USA 2020 Elections: Thread

grarpamp grarpamp at gmail.com
Mon Mar 13 20:51:39 PDT 2023


The March Madness Of The [Fraudulent] President

https://amgreatness.com/2023/03/12/the-march-madness-of-the-president/

Joe Biden’s political utility and near senility serve as exemptions
for his often sexist, racist, and creepy riffs...

Another couple of weeks, another bout of madness from Joe Biden and his team.

Of recent Biden delusions, consider:

Biden went off in one of his impromptu Corn Pop, or
“beat-up-Trump-behind-the-bleachers” fables. These often slurred and
nearly unintelligible tales characteristically virtue signal Biden’s
own victimhood and “courage.”

They are interspersed with his bizarre propensity for eerie female
contact. So we see or hear of his long record of blowing into the ears
and hair, or squeezing the necks of young girls. He hugs, for far too
long, mature women. He can call out among a crowd an anonymous
attractive teen stranger. Or, recently he relates an incoherent but
quasi-sexual vignette.

So Joe recalled his patient days in his usual off-topic “no lie/not
kidding/no joke” manner (i.e., tip offs that he’s lying). He told us
that a noble nurse once would “come in and do things that I don’t
think you learn in medical school—in nursing school.” The president
got a nervous laugh from the apparent quasi-pornographic reference
(but then again Joe is excused because he is a “feminist”), before he
detailed her technique:

    She’d whisper in my ear.  I didn’t—couldn’t understand her, but
she’d whisper, and she’d lean down. She’d actually breathe on me to
make sure that I was—there was a connection, a human connection.

A woman leaning over to blow into a prone man’s ear certainly
constitutes a “human connection.” Yet all of Joe’s fables have
different Homeric-style retellings. Two years ago he claimed that the
same nurse in question actually blew into his nostrils. What a strange
air-pressure technique that must have entailed for a person recovering
from brain surgery. But perhaps it was consistent with biblical
references to God blowing the spirit of life into the nose of man.

About a week later, referencing that hospital stay, Biden added that
doctors “had to take the top of my head off a couple times, see if I
had a brain”—a reference that did not reassure the nation he is not
enfeebled.

No one in the media had much of a reaction because Joe Biden’s
political utility and near senility serve as exemptions for his often
sexist, racist, and creepy riffs.

Instead, the media wrote off the nurse breathing into good ol’ Joe’s
orifices as belonging to the same weird genre that a while back gave
us inner-city kids stroking the golden hairs on Joe’s tan legs, or the
shower revelations of Ashley Biden’s diary, or his “you ain’t’ black,”
“put y’all back in chains,” and “junkie” sorts of racial condescension
(e.g., “Why the hell would I take a test? C’mon, man. That’s like
saying you, before you got on this program, you take a test where
you’re taking cocaine or not. What do you think? Huh? Are you a
junkie?”).

Joe also blustered to a crowd during Black History Month, “I may be a
white boy, but I’m not stupid.”

The crowd laughed at the idea that the jester Biden believes white
people are usually stupid, but that he, Joe, the exception to his
race, is not stupid, despite being white. At least Biden finally
referenced himself as “boy.” Usually he has used that racial putdown
for prominent blacks like Maryland Governor Wes Moore or a senior
White House advisor Cedric Richmond.

The February-March madness of Joe was not through. Sometimes, his
venom renders him disgustedly comic, as when he took the occasion of
mass American deaths from fentanyl on his watch, to chuckle that the
carnage was at least worse under Trump (an abject lie):

    ‘I should digress, probably. I’ve read, she [Rep. Marjorie Taylor
Greene], she was very specific recently, saying that a mom, a poor
mother who lost two kids to fentanyl, that, that I killed her sons.
Well, the interesting thing is that fentanyl they took came during the
last administration.’ Followed by the Biden laugh.

Apparently, 100,000 dead at least deserves from Joe a “Trump did it” chuckle.

