AT&T announces it's shuttering its flagship store in Democrat-controlled San Francisco, citing change in 'consumer shopping habits'



AT&T revealed Thursday it is joining the host of companies that have already shuttered their anchor stores in the Democrat-controlled city of San Francisco.

The company's 24,000-square-foot flagship store, a prominent fixture in the downtown's Union Square, will be closing August 1.

Chris Collins, a spokesman for the telecommunications giant, told the San Francisco Standard, "Consumer shopping habits continue to change, and we're changing with them. ... That means serving customers where they are through the right mix of retail stores, digital channels and our phone-based care team."

Consumer shopping habits have changed drastically since leftists successfully passed Proposition 47 in 2014 — a leftist California ballot initiative that effectively decriminalized thefts under $950.

Collins noted, "All retail employees affected by this change will be offered jobs at one of our other many retail locations within the city."

AT&T will still have a presence in the city, where it still has over 10 stores and licensed retailers.

The news of the closure broke just hours after Cinemark Holdings, Inc., revealed it too was ditching the crime-ridden and excrement-littered city, shuttering its theater in the downtown Westfield San Francisco Centre mall, which has seen 46% of its stores close since the pandemic.

A spokesman for the company told Fox Business, "Cinemark can confirm it has decided to permanently close the Century San Francisco Centre 9 and XD theater shortly before the conclusion of its lease term following a comprehensive review of local business conditions."

Months after announcing it would peel back its Banana Republic presence in Union Square and shutter the Atheleta store on Sutter Street, Gap announced in May that it was closing its 73,000-square-foot Old Navy flagship store, reported the Standard.

Nordstrom's chief store officer also indicated last month it was closing its anchor location in the Westfield Mall, citing dramatic changes in the "dynamics of the downtown San Francisco market."

A spokesman for the mall, which has said goodbye to Office Depot, the Container Store, Anthropologie, and Saks Off 5th flee, noted the Nordstrom closure "underscores the deteriorating situation in downtown San Francisco."

TheBlaze previously reported that number of the businesses still sticking it out, such as Target, have begun locking large sections of their products behind security glass.

When the glass breaks, proprietors are oftentimes reluctant to defend their exposed property from the hordes of thieves who roam the streets in the broad daylight because San Francisco's victims are oftentimes subject to greater scrutiny than the offenders.

Democratic socialist Dean Preston, on the city's board of supervisors, recently threatened legislation to prevent security guards from drawing their weapons in defense of property.

\u201cThe Looting going on in war-torn Kiev is INSANE \u2026. \n\nOh wait, this is Democrat controlled San Francisco. \n\nNo one look or RT please. \n\nhttps://t.co/Rrp2Y61hhw\u201d
— Benny Johnson (@Benny Johnson) 1645984209


San Francisco, which comedian Dave Chappelle recently quipped has become "half 'Glee,' half zombie movie," scores a 2 out of 100 (100 being safest) on Neighborhood Watch's crime index.

The chance of becoming a victim of a violent crime is 1 in 186, and the likelihood of becoming a victim of a property crime is 1 in 20, as filmmaker Eli Steel recently discovered firsthand.

\u201cYou hear about how bad San Francisco is. I was filming a shot of my father , Shelby Steele, and in the ten minutes we were gone our SUV was broken into and nearly $15k of cameras stolen. Called 911 & they hung up twice.\u201d
— Eli Steele (@Eli Steele) 1686767367

According to the SFPD, between Jan. 1 and June 11, there were 131 reports of arson; 13,445 reports of larceny theft; 2,378 burglary reports; 1,070 assaults; 1,150 robberies; 91 rapes; 2,889 motor vehicle thefts; and 22 murders.

The city's crime and decline is not just chasing out businesses.

A comprehensive survey conducted by the San Francisco Chronicle last year found that 37% of current residents plan to be living somewhere beside San Francisco in three-years time. The city had experienced a 7% numeric decline in its population between July 2020 and July 2021.

