Originally Posted by Cheyenne
With Noem, I was able to read entire paragraphs from her book.
Yet you came to your conclusions thinking that Noem didn't indicate she thought the dog was dangerous.
Your sources (what ever they are) either omitted or downplayed the fact that she did feel the dog was dangerous and you believed and posted a lie.
Your posts indicate you envisioned the situation one way and when anything challenges that vision, you dismiss it as spin.
(I.e. it doesn't support your perception and and therefore "doesn't make sense.)
I envision a woman who watched a happy playful puppy transform into a vicious animal that she could not control and had turned on her.
I can imagine her blood running cold as she thought about the times her children played with a dog that could turn transform so quickly.
My take does make sense of her narrative.

Originally Posted by Cheyenne
Getting back to Vance, I can understand the less said the better about the couch fabrication.
Yet you led off your OP with it.
Granted, you allowed for the possibility of it being false, but anyone reading it and trusting your judgement will assume it to be true.

Originally Posted by Cheyenne
His comments about women are right out there. As the female vote is very important for Trump, I'm really disappointment that Vance said what he did. I'm talking about the exact words that came from his mouth in the commencement speech and his weak clarification of them.
I haven't read his speech. Are your quotes the ones addressed in the article I linked to?

I really hate spending time addressing the wrong quotes.
For your reference, here is one of the quotes the article addresses:
Quote
And what it made me realize is that so much of what drives elite culture is mediocre millennial journalists who haven’t gotten out of their career with thought they would write. And the thing is, everybody can be exceptional mother and father, not everybody can be exceptional journalists. And not enough people have accepted that if they put their entire life’s meaning into their credential into where they went to school, into what kind of job they have. If you put all of your life’s meaning into that, if you’re going to be the sort of person who asks women to talk about how they regret having children, you’re going to be a sad, lonely, pathetic person, and you’re going to know it internally, you’re going to project it onto people who have actually built something more meaningful with their lives.