Joe, for the third time in two years, tripped and nearly fell
ascending the ramp of Air Force One. At some point even his supporters
will concede that when octogenarians repeatedly stumble and fall, if
not put under careful watch or provided a walker, it is only a matter
of time until they break a hip and become bedridden.

In another replay, once again Biden finished his remarks, turned
around to exit—and had no idea where he was going to go or whose
invisible hand he was supposed to shake.

Amid all this, Biden more or less stuck to his now tired rhetorical themes.

One is the serial denunciation of the MAGA Republicans. Usually, he
trashes them as semi-fascists or un-American, often in the context of
his “unity speeches.” After calling for reconciliation,
bipartisanship, and unity, Joe then usually tightens his face,
grimaces, and starts yelling about the MAGA dregs and chumps.

If Biden is really angry, he adds the intensive adjective “Ultra” for
the MAGAites. He gets particularly incensed when referencing the one
percent who “don’t pay their fair share” (the one percent pays over 40
percent of all income tax revenues). Biden is oblivious that the
entire Biden clan is under popular suspicion of not reporting all of
the millions of dollars in quid pro quos leveraging they raked in from
foreign governments without registering as their agents.

Note that his entire team, when stung by charges of incompetency or
illegality, usually follows Joe’s tactic of “Trump did it.” So when
Pete Buttigieg was criticized for ignoring the East Palestine rail
wreck and reminded of his past serial transportation failures,
junkets, and incoherent systemic racism charges, he retreated to
blaming Trump for the derailment.

Buttigieg falsely claimed that Trump’s past lifting of particular
electric railcar brake regulations caused the wheel bearing failure in
East Palestine, a lie that even members of his department could not
stomach.

Two, Joe creates elaborate fables. In the past two weeks, he returned
to his civil rights lie that he was a campus activist agitating for
racial justice. At least he did not add his usual fillips of being
arrested or standing up to apartheid police in South Africa.

In Biden’s world, he brags he has reduced inflation. Yet when he
entered office in January 2021, the annualized inflation rate was 1.7
percent. Two years later in January 2023 inflation went up to 6.4
percent, after hitting a high in June 2022 of 9.1 percent—6.4
percentage points higher than when he took office. In mid-March we
will learn of the February 2023 annualized rate, but it is expected to
climb back to more than 8 percent.

If anyone compares the current price of eggs, or rent, or diesel fuel,
or a natural gas heating bill or building materials to their
respective costs when Biden entered office, then he would know Biden’s
inflation is cumulative and has nearly destroyed the affordability of
shelter, food, and fuel—the stuff of life.

He mentioned lowering heating and cooling costs of American homes
through his climate change advocacy. In truth, on average electric
rates shot up over 10 percent last year. Natural gas and fuel went
even higher to over 25 percent in a single year.

Biden talks about his low unemployment rate of 3.4 percent. But it is
almost identical to what the Trump Administration achieved—without
Biden’s high interest rates and acute inflation—in the months before
the massive COVID lockdowns.

Moreover, current low employment is largely a reflection of reduced
labor participation—due to early retirements, exits during the
pandemic, fear of COVID, long COVID, the zoom culture, and most
importantly the Biden continuance of massive COVID-era subsidies that
discourage employment. The labor participation rate has hit near
historic lows under Biden, lower than the pre-COVID rate under Trump.

It was not until last month that the Biden economy finally achieved
the level of total employed Americans who had been working in January
2020 on the eve of the Covid lockdowns.

As far as interest rates for 30-year fixed mortgages, they were 2.9
percent when Biden took office. Now they are currently over 7 percent.

In sum, Biden repeats the same patterns of deception: crash the
economy as evidenced by many of its major indicators, then when a data
point reveals a slight and likely temporary monthly recovery, he brags
he “reduced” inflation, interest, or unemployment.

We also heard during the same week from Biden Attorney General Merrick
Garland who was shredded during his testimony to the Senate. He argued
that the vastly disproportionate FBI response to violence against
abortion centers versus attacks on pro-life groups was only due to the
differences between light and dark—literally: abortion centers are
attacked during daytime; in contrast, pro-life shelters are attacked
during night.

