ru24.pro
News in English
Август
2024

Usha Vance Says J.D. Vance’s ‘Childless Cat Ladies’ Comment Is Just a Silly Bit

0
Since Donald Trump selected Ohio Sen. J.D. Vance as his running mate in July, every headline about Vance has either been about his bizarre, rumored sexual fetish or a resurfaced clip of him going off on a tirade about “sociopathic” childless people razing this once-great country to the ground. In Vance’s most famous permutation of these comments from 2021, he refers to Vice President Kamala Harris and other Democrats who don’t have biological children as “childless cat ladies” who “are miserable in their own lives”—which, like his comments implying childless adults should lose their right to vote, is sure to endear him to the 47% of U.S. adults younger than 50 without kids. In a Fox News interview that aired on Monday, Vance’s wife, attorney Usha Vance, attempted to do damage control and insisted that the “childless cat ladies” remark was some sort of bit. Ma’am, you do realize that bits are supposed to be funny, right…? “He made a quip in service of making a point that he wanted to make that was substantive,” Usha told Fox News host Ainsley Earhardt. “And I just wish sometimes that people would talk about those things and that we would spend a lot less time just sort of going through this three-word phrase or that three-word phrase, because what he was really saying is that it can be really hard to be a parent in this country.” Usha Vance defends her husband JD Vance's "childless cat ladies" comments as a "quip": "What he was really saying is that it can be really hard to be a parent in [U.S.]. And sometimes our policies are designed...[to] make it even harder... I understand why he was saying that." pic.twitter.com/tPHPCequDz — The Recount (@therecount) August 5, 2024 Sure, except just one small thing: That’s not what Vance said at all! He didn’t propose anything akin to universal child care or paid family leave or anything of the sort. Let’s review his original comments in full, shall we?  “We’re effectively run in this country, via the Democrats… by a bunch of childless cat ladies, who are miserable at their own lives and the choices that they’ve made, and so they want to make the rest of the country miserable, too,” Vance rambled to Tucker Carlson in 2021. “If you look at Kamala Harris, Pete Buttigieg, [Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY)], the entire future of the Democrats is controlled by people without children—and how does it make any sense that we’ve turned our country over to people who don’t really have a direct stake in it?”  In more resurfaced comments, also from 2021, Vance says people who don’t have children are “sociopathic,” “psychotic,” and “deranged” and can’t be trusted with political leadership. And in another speech, also from that year, Vance argued that people who don’t have children should “face the consequences and the reality” and not be accorded “nearly the same voice” in democracy. He even suggested they shouldn’t be able to vote, while parents should be able to vote twice: “Let’s give votes to all children in this country, but let’s give control over those votes to the parents of those children.”  While Vance is clearly attacking childless adults broadly, his comments are also distinctly gendered. The right’s decades-long policy war on abortion rights is meant to compel childbirth, all while the right has simultaneously waged a cultural war on women who aren’t mothers for supposedly failing at their one, existential purpose.  JD Vance says women who haven’t given birth like Kamala Harris are “childless cat ladies who are miserable at their own lives,” and have “no direct stake”…