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Self-described 'queer' and 'trans' person boasts about illegally providing minors gender-transition prescriptions without facing any legal consequences



Eli Erlick, who self-identifies as "[e]xtremely queer & incredibly trans," is continuing to openly admit to distributing gender-transition prescriptions to minors.

"I order 4 times more estrogen & testosterone blockers than I actually take. You should, too. Several states have now banned trans medicine for minors but we won't let a single young person go without medication. We'll provide care ourselves if youth can't access formal medicine," Erlick tweeted.

Sharing a screenshot of the text of a new Mississippi law that prohibits providing gender-transition measures to minors, Erlick wrote, "I'm now a proud criminal in Mississippi for 'aiding and abetting' lifesaving medicine for trans youth. I realize the risks of posting this but it's more important to encourage others to share lifesaving medications than guarantee one's safety (granted I'm in little danger in NY)."

\u201cI'm now a proud criminal in Mississippi for "aiding and abetting" lifesaving medicine for trans youth. I realize the risks of posting this but it's more important to encourage others to share lifesaving medications than guarantee one's safety (granted I'm in little danger in NY).\u201d
— Eli Erlick (@Eli Erlick) 1678207860

Last year, conservative commentator Matt Walsh and Libs of TikTok, which is a Twitter account run by Chaya Raichik, both indicated that they contacted the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration to alert authorities about Erlick's prescription-distribution scheme.

But Erlick is currently claiming not to have suffered any consequences while openly engaging in the illicit activity.

"Sharing prescription hormones is technically illegal but such a minor offense law enforcement doesn't care," Erlick tweeted. "Tens of thousands of people have reported me to the DEA, FBI, etc. Nothing happened."

While transgender women are simply biological men masquerading as women, Erlick has absurdly asserted that transgender women are "natural women" and "biological women."

"The only inherent difference between trans women and cis women is that trans women were assigned male by a doctor. Trans is an adjective that describes that assignment," Erlick has claimed.

Conservatives Agree with Trans People www.youtube.com

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CNN medical analyst who said the unvaccinated should not be able to travel changes her tune, emphasizes benefits of natural immunity



A CNN medical analyst who promoted lockdowns and vaccination requirements and at one stage claimed "we can't trust the unvaccinated" has taken to the pages of the Washington Post to confirm claims that were up until recently derided as misinformation.

The so-called health expert now admits that natural immunity is optimal and that those who are vaccinated but had not previously caught COVID-19 are more susceptible to infection.

While some may be happy to see these long-censored claims printed in the Washington Post, others have suggested that what is missing from these public confirmations is an apology.

What are the details?

Leana Wen is an emergency doctor and professor of health policy and management at the George Washington University Milken Institute School of Public Health. She was previously president of Planned Parenthood and has also served as a medical analyst on CNN.

On Dec. 9, Wen wrote an op-ed in the Post calling for an end to the vaccine mandate for members of the military.

Wen also suggested that "businesses, universities, schools and other entities that were once justified in implementing these requirements should consider removing them, too."

The CNN analyst appeared to defend stances she had taken earlier in the pandemic, claiming that "when the coronavirus vaccines were first made available, there was a compelling case for requiring them."

However, Wen noted that things and standards changed when the Omicron variant turned up.

Wen said that research has shown that vaccines' "effectiveness in reducing infection against the omicron subvariants is low and not lasting."

She cited a recent study in "Nature Communications," which found that "effectiveness against infection was about 50 percent in the first three months after vaccination but declined to around 10 percent or below thereafter."

In a study published in the "New England Journal of Medicine," Wen noted researchers found "that there was no difference in infection rates between people who received two doses of the vaccine six months earlier and those who remained unvaccinated."

Wen further noted in her piece, which would likely have been censored online earlier this year, that the new bivalent booster targeting Omicron is not particularly effective against infection.

Potentially running afoul of the mRNA vaccines' most outspoken champions, like Dr. Anthony Fauci, Wen claimed that public health officials must be up front that the coronavirus vaccine is not equivalent to far more effective real vaccines, such as those used to treat polio or measles.

