What may be the oddest take on the 2024 election comes by way of a Dec. 29 WorldNetDaily article by David Brummer:
On a recently released episode of the smash-hit podcast “TRIGGERnometry,” Soviet-born businessman and entrepreneur Dimitry Toukhcher, who has designed and constructed custom-made suits for the likes of Jordan Peterson, claimed he knew U.S. President Joe Biden was going to be replaced in the presidential race, the moment he saw him at his disastrous June debate with President-elect Donald Trump.
Speaking to the show’s two hosts – Francis Foster and Konstantin Kisin – Toukhcher noted with a critical eye how the president and the at-the-time Republican nominee for the role differed in their approach to clothing.
“What I proposed [in a video shot with a colleague] is that Biden will immediately be replaced after the debate,” he explained. “And it looked pre-planned before the debate just based on what Biden was wearing. I made a very cogent argument … and still remember these points.”
“We all see the world through the lens of what we do. A doctor might be looking for signs of dementia, for example. As a haberdasher, I see Biden’s outfit and I go, ‘Oh, they’re gonna replace him.'”
[…]With regard to the ousted Biden, Toukhcher said whoever dressed him was trying to convey a message, although one neither of competence nor hope.
He was wearing a suit a shade darker, which was an “intentional decision,” according to the designer.
“There is no way someone dressing Biden would miss that. But when you’re old and everyone questions your mental capacity, and thinks you’re about to die, what you don’t want to do is wear a black suit. Because what does black psychologically trigger? The idea of a funeral, of death. He was wearing a very dark navy blue suit, and that is not the color you put an 80-year-old guy in, who might have dementia.”
[…]“If I’m dressing an 80-year old guy and people are asking, ‘Hey, is this guy potentially incapable of leading a country,’ I’m giving him a beautiful full Windsor tie, I’m giving him cufflinks to show he is able to eloquently place cuffs into his shirt, and I’m giving a lighter suit. He also wore the wrong shirt collar; you never wear a pointy collar with an oblong face. To me he was designed to fail, which is why I knew they were going to replace him.”
Some of the suits Toukhcher has designed for Peterson include the “unemployed birthday clown” look, and a “heaven and hell” suit that’s half red and half blue. So perhaps he’s not exactly the best judge of such things.