Examples of Democratic Party leadership

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
well let's just profile it..who/what we think it is..obvi is some jackass somewhere..male..military background (perhaps) it uses a lot of military reference that anyone can get off the web..pics same..of it's 'drops' it usually has one thing it wants to say and everything else is bullshit that most stoners say and pretty much without imagination..'up is down, down is up'. one day we will find out and it would be cool to see how close we were. i also believe it uses time zone to 'predict' and the 'true believers' are too stupid to realize.

simple debunk..pandemic fun.
I think it is just a bullshit scam tbh.

A place to sort all the people who have already fallen for one internet scam gets a lot of shit pushed at them and eventually they have enough data about the mark that they troll them until they become fanatical.

The HBO doc on it is pretty neat though. I saw I think the first 2 and I am thinking that it is just a shell company offshore that is running a troll for the dark money behind Trump's militarized trolls (foreign and domestic). So nothing good will be known about it since the weirdo who owns that q website forum (8chan? I forget), who is an obvious troll, is running his company out of the US.

Im looking forward to the rest of the series. And then I could really care less about that particular cult. Unless it ends up in court, then I will be really interested.
 

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
I think it is just a bullshit scam tbh.

A place to sort all the people who have already fallen for one internet scam gets a lot of shit pushed at them and eventually they have enough data about the mark that they troll them until they become fanatical.

The HBO doc on it is pretty neat though. I saw I think the first 2 and I am thinking that it is just a shell company offshore that is running a troll for the dark money behind Trump's militarized trolls (foreign and domestic). So nothing good will be known about it since the weirdo who owns that q website forum (8chan? I forget), who is an obvious troll, is running his company out of the US.

Im looking forward to the rest of the series. And then I could really care less about that particular cult. Unless it ends up in court, then I will be really interested.
yes, yes, yes..that's what makes this intriguing. there are only 2 in the series so far. this will make the history books and will find it similar to mass hysteria conveyed through social media..how elegant and Inception-wise.. implantation of another person's idea into a target's subconscience even though it starts off on conscience level.

this is 1692 with the Twitter and FB.
 
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schuylaar

Well-Known Member
I think it is just a bullshit scam tbh.

A place to sort all the people who have already fallen for one internet scam gets a lot of shit pushed at them and eventually they have enough data about the mark that they troll them until they become fanatical.

The HBO doc on it is pretty neat though. I saw I think the first 2 and I am thinking that it is just a shell company offshore that is running a troll for the dark money behind Trump's militarized trolls (foreign and domestic). So nothing good will be known about it since the weirdo who owns that q website forum (8chan? I forget), who is an obvious troll, is running his company out of the US.

Im looking forward to the rest of the series. And then I could really care less about that particular cult. Unless it ends up in court, then I will be really interested.
You mention court, is it court per se that interests you or the subject in court? just curious.
 

V256.420

Well-Known Member
i had 3 hard inquiries when trying to buy my car and it went down 70 points which ended up disqualifying me from VW. I literally showed them my score printed prior to 'you said your score was'..it was because of YOU and your HARD INQUIRY YOU STUPID FVCKS!!!:finger:

the poor in this country are vilified and charged extra for the privilege of being poor.

damn bastids!! :finger:
 

HGCC

Well-Known Member
I always thought Jim Watson (8chan guy) was Q or knew where it came from, it really comes across as a long sorta troll that seemed more common 20 years back. Bet it's a couple of guys in their early 50s on an IRC channel or ICQ just cracking up.

Looking back at internet history and what has become the alt right crowd is fascinating.

This dude:
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Opinion | Biden excels at his first news conference. The media embarrass themselves. - The Washington Post

Opinion: Biden excels at his first news conference. The media embarrass themselves.

After weeks of whining, the White House press corps got its first official Biden presidential news conference on Thursday. President Biden used the event to pledge that 200 million covid-19 vaccinations would be administered by the end of his first 100 days, double his original goal. (The administration will reach 100 million shots on Friday, Day 58.) He also announced that a survey showed nearly half of K-12 schools are open full-time for in-person learning. (He expressed confidence it would be more than half by the 100th day, consistent with his goal.) Certainly, that should be near the top of any news coverage.

Asked how “hard” he would work for his policy goals, he responded that “all my focus” so far has been on covid-19 and the economic recovery, but he promised he would get to other issues such as guns, immigration, climate change and voting rights. “I think my Republican colleagues are going to have to determine whether or not we’re going to work together … [or] continue the politics of division,” he said.

