The menu of things that can sum up President Joe Biden’s administration and presidency in a nutshell is quite plentiful.
An old man ranting about fascism standing in front of a blood-red, Soviet-style backdrop and flanked by uniformed soldiers would be just one of the more recent ones.
Here’s another:
WTRF in Wheeling, W. Va., posted a mundane photo on Saturday of a group of men helping a stranded motorist by pushing his stalled car.
Then you get to the caption: “Coal miners in Tucker County push an electric car after it ran out of charge near their mine.”
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Yes, coal miners – the people Biden paints as the pawns of the evil fossil fuel industry, an industry which must be swept away in favor of sunshine and windmills – were pushing an electric car after it ran out of juice.
And to make the image extra sweet for non-liberals, the photo indicated the car had Washington, D.C., license plate.
Is it too much to hope the owner was some bureaucrat from the Energy Department?
Apparently, the car could not be towed because its undercarriage was plastic, WTRF reported. So, the helpful miners pushed it to a building at their job site. Another photo showed an extension cord running from the building to the dead car’s front end.
WTRF reported that the miners gave the driver a “Friend of Coal” license plate.
Sen. Randy Smith, a Republican, owns the company the miners work for. He noted of his employees, “Shows even though they aren’t crazy about electric cars they still have a good heart and treat people with respect and would help anyone in need.”
On Twitter, West Virginia state Treasurer Riley Moore, a Republican, weighed in with the most commonsense observation that neither the national media nor the Bidenistas have yet grasped:
“An electric car breaks down in West Virginia and coal miners push it up the road to the mine to recharge. Friendly reminder that electric cars don’t exist without coal.”
The views and opinions expressed in this commentary are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the opinion of The Free Press.
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