"Young, healthy people, most of whom already had covid, are very unlikely to become severely ill, and there is little, if any, lasting difference between the vaccinated and unvaccinated people’s likelihood of infecting others," wrote Wen.

In another shibboleth-violating op-ed published Dec. 18, Wen stated, "Abundant research shows natural immunity conveys excellent protection against covid. One Centers for Disease Control and Prevention study found that vaccinated people who never had covid were at least three times as likely to be infected as unvaccinated people with prior infection."

She also cited a Lancet study that found "that those who were vaccinated but never had covid were four times as likely to have severe illness resulting in hospitalization or death compared to the unvaccinated who recovered from it."

The piece points out that an Israeli study published in the "New England Journal of Medicine" compared a group of vaccinated people who had never had COVID-19 and a group of people who had not been vaccinated but had been previously infected with COVID-19.

It turns out that the first group had "twice the number of infections as the second" just two months after their shots, and after six months, the "first group's infection rate was nearly three times higher than the second's."

Although Wen had previously supported vaccinating children, she cited CDC analysis indicating that over 90% of adolescents have contracted the virus, meaning they likely benefit from the natural immunity touted earlier in the piece.

After questioning the utility and good of vaccine mandates, Wen highlighted the dangers they pose — which were previously unacknowledgeable on social media.

Wen referenced two sets of statistics, one from the CDC and the second from a Canadian database; the first showing that there are 39 myocarditis cases per million second doses among males 18 to 24 and the second showing that there are 22 cases for every 100,000 doses for men ages 18 to 29.

About-face and backlash

Wen has ostensibly come a long way in her thinking in a short period of time.

In July 2021, Wen spoke to Democracy Now! bemoaning vaccine hesitancy and claiming that "we know that we can't trust the unvaccinated."

When the Delta variant turned up, Wen told CNN that "it needs to be hard for people to remain unvaccinated."

\u201cCNN medical contributor Leana Wen says that life needs to be "hard" for unvaccinated Americans!\n\nWhat a tyrannical monster! \n\n\u201d
— Luke Rudkowski (@Luke Rudkowski) 1626032537

The health policy professor suggested to CNN's Chris Cuomo that societal reopening must be tied to vaccination status.

She said, "We need to start looking at the choice to remain unvaccinated the same as we look at driving while intoxicated. ... You have the option to not get vaccinated if you want, but then you can't go out in public."

Wen also stressed that mobility rights and other human liberties should be tied to vaccination status.

"There are privileges associated with being an American. That if you wish to have these privileges, you need to get vaccinated. Travel, and having the right to travel in our state, it’s not a constitutional right as far as I know to board a plane," she told CNN on another occasion.

\u201c.@DrLeanaWen: \u201cThere are privileges associated with being an American. That if you wish to have these privileges, you need to get vaccinated. Travel, and having the right to travel in our state, it\u2019s not a constitutional right as far as I know to board a plane."\u201d
— Tom Elliott (@Tom Elliott) 1631292960

In response to Wen's recent op-eds, New York art dealer Eli Klein expressed his surprise that the "Washington Post finally published the truth about natural immunity."

\u201cWow, the Washington Post finally published the truth about natural immunity in a piece by Leana Wen. \n\n\u201c\u2026vaccinated people who never had covid were at least three times as likely to be infected as unvaccinated people with prior infection.\u201d\u201d
— Eli Klein (@Eli Klein) 1671544247

Joel Petlin, superintendent of the Kiryas Joel School District, tweeted, "The media coverage of COVID-19 research on natural immunity has evolved from being banned on Twitter to being embraced by the same *experts* who applauded the original bans. The only thing missing is the apologies and the commitment to not repeat the outrageous past mistakes."

Revolver News suggested that Wen's admissions are "too little too late. Dr. Wen and her ilk conspired with the FBI and Big Tech to suppress these very facts that we needed to make sound decisions about how to respond to a novel pathogen. Their totalitarian streak cost us our freedom of movement, freedom of association, and our bodily autonomy."

