This article was originally published on American Greatness - Opinion. You can read the original article HERE
Condé Nast is a far-left-leaning publisher of glossy fashion and lifestyle magazines such as Vogue and Vanity Fair (Condé Nast Traveler, bon appétit, Architectural Digest, Wired, House & Garden, and more than a dozen other high-profile titles). Vogue’s editor, fashion icon Anna Wintour (who inspired the Miranda Priestly character played by Meryl Streep in the 2006 film The Devil Wears Prada), is also its Global Chief Content Officer since 2020.
More importantly, Wintour is a Democrat activist and fundraising juggernaut. It can be traced back to December 1998, when she featured the “Extraordinary Hillary Clinton” on the cover of Vogue. It’s been reported that since 2000, Wintour, when she backed Hillary Clinton’s 2000 run for the Senate, has raised and bundled more than $150 million. It’s a synergistic relationship that benefits only one political party; Democrats.
A mock-up of what the Vogue magazine cover with Harris will look like. (Photo by Richard Truesdell)
As a fashion and culture publication, Vogue embodies an elite, wealthy mindset that not only critiques trends in the fashion world but also recognizes power and sings its praises quite often. Hardly the independent, non-partisan digest that it could be, Vogue is definitively in the Democrat corner and unabashedly supports those on the rise within the party.
When Kamala Harris became vice president in 2021, they published a slobbering, virtually unreadable 3000-word piece of dreck by Alexis Okeowo on America’s first black vice president. What can we expect next?
Since 1998, Vogue has featured most First Ladies on its cover along with a glowing feature article—that is, every First Lady except for Melania Trump, an actual fashion model.
In the wake of the New York Magazine cover feature Kamalot, you don’t need to be Nostradamus to see what’s coming. The November issue of Vogue hits newsstands the third week in October, just in time for… the final three weeks leading up to the 2024 presidential election. It’s a subtle form of election interference (just like in 2016 with a pre-election Vogue cover featuring Hillary Clinton that didn’t work out well).
Do you remember the Sports Illustrated cover jinx? Sports analysts and psychologists opine that achieving the cover of SI represents athletes at the apex of their game and that there is nowhere to go but down. Kamala Harris does not “achieve” the cover of Vogue; she merely has to show up at the photo shoot.
But we can confidently state that Harris, in the post-DNC time frame, has nowhere to go but down, irrespective of her possible appearance on the November 2024 cover of Vogue. She has reached the apex of her stature as a public official, and now that voters are learning more about her leftist history and can better calculate the impact of a potential Harris presidency, her appeal will diminish.
Could there be a Vogue cover curse? Who was on the cover of the August 2024 issue of Vogue? None other than “Dr.” Jill Biden. What happened days later? Joe Biden’s disastrous debate performance which ended his 2024 reelection bid.
Let’s all hope that there is a Vogue cover jinx. And if there is, let’s hope Vogue will put Kamala Harris on its November cover.
This article was originally published by American Greatness - Opinion. We only curate news from sources that align with the core values of our intended conservative audience. If you like the news you read here we encourage you to utilize the original sources for even more great news and opinions you can trust!
Comments