it's funny that richard spencer endorses joe biden, and the coverage around it is that biden rejected it, as though biden has some kind of right to choose his voters, and as though biden's rejection at all matters.
it's this weird tendency tied into the rise of identity politics to see voting for a candidate as joining a club, rather than as an act of self-interest. in the minds of identity voters, it seems to be that there's a "biden club" and that, by supporting the candidate, you're joining the club. as such, members of the club have the right to remove you from it.
this is of course utterly ridiculous to everybody else...
if biden rejected my endorsement (which is not coming.), i'd tell him to fuck off, and that i'm voting for him anyways, whether he likes it or not.
so, let's take a step back, here.
richard spencer apparently thinks that joe biden aligns more with his concept of history than donald trump. why is that?
is it the kasich endorsement?
and, is spencer right? or is he foolishly voting against his self-interest?