Image Credit: Disney
Forgot password
Enter the email address you used when you joined and we'll send you instructions to reset your password.
If you used Apple or Google to create your account, this process will create a password for your existing account.
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Reset password instructions sent. If you have an account with us, you will receive an email within a few minutes.
Something went wrong. Try again or contact support if the problem persists.
Marjorie Taylor Greene
Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images

‘Tim Walz did nothing while Minneapolis burned,’ says Marjorie Taylor Greene, who is doing nothing while Georgia floods

If hypocrisy were a person, it's name would be Greene.

With each passing day, Georgia ghoul Marjorie Taylor Greene watches her relevance bleed away a little bit more, as far more interesting and important figures take center stage and push her further and further to the wings.

Recommended Videos

As a result, her desperate screeching has taken on a new tenor each day, as she flops wildly from topic to topic in search of another moment in the spotlight. Her latest attempt isn’t likely to get her far, unfortunately, particularly when the name of Greene’s game increasingly seems to be hypocrisy.

She whines about do-nothing politicians while leading the do-nothing pack, she lambasts Joe Biden’s age while ignoring Donald Trump’s, and she’s now pointing fingers while standing waist-deep in her own failures. It’s not a good look for the Georgia Republican, but at this point, it’s the only look she sports.

Her latest petty posturing saw Greene attempt to lambast Kamala Harris’ vice presidential pick, Tim Walz, for his failure to crack down on the protests that turned violent in the wake of George Floyd’s murder. When protests turned to riots and several buildings were burned during the Black Lives Matter outcry in 2020, Walz was criticized by a number of right-leaning figures for what they characterized as his slow resolution of tensions.

Walz, for his part, didn’t want to figuratively fight fire with fire — he was hoping that the protests would burn bright but quick, and settle down without the need for armed intervention. He ultimately changed his mind, tapping the National Guard to step in, but in the meantime several buildings burned, and he was subject to broad criticism from people just like Greene.

It’s a fair criticism, if a loaded one, but it fails to hold up to literally any scrutiny when compared against Greene’s own failings. There are too many to count, over her short tenure as a U.S. representative, but the latest is a stellar example of Greene calling the kettle black while the pot’s boiling over in the background.

While she blasts Walz for sitting back “while the rioters that Kamala would bail out burned down a city,” she’s busy ignoring her own state in the midst of potentially historic rainfall. As tropical storm Debbie shifts its way into the state, harkening in what could become catastrophic flooding, Greene is too busy pointing fingers to do her job.

Her own constituents, the people she an hour before referred to as her “friends and family,” are in desperate need of leadership as Debbie starts to ravage their borders, but they won’t find it in Greene. She’s not a leader, she’s an inconsequential, inadequate, pointless talking head with less brain in her skull than she has words in her big mouth.


We Got This Covered is supported by our audience. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn a small affiliate commission. Learn more about our Affiliate Policy
Author
Image of Nahila Bonfiglio
Nahila Bonfiglio
Nahila carefully obsesses over all things geekdom and gaming, bringing her embarrassingly expansive expertise to the team at We Got This Covered. She is a Staff Writer and occasional Editor with a focus on comics, video games, and most importantly 'Lord of the Rings,' putting her Bachelors from the University of Texas at Austin to good use. Her work has been featured alongside the greats at NPR, the Daily Dot, and Nautilus Magazine.