On immigration, he made clear that crowded facilities at the southern border are not the result of a policy change from his administration or the fact that migrants see him as a “nice guy.” He pointed out that there was a higher surge under his predecessor last spring, which certainly was not because migrants believed the former president was a “nice” guy. “It happens every single solitary year,” Biden noted. In his lengthy responses to questions on the border, he showed his skill in de-escalating issues. One message came across loud and clear: “We’re building back up the capacity that should have been maintained and built upon that [Donald] Trump dismantled. It’s going to take time.”

One reporter mentioned a 9-year-old she had seen at the border and asked if Biden’s messaging was contributing to the problem. No, he responded, again offering a detailed answer about the problems refugees face in their home countries that create the outflow. Prodded with a question about whether overcrowding was “acceptable,” he responded, “C’mon.” Of course it was unacceptable, he said, listing steps he is taking to find more beds for unaccompanied minors. The repeated questions on the same topic were tiresome and a poor use of precious time.

Try as they might to seem “tough,” the media did not succeed in knocking Biden off message. Biden spoke in great detail and length to show not only his mastery of the issues but also to suck tension and conflict out of the room. He simply would not be lured into accepting a false premise devised by Republicans (i.e., that his nice demeanor prompts parents to send kids thousands of miles under deadly conditions). “I’m going to send him on a thousand-mile journey across a desert and up to the United States because I know Joe Biden is a nice guy and he’ll take care of him? What a desperate act to take," he said. "The circumstances must be horrible.”

On the filibuster, he argued that “It’s being abused in a gigantic way.” He also suggested that the Senate return to the talking filibuster or reform it so it cannot be used to block legislation on “elemental” issues such as voting rights.

He slammed Republican attempts to pass restrictions on voting as “sick” and said they make "Jim Crow look like Jim Eagle.” He made clear that Republican voters he knows find such measures “despicable.” Is the filibuster a relic of the Jim Crow era, one reporter asked? He answered simply: “Yes.”

At another point, Biden said he “planned” to run for a second term, a somewhat meaningless response to a question about his intentions regarding reelection. In response to a mind-numbing question on whether he expected to run against his predecessor, Biden launched into an ode on helping working-class people, called out Republicans’ hypocrisy on debt and denounced GOP tax cuts as mostly benefiting the rich. He seemed delighted to point out that Republicans are out of sync with many of their own voters.

On foreign policy, he gave measured answers on Afghanistan (which he intends to leave) and North Korea (for which he will pursue diplomacy with goal of denuclearization). On China, he made clear we need to invest in U.S. workers and science to compete, repair our alliances and speak out firmly on human rights. He spoke eloquently about the world being in a “battle between the utility of democracies and of autocracies.”

The media did not distinguish themselves. By asking about immigration multiple times and echoing the false narrative that Biden had created a “surge," they showed they were more interested in sound bites than actual news. Their failure to ask about the pandemic, the recession, anti-Asian violence, climate change or even infrastructure (Biden had to bring it up himself) was nothing short of irresponsible. They pleaded for a news conference and then showed themselves to be unserious. They never laid a glove on Biden; they did, however, make the case for why these events are an utter waste of the president’s time.
 

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
Opinion | Biden excels at his first news conference. The media embarrass themselves. - The Washington Post

Opinion: Biden excels at his first news conference. The media embarrass themselves.

After weeks of whining, the White House press corps got its first official Biden presidential news conference on Thursday. President Biden used the event to pledge that 200 million covid-19 vaccinations would be administered by the end of his first 100 days, double his original goal. (The administration will reach 100 million shots on Friday, Day 58.) He also announced that a survey showed nearly half of K-12 schools are open full-time for in-person learning. (He expressed confidence it would be more than half by the 100th day, consistent with his goal.) Certainly, that should be near the top of any news coverage.

Asked how “hard” he would work for his policy goals, he responded that “all my focus” so far has been on covid-19 and the economic recovery, but he promised he would get to other issues such as guns, immigration, climate change and voting rights. “I think my Republican colleagues are going to have to determine whether or not we’re going to work together … [or] continue the politics of division,” he said.

On immigration, he made clear that crowded facilities at the southern border are not the result of a policy change from his administration or the fact that migrants see him as a “nice guy.” He pointed out that there was a higher surge under his predecessor last spring, which certainly was not because migrants believed the former president was a “nice” guy. “It happens every single solitary year,” Biden noted. In his lengthy responses to questions on the border, he showed his skill in de-escalating issues. One message came across loud and clear: “We’re building back up the capacity that should have been maintained and built upon that [Donald] Trump dismantled. It’s going to take time.”