Pharma company stock loses billions after fake Twitter account tweets that insulin is free in latest Elon Musk verification debacle



A pharmaceutical company lost billions in stock valuation after a fake Twitter account tweeted that insulin was free in the latest debacle from Elon Musk's acquisition of the social media company.

Eli Lilly and Company has been criticized by many for profiting from high insulin pricing, but the company was forced to release a clarification when the fake tweet resulted in a loss of 5% of its stock value.

Pranksters have taken advantage of the confusion surrounding the changes that Musk has made to verification on Twitter by paying his fee and then impersonating celebrities and companies. In some instances they have made statements damaging to the impersonated before Twitter is able to shut them down.

"We are excited to announce insulin is free now," the tweet from a verified account read on Thursday.

\u201cA fake verified account pretending to be Eli Lilly announced that insulin was now free. So they burned a billionaire and big pharma all in one tweet. Sweet.\u201d
— Prof Zenkus (@Prof Zenkus) 1668128261

The actual account for the company responded soon after.

\u201cWe apologize to those who have been served a misleading message from a fake Lilly account. Our official Twitter account is @LillyPad.\u201d
— Eli Lilly and Company (@Eli Lilly and Company) 1668114541

On Friday, the stock price for the company dropped by more than 5% at one point, costing the company about $20 billion in valuation by some estimates. By the end of trading, the pricing had recovered slightly.

A second fake account posted another message mocking the incident by claiming it had raised the pricing of a diabetes drug to $400. "We can do this whenever we want and there’s nothing you can do about it. Suck it.”

Twitter verification pranks struck other companies, including Nintendo, and celebrities like NBA star LeBron James.

In his first company-wide email on Thursday, Musk warned employees that the company faces "dire" circumstances.

"Without significant subscription revenue, there is a good chance Twitter will not survive the upcoming economic downturn. We need roughly half of our revenue to be subscription," he wrote. "The road ahead is arduous and will require intense work to succeed."

He added that remote work at the company was no longer allowed except in some special cases.

Here's a news report about the incident:

Eli Lilly stock dips after imposter account posts prank on Twitterwww.youtube.com

New Yorker's plea to Democrats goes viral after a woman is raped in front of his art gallery: 'Vote Republican ... We urgently and desperately need change.'



A New York City resident's plea on Twitter to his fellow New Yorkers to vote Republican went viral over a horrible crime that occurred in front of his business.

Eli Klein tweeted about the incident Thursday after a woman told police she had been attacked and raped while jogging in the morning.

"A woman was raped, beaten and robbed across the street from my NYC art gallery this morning. She was just jogging when she was attacked by a stranger from behind," he tweeted.

\u201cA woman was raped, beaten and robbed across the street from my NYC art gallery this morning. She was just jogging when she was attacked by a stranger from behind.\n\nPlease, my fellow New York Democrats, vote Republican, at least this once. We urgently and desperately need change.\u201d
— Eli Klein (@Eli Klein) 1667486007

"Please, my fellow New York Democrats, vote Republican, at least this once. We urgently and desperately need change," he added.

The tweet garnered 9.5k likes.

Klein was apparently referring to a 43-year-old woman who told the New York Police Department she had been raped during an attack at about 5:30 a.m. Police said he raped her, stole her phone and wallet, and fled the scene on a bicycle.

The police later announced they had arrested a 29-year-old suspect.

"Police have arrested a homeless man named Carl Phanor in connection with this brutal rape. Phanor is also suspected of choking, robbing & sexually assaulting two other women in NYC back in March & October. Phanor had been arrested 18 times, so should not have been on the streets," Klein said in a second tweet.

Police said that the 48-year-old victim in the October incident had been able to fight her attacker off before she was raped. They also confirmed that his last known address was a homeless shelter and that he had been arrested 18 times prior to the latest accusations.

Gabrielle Sumkin told WCBS-TV that she was the jogger that called the police after encountering the victim soon after the assault. She said she didn't know the victim had been raped until news reports later.