Apparently his Justice Department and the FBI shut down at sunset and
reawaken at dawn—as if either most violent crime does not occur at
night or there is nothing to be done about it when it does.

Garland further embarrassed himself when he could not explain the
disproportionate use of force in arresting or detaining conservative
suspects versus the virtual exemptions given prominent left-wing
suspects.

Most embarrassingly, when asked why he did not charge mobs that
swarmed the homes of conservative Supreme Court justices to influence
their decisions—a federal felony—he lamely claimed there were federals
protecting the residences.

In Garland’s world, some criminals committing felonies are completely
exempt if law enforcement prevents further violent manifestations of
their criminal behavior. So illegally swarm a Supreme Court justice’s
residence to influence a court decision, but then stop short of
escalating further by the sight of law enforcement—and, presto, you
never committed a crime in the first place.

Garland finished off his recent nonsense by repeating the lie that
five police officers were killed due to the January 6 protests. In
fact, none were. Officer Brian Sicknick died of natural causes after
the protests were over. The other four committed suicide weeks or even
months later and no one has connected their self-induced deaths with
any act of the protestors.

About the same time, a beleaguered Pete Buttigieg went off on riffs
about Tucker Carlson, who, he implied, lacked the grassroots,
working-man fides of Buttigieg.

He claimed that for all the criticism he has endured, he believes that
he will be remembered for posterity for his fight against “climate
change”—although he did not point to any concrete result in reducing
carbon emissions due to his singular policies.

In fact, Buttigieg will be known but for other characteristics: He
repeatedly emphasizes his identity politics gay stature both to note
his supposedly pathbreaking courage and to claim victimhood when
attacked. He sees transportation through the lens of race and so
chases the unicorn of white privilege, whether concerning past freeway
routes or the makeup of current construction crews (falsely charging
that white men are overrepresented on them). Under his tenure as
Transportation Secretary, the country experienced dangerous supply
interruptions, ossified ports, and harbor-bound trains robbed in Wild
West fashion.

Buttigieg’s diversity mandates either did nothing to ameliorate, or
actually led to, a series of near-miss airline crashes, the complete
shutdown of the airline industry due to computer glitches and weather,
the implosion for a week of Southwest Airlines, the East Palestine
derailment disaster, and labor interruptions. In all these cases he
either was on leave or a junket, wrote them off as Trump’s fault, or
contextualized them as no big deal.

Delusional Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Majorkas has declared
the border closed and the nation secure, even as 100,000 Americans per
year have died from overdoses of fentanyl shipped with impunity across
the open border by Mexican cartels. When upwards of 7 million aliens
flow across the border illegally since Biden took office, it is
written off as Trump’s fault.

Finally, last week there were several interviews with FBI Director
Christopher Wray. He could not explain why his agency goes full
military mode to arrest a father and husband for protesting at an
abortion clinic while having no clue who has been attacking pro-life
shelters.

In Wray’s mind, the performance art sweep into Mar-a-Lago, which he
claims was not a “raid,” was no different from having Biden’s lawyers
quietly conduct their own “investigations” of Biden’s improper removal
of classified documents (improper with an asterisk, since no vice
president has the president’s legal authority to declassify whatever
he wishes).

Wray could not explain why the FBI sat on the Biden trove until the
midterm election was over and then only acted to further search Biden
residences when its own asymmetrical protocols came under fire.

Add up the last few weeks, and we learned that Christopher Wray’s FBI
is doing splendidly in its even enforcement of the law. Merrick
Garland’s Justice Department is absolutely disinterested and treats
all sides equally. Alejandro Mayorkas has closed the border and we are
now “secure.” Pete Buttigieg is building a legacy for the ages as a
climate change crusader.

And an eloquent and dynamic Joe Biden has compiled an impressive
legislative record on his way to a great presidency—with the energy,
we are told by Dr. Jill Biden, that is more impressive than any
30-year-old’s.


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