One reporter mentioned a 9-year-old she had seen at the border and asked if Biden’s messaging was contributing to the problem. No, he responded, again offering a detailed answer about the problems refugees face in their home countries that create the outflow. Prodded with a question about whether overcrowding was “acceptable,” he responded, “C’mon.” Of course it was unacceptable, he said, listing steps he is taking to find more beds for unaccompanied minors. The repeated questions on the same topic were tiresome and a poor use of precious time.

Try as they might to seem “tough,” the media did not succeed in knocking Biden off message. Biden spoke in great detail and length to show not only his mastery of the issues but also to suck tension and conflict out of the room. He simply would not be lured into accepting a false premise devised by Republicans (i.e., that his nice demeanor prompts parents to send kids thousands of miles under deadly conditions). “I’m going to send him on a thousand-mile journey across a desert and up to the United States because I know Joe Biden is a nice guy and he’ll take care of him? What a desperate act to take," he said. "The circumstances must be horrible.”

On the filibuster, he argued that “It’s being abused in a gigantic way.” He also suggested that the Senate return to the talking filibuster or reform it so it cannot be used to block legislation on “elemental” issues such as voting rights.

He slammed Republican attempts to pass restrictions on voting as “sick” and said they make "Jim Crow look like Jim Eagle.” He made clear that Republican voters he knows find such measures “despicable.” Is the filibuster a relic of the Jim Crow era, one reporter asked? He answered simply: “Yes.”

At another point, Biden said he “planned” to run for a second term, a somewhat meaningless response to a question about his intentions regarding reelection. In response to a mind-numbing question on whether he expected to run against his predecessor, Biden launched into an ode on helping working-class people, called out Republicans’ hypocrisy on debt and denounced GOP tax cuts as mostly benefiting the rich. He seemed delighted to point out that Republicans are out of sync with many of their own voters.

On foreign policy, he gave measured answers on Afghanistan (which he intends to leave) and North Korea (for which he will pursue diplomacy with goal of denuclearization). On China, he made clear we need to invest in U.S. workers and science to compete, repair our alliances and speak out firmly on human rights. He spoke eloquently about the world being in a “battle between the utility of democracies and of autocracies.”

The media did not distinguish themselves. By asking about immigration multiple times and echoing the false narrative that Biden had created a “surge," they showed they were more interested in sound bites than actual news. Their failure to ask about the pandemic, the recession, anti-Asian violence, climate change or even infrastructure (Biden had to bring it up himself) was nothing short of irresponsible. They pleaded for a news conference and then showed themselves to be unserious. They never laid a glove on Biden; they did, however, make the case for why these events are an utter waste of the president’s time.
Media knocked out in Round 1.

eilish ovation.gif


special embarrassment un-honorable mention goes out to Kristen Welker for being such a question hog that the 46th President of the United States of America had to comment.
 
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schuylaar

Well-Known Member
I always thought Jim Watson (8chan guy) was Q or knew where it came from, it really comes across as a long sorta troll that seemed more common 20 years back. Bet it's a couple of guys in their early 50s on an IRC channel or ICQ just cracking up.

Looking back at internet history and what has become the alt right crowd is fascinating.

This dude:
in the doc his son said he believes it's not his father because if it was he'd brag about not be able to keep the secret.

the alt right crowd is fascinating and there are so many players..it's like we need Pokemon cards for stats etc.

some debunkers have it as 50s/military/close to Teump but much of what is posted is merely anything you can't get from the web..the Mont Blanc pen? it's pics that can be gotten anywhere..80% of what was said was just talking out of your ass stuff and the other 20% completely erroneous 'HRC in custody'. it hasn't posted anything since 12/8/20. it may even be in jail. based on some postings it has a rightie type temperament.

guy in the wheelchair said his blue 'Q' just showed overnight (a gift from Q) and he lives in the Phillipines?
 

HGCC

Well-Known Member
That podcast I linked has some great research into modern fascism and the rise of the alt right. It creeps me out as quite a bit of it originated in places I used to frequent.

We need to buy these angry nerds hookers is what I'm trying to say.
 

printer

Well-Known Member
That podcast I linked has some great research into modern fascism and the rise of the alt right. It creeps me out as quite a bit of it originated in places I used to frequent.

