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The Senate Is Now Going To Stop Enforcing A Dress Code

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Sen. John Letterman will be allowed to wear whatever he pleases since the Senate will no longer enforce the typical dress code.

GALLAGHER: This John Fetterman showed up at the UAW, one of the UAW picket lines, over the weekend. He didn’t even look like him on social media. If you if you’re on X or Rumble or Truth Social or Instagram or Facebook. There’s a lot of speculation that he has a doppelganger, that he’s got like a body double because he has a what appears to be a major transformation, not the least of which are his tattoos. They’re gone. Allegedly, all the tattoos he had all over his arms. I guess he had them removed. And he looks different. His head looks different. And he’s got like a big Fu Manchu mustache now. Of course, he loves walking around in that sweatshirt and those those those gym shorts. And the U.S. Senate is now evidently going to stop enforcing a dress code to be on the Senate floor. So Fetterman can wear his hooded sweatshirts and gym shorts while casting votes on behalf of the American people. In that nice, the U.S. Senate is no longer going to enforce the dress code that has always been in place with the expectation that if you’re a United States senator and you’re going to do the people’s business on the floor of the Senate, maybe you shouldn’t look like you’re going to, you know, a hayride. And John Fetterman always looks like something the cat dragged in. He likes to wear hoodies and shorts. It’s quite the look for that big hulking guy, isn’t it? But that’s his that’s his vibe. Speaking of the UAW strike, I watched Sean Thain, the president of the United Auto Workers Union, on the Sunday morning news shows. And, you know, I admit I’m not a real big fan of unions. In fact, quite the opposite. I, I kind of think that unions have helped destroy many aspects of our economic system. In fact, it’s a commonly held view that pension plans that used to be in place contributed to the decline of the U.S. automakers. Well, now the UAW is demanding pensions come back. They want the old fashioned defined benefit plan. And as Bloomberg points out, pensions are not worth striking over. You know what I find interesting about the UAW dispute? I heard all the talking points about how the corporate executives at the Big three automakers make too much money. That’s a Bernie Sanders mantra. That’s an Elizabeth Warren trope. The executives make too much. You know, a company can be producing billions of dollars of revenue. But the Bernie Sanders of the world want to cap what an executive at one of those companies earns, which I always find so fascinating. It’s as if they want to equate the guy or gal on the assembly line with the chief executive officer of one of the big automakers. Well, they’re not the same. I mean, it’d be nice if everybody made the same amount of money in life. Hate to break it to you. Life doesn’t work that way.

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