"It's disgusting. I'm a staunch feminist. I support women," she told WCBS. "People who commit crimes like that are at the absolute bottom of my list."

Voters say that crime is one of the issues most concerning to them for the midterm elections. New York state residents are also voting for governor in an election between the incumbent Gov. Kathy Hochul, a Democrat, and Rep. Lee Zeldin, a state legislator and Republican.

Here's more about the horrible assault:

Jogger raped and robbed at Hudson River Parkwww.youtube.com

'Trans women are biological women': Eli Erlick posts a litany of laughably preposterous claims about transgender women



Eli Erlick, an individual who identifies as "Extremely queer & incredibly trans," has posted a series of absurd statements on social media claiming that transgender women are actually women.

"Trans women are natural women. Trans women are normal woman. Trans women are biological women. Trans women are born women. Trans women are women," Erlick tweeted. "The only inherent difference between trans women and cis women is that trans women were assigned male by a doctor. Trans is an adjective that describes that assignment," Erlick added in another tweet.

\u201cThe only inherent difference between trans women and cis women is that trans women were assigned male by a doctor. Trans is an adjective that describes that assignment.\u201d
— Eli Erlick (@Eli Erlick) 1660846714

Despite Erlick's emphatic declarations to the contrary, transgender women are actually just biological men masquerading as women.

"I've been openly trans since age 8. I was constantly told transition was impossible but still expressed myself. There was no other way forward. Nearly 2 decades later, I'm proud of who I am. I wouldn't be here w/o transitioning as a kid. Trans youth deserve our unwavering support," Erlick has tweeted. "Trans education matters. I didn't know transition was possible when I first came out as trans in 3rd grade. I didn't know that there were other people out there like me. I didn't even know queer people existed! I just knew that I was a girl and I wanted to be respected as one," Erlick wrote in another recent tweet.

Erlick has previously admitted to involvement in a scheme to distribute prescription hormones to people.

"There are over 20 states trying to criminalize hormone therapy, particularly for trans youth. So, my friends and I had an idea: sending out our extra prescriptions around the country. If you need hormones, I'm working with a distribution network to get you access. Everything is free, no questions asked. We have hundreds of doses of testosterone, estradiol, and spironolactone available right now. All are prescribed by doctors and unused. Each package comes with information on dosage, obtaining bloodwork, etc," Erlick wrote in an Instagram post that has apparently been deleted.

"I realize this is only a band-aid solution: we need full access to affirmative medical care from professionals immediately. However, missing a single dose of hormones can be devastating (especially for trans teens and those new to hormones)! These laws are outrageous and I can't wait for them to be overturned. In the meantime, DM me if you need HRT or if you have overprescribed hormones you'd like to send out," Erlick's post read.

\u201c*lifesaving medicine to young people that need it\u201d
— Eli Erlick (@Eli Erlick) 1659733140

Top infectious diseases expert says double masking may actually increase COVID infection: 'May do more harm'



Michael Osterholm, an infectious disease expert, said Sunday that wearing two face masks as a precautionary measure against the coronavirus may actually increase the chances of becoming infected.

What's the background?

As public health experts fear the spread of potentially more contagious COVID-19 variants, Dr. Anthony Fauci endorsed last week the practice of "double masking" — wearing a cloth face covering over a surgical face mask.

Speaking on NBC's "Today" show last week, Fauci called double masking "common sense."

"If you have a physical covering with one layer, you put another layer on, it just makes common sense that it likely would be more effective and that's the reason why you see people either double masking or doing a version of an N-95," Fauci said.

But what is Osterholm saying?

Osterholm, who served on President Joe Biden's COVID-19 Advisory Board during the presidential transition, explained on NBC's "Meet The Press" that double masking could enhance infection.

"When we talk about double masking, remember what we're really talking about is just trying to prevent the virus from being excreted by me into the air or me inhaling the virus from someone else in the air, and it's both a function of face fit and face filtration," Osterholm said.

Osterholm, who is the director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota, used swimming goggles as an analogy to explain the downside to double masking.

