Interestingly, just a few weeks after Vivek Ramaswamy announced he was running for Governor of Ohio at CTL Aerospace in West Chester, we both found ourselves at the Library of Congress, for different reasons, on the same day. Vivek is all in and doing media interviews every day on the prime-time Fox News shows and other places, and he was at the Library of Congress to celebrate Ohio’s birthday for statehood, which is a pretty interesting story. And that, too, is interesting: since President Trump has returned to the White House, where he was rightfully supposed to be, many of my close friends have suddenly had a lot of business in Washington, D.C. But one of the aspects of all this that I get asked about the most is that when Vivek came to West Chester to make his big announcement, people wondered why Vivek and I seemed to know each other and what was it with that card I showed him when he arrived. The truth is, I didn’t know if he would remember me after all he had been through since the last time I saw him. But he seemed to upon sight once he arrived and met with a small group of people responsible for the event at CTL Aerospace. When it came time for him to greet me, his wife was already speaking with me. I wanted an ice breaker. After all, he has met many people over the last couple of years and spent his time helping campaign for Trump, hanging out at Mar-a-Lago, and creating D.O.G.E. with Elon Musk. So, to start our conversation, I showed him a card he gave me four years ago, which everyone has been asking about. And when he saw it, he laughed. He and his wife instantly knew what it was, and it kicked off a nice conversation about his personal political journey, which started at CTL Aerospace five years earlier.

The card in question was a little promo thing he did for his book Woke Inc, which went on to be a game-changing bestseller, as I thought it would at the time. Vivek was really one of the first in the country to figure out just how dangerous woke politics was, and the great Butler County Auditor Nancy Nix invited me to come to a special launch of his new book at the Middletown Republican Party Headquarters. Vivek was trying out his messaging for a national campaign that would encompass Fox News, specifically Tucker Carlson, so he was trying out his platform to a kind of test showing in his hometown of Butler County, Ohio. But that isn’t where the story started, as Vivek told me the same story he said at the governor’s announcement and why he wanted to return to CTL Aerospace to make his big pitch. A year earlier, from the book launch, where all he had to give out was that card, because the book hadn’t officially come out for another three months at that point, I had set up a rally in support of President Trump. He was in his last year in office and was starting to run again for a second term. And Democrats were entrenched in impeaching him and trying to use the Russian story to knock him off. So I, along with several other prominent Butler County Republicans set up a rally to support Trump during a very dark period, and the rally was at CTL Aerospace which many thought was bold, to politically stick their necks out to show open support for President Trump when everyeone else in the world was running away.

J.D. Vance was still coming off his popular book The Hillbilly Elegy and was getting attention wherever he went, and he already knew Nancy Nix, who of course was coming to the rally I was putting on. And as the story goes, the future Vice President wanted Nancy to introduce a friend of his, Vivek Ramaswamy, to the world of politics because he was stepping away from a CEO job he had been doing at the time and was looking for something new to wrap his brilliant mind into next. So he came to the rally, got a good taste of politics, and saw an anti-woke company that was not afraid to tell the world at the time. Vivek told me a year later that the rally helped him define a virus he and his wife had been considering curing. Not a disease of the body, but one of the mind, wokeness. After that CTL rally, he sat down and refined those ideas into the now famous book, Woke Inc. There were many people in the audience that day at that rally, so I didn’t know Vivek from any other face in the crowd. But a year later, as he explained, he had written his book and was pitching it to a hometown crowd before going nationwide with a more extensive campaign. But my joke to him then was that he was doing a book launch without a book because it wasn’t out yet. But he did bring little cards with the cover printed on it. I sat in the front row, because I love new books, and he gave me one of those cards and signed it. And I looked at it and joked, “Is that it?” Because I wanted an actual book to read, not just a silly little card.

Well, it was a pretty good story, and I kept that card as a bookmark in some of my other books in my library. A year after the Middletown event, I saw Vivek again at a Lincoln Dinner, and we were all in the VIP section as he was scheduled to speak that night. Mike Pompeo was back there too, with a bunch of my personal friends, so it was a festive environment. But I didn’t forget about the joke between Vivek and me, so I brought a copy of his book, Woke Inc, that I had long since read. I got it for him to sign, which he did, and we joked about that card. So now fast forward to three years after that, and Vivek was coming back to CTL Aerospace to make his governor announcement, and I pulled out that card for our greeting, curious as to whether he would remember all those events. I didn’t want it to be weird for him to wonder, after seeing so many faces on his journey of running for President and traveling all over the United States, to see me and wonder how he knew me. So I showed him that card before we even shook hands, and our conversation picked up exactly where it had last resided, and we had a lot of fun with the topic. People watching and seeing all the pictures have been wondering what the story of the card was, how Vivek Ramaswamy stepped into politics to contribute his massive brain to the cause of freedom along the trajectory of the MAGA movement. But I was there initially and played a part in his journey and was happy to see him doing good things with it. You never know who might be in the audience when you host a rally or write articles like these daily. But I have found many Vivek Ramaswamys out there thinking about doing something significant with their lives; sometimes, they need someone to hold the flashlight in the right direction so they can find their way to it. And things cascade from there, so doing things is always important. Vivek will be a great governor in Ohio and, undoubtedly, a great president after that. He will do a lot of great things in the years to come. And it will be because he is good and is willing to do all the hard work. But sometimes great things happen just because of a little card and a story that grows with it. That is the story of the card I have kept and the movement it launched, with the efforts of many people brought together with the common bond of just wanting to do the right thing. I’m very proud of Vivek Ramaswamy; he’s the right guy at the right time for all the right reasons and when you see things like this you can see the hidden hand of God working from behind a veil with a yearning for good things to happen with little miracles that make no sense under any other condition. And I wouldn’t say that anything in this story is a miracle. But what it is only happens when people refuse to bend the knee to darkness, and people so inclined to resist come together under a common cause and change the world, one little card at a time.
Rich Hoffman

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