Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez might have thought she had a final slam dunk for conservatives to close out the year â instead she got slammed and dunked herself.
On the national stage since 2018, the New York Democrat has established a well-deserved reputation for a combination of narcissism, arrogance and self-righteousness that sets conservative teeth on edge and keeps her mainstream media sycophants salivating.
But when she claimed on Saturday that her political opponents are motivated by âsexual frustration,â she took things to a whole new level â and the scorn poured in.
Ocasio-Cortez â better known by the rock-star initialism AOC â was responding to reactions to a story broken by National Review that reported that she was spending the New Year holiday in Miami Beach with her longtime beau, Riley Roberts, enjoying the freedoms offered by Florida in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Another kind of politician might have acknowledged the hypocrisy of being from a political party and political movement that has crucified Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and the Sunshine Stateâs realistic approach to dealing with the coronavirus â pretty much the opposite of the vaccination-obsessed, mask-fetishizing approach of her native New York City and the Empire State.
But humility isnât how AOC rolls. So, naturally, the criticism sparked by the story had to be due solely to ⌠Republican âsexual frustrationâ due to GOP members not being able to enjoy the congresswomanâs physical favors. She took particular issue with a Twitter post by Steve Cortez, a commentator and former adviser to former President Donald Trump, who commented rudely on Robertsâ footwear.
âIf Republicans are mad they canât date me they can just say that instead of projecting their sexual frustrations onto my boyfriendâs feet,â Ocasio-Cortez wrote on Twitter.
âYa creepy weirdos.â
That kind of message from a federal lawmaker should disturb any American, regardless of Politics, considering it sounds like the pouting of a particularly spoiled high school diva more than a duly elected member of the legislative branch of government.
AOC herself might have realized how the message came off, because she followed it up with a tweet apparently aimed at broadening the circle of oppression beyond her own undeniably photogenic person to âwoman, &LGBT+ people in general.â
Putting aside the fact that that didnât make a whole lot of sense, the damage had already been done. AOC had declared that her political opponents are just venting their feelings of being unable to consummate an irresistible desire for the belle of the Bronx.
It being the leftist cesspool of Twitter, AOC had plenty of supporters, of course. But conservatives werenât buying it â very much including conservative women.
And then there were the ones like these â trying to communicate with AOC in the kind of language she really understands: The beauty contest school of political competition.
Comparing the relative attractiveness of women is not generally a winning argument in political discourse (comparing the relative of attractiveness of men in Politics is even worse). And thereâs a good reason for it.
Political philosophy isnât about physical attraction, itâs about the power of ideas and their results. And the power of the ideas that created the United States â individual liberty to find success or failure, equality under the law respect for private property rights â are undeniable, because of their results.
They havenât been perfectly implemented, of course â no endeavor by humans will ever be perfect. But theyâve resulted in the richest, freest and most powerful nation the world has ever seen.
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The socialist, collective ideas espoused by Ocasio-Cortez and her ilk, meanwhile, have resulted in pretty much the exact opposite: poverty, the grinding subjection of the individual to the power of the state and the deaths, over and over again, of countless millions of human beings. (Leftists donât like admitting that regimes that count their victims in the tens of millions â Stalinâs Soviet Union, Hitlerâs National Socialist Germany, Maoâs Communist China â all have a totalitarian ideology in common. Guess which side of the aisle itâs on.)
In her short time in the public eye, Ocasio-Cortez has been wrong about many things, but itâs tough to get anything more wrong than she got this.
The congresswomanâs relative physical charms are not the issue. When it comes to conservatives and when it comes to what matters, itâs not desire that AOC arouses. Itâs disgust.
This article appeared originally on The Western Journal.