"Think about your swim goggles. When's the last time anybody leaked at the lenses? They leak at the fit," Osterholm began.

"So, what we're concerned about is that many of these face cloth coverings do have already compromised fit or filtration capacity," he continued. "If you add on another mask, you may actually make it tougher for the air to move through the two cloth area, and then at that point, it causes more air to actually leak around the sides, which actually enhances your ability to get infected."

In fact, Osterholm claimed that double masking may do "more harm" than good.

I'm not saying that some couldn't be used in a better way. But at the same time, there are many that actually, you may do more harm. Let me just say right now one thing that's really, to me, very important is we see up to 25% of people who wear it under their nose. You know, that's like fixing three of the five screen doors in your submarine. You know, what's going on there? We've got to get people to start using these right. That would help right there tremendously.

Full Osterholm: 'We Need To Get As Many One-Doses … As We Possibly Can" | Meet The Press | NBC News www.youtube.com

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has not yet issued guidance about double masking.

Current CDC guidance says that cloth face masks (as opposed to the disposable paper kind) should "have two or more layers of washable, breathable fabric" and should "fit snugly against the sides of your face and don't have gaps."

Meanwhile, Fauci, who is Biden's chief medical adviser, has since backtracked on double masking being "common sense."

"There's no data that indicates that that is going to make a difference," Fauci said of double masking.

Fauci on double masking:“There’s no data that indicates that that is going to make a difference” https://t.co/ptVivQfuwt
— Eli Klein (@Eli Klein)1612128569.0

Time magazine taken to the woodshed after announcing Joe Biden, Kamala Harris as 'Person of the Year'



Time magazine faced a barrage of backlash on Friday morning after announcing that former Vice President Joe Biden and California Sen. Kamala Harris were the recipients of its "Person of the Year" award.

What's a very brief history here?

Time magazine editor-in-chief Edward Felsenthal said that the magazine chose the duo for "changing the American story" with regard to the 2020 presidential election.

The two also showed that the "forces of empathy are greater than the furies of division, for sharing a vision of healing in a grieving world," he said.

Biden responded to the announcement on Twitter, writing, "I'm honored to be Person of the Year with @KamalaHarris and grateful to be on this list with so many extraordinary folks. From front line workers to racial justice organizers, Americans met this year with strength, fortitude, and an unflinching belief in a brighter tomorrow."

I’m honored to be Person of the Year with @KamalaHarris and grateful to be on this list with so many extraordinary… https://t.co/sOCjIqBlpA
— Joe Biden (@Joe Biden)1607701980.0

Harris wrote, "Honored to be named @TIME's Person of the Year with President-elect @JoeBiden.We're at a moment where we're being confronted by multiple crises that have converged. We have a lot we need to handle in the days ahead but I know together we can get it done."

Honored to be named @TIME’s Person of the Year with President-elect @JoeBiden.We’re at a moment where we’re being… https://t.co/gdQwJQ0FeM
— Kamala Harris (@Kamala Harris)1607702296.0

What was the response to the announcement?

Many people responded to the news by decrying the magazine's actions and said that scientists and doctors, or even the Black Lives Matter organization, should have been chosen instead.

Reporter Jenan Moussa wrote, "Odd. Feels like it should have been the healthcare workers and the scientists behind the [COVID-19] vaccine."

ABC News' chief political analyst, Matthew Dowd, added, "I actually don't think winning this Time award is going to help them. It is just going to feed negativity by many that they get an award before actually doing anything."

@lesliesusan2020 @jenanmoussa I actually don’t think winning this Time award is going to help them. It is just goi… https://t.co/oXImPXxjJ1
— Matthew Dowd (@Matthew Dowd)1607681722.0

CNET editorial director Mark Serrels wrote, "Scientists who developed vaccines in record shattering time, frontline workers who risked their lives during COVID, Jacinda Ardern, BLM activists. This is such a ridiculous, US centric choice."

