3. Pence Tried To Create His Own State-Run MediaOne of the most heinous parts of living under a Trump administration has been his relentless assault on a free press -- or at least, that small part of the press that speaks up whenever he acts like he's God Emperor of the Doucheclowns. But if they had wanted a bit of a clue as to how media might look under a Putin Trump presidency, they should've looked at Pence's time as governor.
Pence, it turns out, has a bit of a history of censorship. When some of his constituents commenting on his public Facebook page noticed their comments had disappeared, it was revealed that Pence's staff was going through and deleting comments in a targeted fashion. If they were particularly pro-gay or seemed to come from people they knew were specifically anti-Pence, the staffers had been instructed by Pence (which he freely admitted to) to go ahead and get rid of them. Sure, it's just social media, but that's how a lot of people get their news nowadays, and when you're a politician, that's a clear suppression of folks' First Amendment rights. Yes, even if they hate you.
Not that that makes Pence the world's most boring dictator or anything. No, that coup happened when he tried to create a literal state-run news service. The plan was to come up with a controlled breaking news outlet called JustIN, which sounds like how an angry mom would yell at her son to stop skateboarding. JustIN would have meant that government types would be able to control the news that was coming out of their offices, and independent press agencies would have no more access to political coverage other than repeating what JustIN published. This was quickly mocked as "Pravda on the Plains," which still makes it sound more exciting than Pence's particularly mundane evil. Governor Pence quickly backed off the idea, if for no other reason than he probably remembered that conservatives are supposed to appear to reduce the government meddling into people's affairs. Eye on the tax breaks, Pence. Eye on the tax breaks.
2. But His Emails!It's no secret that Hillary Clinton's emails were one of the issues that dragged her down into the electoral gutter. Democrats flailed wildly to defend her, trotting out a number of politicians who it seems had used private email servers to handle state business in order to show how normal it was for a bunch of old people to not understand internet good. But if the point was to show politicians' digital incompetence, then why didn't they utilize this fun story from the Republican VP candidate?
During the presidential race, Mike Pence sent an email blast titled "Nefarious News!" (which is exactly how we imagine an upset Pence talks), stating that he and his wife Karen were stranded in the Philippines and needed some money. It was quickly uncovered that some really incompetent people ran a substandard phishing attack on Pence's email account and sent a money request to all his contacts. No one believed it, of course, because everybody knows that the Pences only holiday in Gary, Indiana.
So his AOL email (yes, Mike Pence still uses AOL) got hacked by scammers. Big deal. Happens to the best of us, right? Except that, according to every neckbeard on the internet, the best would never use personal email addresses to conduct state business, which is exactly what Pence did. When The Indianapolis Star made a public records request to look into the hacked emails, they were told that some emails were too sensitive to be made public -- i.e. they contained important state business. If that's not ringing any alarm bells to you, it should, especially if you considered "cyber security liability" a reason not to elect a politician into a higher office than he (or she) had ever held.