Last Updated on October 12, 2021
Failed Democrat Senate candidate Beto O’Rourke made some strange comments this week about being willing to “take it all day long” if people “want to debate, or argue, or fight, or f**k with me on politics.” Rourke did not elaborate on the profane segment of that statement.
“If you want to debate, or argue, or fight, or f**k with me on politics I’ll take it all day long,” O’Rourke proudly announced. The undated video, posted to Twitter by what appeared by be an unofficial O’Rourke fan account on Tuesday, did not receive a positive reception was subjected to widespread mockery.
BREAKING NEWS: Beto will take it all day long. pic.twitter.com/u2cSwFf9Pb
— Gray Hoodie (@grayhoodie) October 12, 2021
If you want to, Beto will take it all day long. pic.twitter.com/Lc68b3kGTn
— Gray Hoodie (@grayhoodie) October 12, 2021
https://twitter.com/THCfarmersWife/status/1447973609885032453
https://twitter.com/CML_Texas/status/1447973508894662662
https://twitter.com/BCinKW/status/1447973693829877762
O’Rourke is perhaps best known for losing a Senate race against Ted Cruz (R-TX), despite massive out-of-state funding and an unprecedented level of fawning coverage from the corporate media.
As National File previously reported, O’Rourke’s high school yearbook did not refer to him as “Beto,” but by his real name:
National File reporter Patrick Howley obtained a copy of Robert Francis “Beto” O’Rourke’s prep school yearbook and discovered no mention of the name “Beto.”
Robert Francis O’Rourke was identified by his given name, not by his invented Latino-sounding nickname, in his yearbook at the expensive Woodberry Forrest prep school in Virginia.
O’Rourke’s yearbook poem identifying himself as “the angry son” is characteristic of his other youthful writings, including an extended murder fantasy in which he inhabited the character of a serial killer. In that fantasy, he imagined killing “nearly 38 people” by his 23rd birthday — an oddly specific number.