Scientists who developed vaccines in record shattering time, frontline workers who risked their lives during COVID,… https://t.co/7Q8zaHhIyu
— Mark Serrels (@Mark Serrels)1607661471.0

Bloomberg writer Eli Lake wrote, "I get that the magazine is trying to seem hip and appeal to zoomers and millennials, but this is such obvious pandering."

I get that the magazine is trying to seem hip and appeal to zoomers and millennials, but this is such obvious pande… https://t.co/drwj2qxzyM
— Eli Lake (@Eli Lake)1607661078.0

Author and podcast host Graham Allen chimed in, "Person of the year for ushering in the radical left to our country..... so sad."

News anchor Elex Michaelson wrote, "With respect to these politicians, I would have voted for health care workers & other essential workers who've sacrificed greatly to keep us all safe."

With respect to these politicians, I would have voted for health care workers & other essential workers who've sacr… https://t.co/uie844uLxG
— Elex Michaelson (@Elex Michaelson)1607659036.0

Fox News contributor Sara Carter added, "Joe Biden and Kamala Harris named Time Magazine 'Person of the Year.' A complete political move. #Biden didn't come out of his basement all year... we never saw him."

Joe Biden and Kamala Harris named Time Magazine 'Person of the Year'A complete political move. #Biden didn't come… https://t.co/ZGZXANaZs7
— Sara A. Carter (@Sara A. Carter)1607695932.0

NYT data reveals presidential choice by voters' first names. Biden dominates among Karens.



New data shows that Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden has taken a significant lead among women with the nation's most memed name: Karen.

Over the last several months, perhaps no everyday name has been subject to scorn, mockery, and ridicule more than "Karen." It has become the label for white women who are perceived to be entitled and overly demanding, do not understand their alleged privilege, and have disregard for the well-being of others.

If women named "Karen" actually fit the stereotype, it's likely that the liberal media would assume they were supporters of President Donald Trump — and would certainly trumpet the pro-Trump "Karen" vote if it existed.

Interestingly, according to New York Times' compilation of survey data over the last couple of months, of the 20 most common names names in America (top 10 women, top 10 men), Karens are the most likely to support the Democratic nominee: 60% for Biden, 40% for Trump.

Of course, as the Times noted, Karens are real and not a meme.

This is an "age thing," as the Times said. "Karens," the paper reported, "are a cross section of women ages 40 and up. The name entered the top 20 in 1941 and stayed there through 1971."

Laura Wattenberg, the author of “The Baby Name Wizard," told the Times, "If you're losing Karens, you're losing women."

Top 20 names and who they're voting for

Below are the 10 most common women's names and 10 most common men's names and the vote preferences of each based on polls of more than 17,000 voters in 18 battleground states since September, as reported by the New York Times:

  • Richard: Trump 64%; Biden 36%
  • Thomas: Trump 61%; Biden 39%
  • William: Trump 58%; Biden 42%
  • Nancy: Trump 57%; Biden 43%
  • Michael: Trump 56%; Biden 44%
  • Robert: Trump 56%; Biden 44%
  • James: Trump 56%; Biden 44%
  • Jennifer: Trump 56%; Biden 44%
  • John: Trump 53%; Biden 47%
  • David: Trump 51%; Biden 49%
  • Linda: Trump 51%; Biden 49%
  • Joseph: Trump 50%; Biden 50%
  • Christopher: Trump 50%; Biden 50%
  • Mary: Trump 48%; Biden 52%
  • Susan: Trump 48%; Biden 52%
  • Elizabeth: Trump 47%; Biden 53%
  • Patricia: Trump 46%; Biden 54%
  • Lisa: Trump 46%; Biden 54%
  • Barbara: Trump 42%; Biden 58%
  • Karen: Trump 40%; Biden 60%
Karens are backing Biden, 60 percent to 40 percent, per New York Times and Siena College polling.… https://t.co/nkxf3jR9ST
— Eli Yokley (@Eli Yokley)1604322475.0

The Times report also includes a searchable database of 102 names that had at least 30 respondents, as well as a quiz for readers to guess patterns that emerged among the various names.