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Satirical Critique of Atlantic Column on Politicians' Relatability

By

Tom Ley

5h ago· 5 min readen

Summary

A sarcastic critique of a Nathaniel Frum column in The Atlantic, which argues that politicians benefit from appearing relatable and down-to-earth. The article mocks this as an obvious observation, while also attacking Nathaniel Frum as the son of David Frum, an Atlantic staff writer. The piece is more of a satirical takedown than a serious analysis.

Key quotes

· 3 pulled
Politicians can increase their chances of getting elected to office if they are seen as down-to-earth and relatable by their constituents.
This novel observation, unearthed for the first time this week, is the premise of a Nathaniel Frum column that appeared on The Atlantic on Tuesday.
Before you ask, yes, Nathaniel is the awful Atlantic staff writer David Frum's stupid son.
Snippet from the RSS feed
Are you ready to receive a powerful piece of information? OK, here it comes: Politicians can increase their chances of getting elected to office if they are seen as down-to-earth and relatable by their constituents. This novel observation, unearthed for t

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