I think I ever have or will,” the blog read. “Yesterday I cried twice, and along with the time my grandma died those are the only times I’ve cried since I was 13 years old. So yesterday was weird, and I read a lot yesterday, from a biography on Winston Churchill, one of my heroes, and the Bible.” he wrote.
Vance later on became a bestselling author with his memoir ‘Hillbilly Elegy’ published in 2016, months before Donald Trump became the president. His childhood stories are plagued by abuse, alcoholism and poverty. After he was named as Trump’s running mate, a renewed interest was generated for his book.
Source : Times of India