We need to buy these angry nerds hookers is what I'm trying to say.
I would like to see some angry nerd hookers. Well, at least the female type.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
You mention court, is it court per se that interests you or the subject in court? just curious.
Basically accountability. I would enjoy a good congressional hearing on it too.

You can see from Kracken-Karen that once things get into the courts a lot of the smoke and mirrors disappear.

One of the good things that Trump has done is expose how if someone is not sworn in and legally bound to tell the truth is they can flat out lie their asses off consequence free
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
I see Jim Clyburn and the entire black caucus is pretty pissed over the voter suppression laws coming out of the red states, particularly Georgia. Joe owes Clyburn bigly and knows it, African Americans and other minorities now under threat are very powerful within the democratic party. Democrats will have even more barriers to getting elected cause right now with voter suppression, gerrymandering and power of rural states with no populations to speak of, they are at a disadvantage. Add in the domestic disinformation system and the republicans being allied with Russians, fascists and racists terrorists and you have a very bad mix.

I think one way or another they are gonna break or modify the filibuster to get HR-1 and voting rights too. Probably infrastructure as well and that contains rural broadband and perhaps other things to change the information available to rural Americans as well as jobs to troublesome white males. I think they need to do more on media regulation and look at other measures to ensure the integrity of news and stifle disinformation. They should only try to do those things which have popular support and build for 2022, while the republicans tear themselves to pieces and carry Trump's water right to his cell door.

The democrats must get shit done to gain the confidence of the electorate and get re elected, if the republicans win it will be trouble, they are unfit to hold power.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Velshi: Bipartisanship Is A Two-Way Street

During an interview on Fox, the now Senate minority leader Mitch McConnell said, “there has been no effort whatsoever by the president or the administration to do anything in the political center." A bold statement from Mitch McConnell, who would have trouble navigating himself to the center of a Tootsie Pop, let alone the political center. McConnell may be confusing doing things his way with what the word “bipartisanship” means. There is probably a lot more the Biden administration can, will, and should do, but the literal last person to speak about a lack of bipartisanship is Mitch McConnell.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
How do you get the cooperation of a reluctant democratic senator? With goodies for his state and a nice job for his wife, is the traditional way... I figure Manchin is looking for perks and stuff for his state, that's his job, his state is poor, but they do a lot to fuck themselves by voting for republicans.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Biden Nominates Joe Manchin’s Wife to Co-Chair Appalachian Regional Commission (yahoo.com)

Biden Nominates Joe Manchin’s Wife to Co-Chair Appalachian Regional Commission

President Joe Biden on Friday nominated Gayle Conelly Manchin, the wife of Senator Joe Manchin (D., W.Va.) to serve as co-chair of the Appalachian Regional Commission (ARC).

The appointment would see Gayle Manchin, the former president of the West Virginia Board of Education, heading the ARC —an economic development partnership between the federal government and 13 state governments with the aim of investing in Appalachian communities.

The West Virginia senator is a crucial vote for Biden and Democrats to be able to pass legislation through the evenly divided Senate.

Manchin has recently come under pressure from fellow Democrats over his refusal to back changes to the filibuster.

Democrats who are in favor of making changes to the filibuster or eliminating it entirely are stressing the importance of passing the voting-rights bill H.R. 1 to justify the push, and have taken to suggesting that the filibuster is a racist anachronism.
...
 

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
i want my life to count Cunuck and i can still effect change even if it's one by one..hell i'd even run for local council or something civic but you can't..everyone goes through your life to shame you in some way. Stacey Abrams was dogged because of her credit history because you know black people can't handle money. approximately 40% of Americans have Fair to Poor credit. but don't let that fact stop anyone.

facts.

there are a few people in my building that have scooters falling apart and i'm trying to think of a way of getting them new ones donated somehow..i haven't told anyone it's a surprise- i just have to come up with the plan but i know enough people here now to do it.

Medicaid and Medicare doesn't do anything for people who can't walk and gives you $0 toward them.
Epilogue: so I made a few calls and found a case worker from one of the local charities who handles Medicare/Medicaid and there is a program to get scooters repaired and/or replaced; i'm connecting two people in need for this from my building.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Broad, Bipartisan Appeal Of Dems' Voting Rights Ideas Alarms Far-Right Billionaires

Rachel Maddow shares highlights of new reporting from the New Yorker's Jane Mayer that far-right dark money groups are panicked over research that shows election reforms proposed by Democrats are popular across the American political spectrum and, as such, are particularly difficult to demonize.
 

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
I see Jim Clyburn and the entire black caucus is pretty pissed over the voter suppression laws coming out of the red states, particularly Georgia. Joe owes Clyburn bigly and knows it, African Americans and other minorities now under threat are very powerful within the democratic party. Democrats will have even more barriers to getting elected cause right now with voter suppression, gerrymandering and power of rural states with no populations to speak of, they are at a disadvantage. Add in the domestic disinformation system and the republicans being allied with Russians, fascists and racists terrorists and you have a very bad mix.

I think one way or another they are gonna break or modify the filibuster to get HR-1 and voting rights too. Probably infrastructure as well and that contains rural broadband and perhaps other things to change the information available to rural Americans as well as jobs to troublesome white males. I think they need to do more on media regulation and look at other measures to ensure the integrity of news and stifle disinformation. They should only try to do those things which have popular support and build for 2022, while the republicans tear themselves to pieces and carry Trump's water right to his cell door.

The democrats must get shit done to gain the confidence of the electorate and get re elected, if the republicans win it will be trouble, they are unfit to hold power.
God just took care of it..Joe is going to make one BIG Federal law toute de suite.

Fed Trumps State-(get it?):lol: always to the betterment of the citizen.

SOME people with high IQ have 'nothing left to lose' and are here to 'right the wrong':wink:

oh! what a truly unique position we are in!

most politicians are busy ass kissing unless they are no longer going to be politicians.
 
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Fogdog

Well-Known Member
Opinion | Biden excels at his first news conference. The media embarrass themselves. - The Washington Post

Opinion: Biden excels at his first news conference. The media embarrass themselves.

After weeks of whining, the White House press corps got its first official Biden presidential news conference on Thursday. President Biden used the event to pledge that 200 million covid-19 vaccinations would be administered by the end of his first 100 days, double his original goal. (The administration will reach 100 million shots on Friday, Day 58.) He also announced that a survey showed nearly half of K-12 schools are open full-time for in-person learning. (He expressed confidence it would be more than half by the 100th day, consistent with his goal.) Certainly, that should be near the top of any news coverage.

Asked how “hard” he would work for his policy goals, he responded that “all my focus” so far has been on covid-19 and the economic recovery, but he promised he would get to other issues such as guns, immigration, climate change and voting rights. “I think my Republican colleagues are going to have to determine whether or not we’re going to work together … [or] continue the politics of division,” he said.

On immigration, he made clear that crowded facilities at the southern border are not the result of a policy change from his administration or the fact that migrants see him as a “nice guy.” He pointed out that there was a higher surge under his predecessor last spring, which certainly was not because migrants believed the former president was a “nice” guy. “It happens every single solitary year,” Biden noted. In his lengthy responses to questions on the border, he showed his skill in de-escalating issues. One message came across loud and clear: “We’re building back up the capacity that should have been maintained and built upon that [Donald] Trump dismantled. It’s going to take time.”

One reporter mentioned a 9-year-old she had seen at the border and asked if Biden’s messaging was contributing to the problem. No, he responded, again offering a detailed answer about the problems refugees face in their home countries that create the outflow. Prodded with a question about whether overcrowding was “acceptable,” he responded, “C’mon.” Of course it was unacceptable, he said, listing steps he is taking to find more beds for unaccompanied minors. The repeated questions on the same topic were tiresome and a poor use of precious time.

Try as they might to seem “tough,” the media did not succeed in knocking Biden off message. Biden spoke in great detail and length to show not only his mastery of the issues but also to suck tension and conflict out of the room. He simply would not be lured into accepting a false premise devised by Republicans (i.e., that his nice demeanor prompts parents to send kids thousands of miles under deadly conditions). “I’m going to send him on a thousand-mile journey across a desert and up to the United States because I know Joe Biden is a nice guy and he’ll take care of him? What a desperate act to take," he said. "The circumstances must be horrible.”

On the filibuster, he argued that “It’s being abused in a gigantic way.” He also suggested that the Senate return to the talking filibuster or reform it so it cannot be used to block legislation on “elemental” issues such as voting rights.

He slammed Republican attempts to pass restrictions on voting as “sick” and said they make "Jim Crow look like Jim Eagle.” He made clear that Republican voters he knows find such measures “despicable.” Is the filibuster a relic of the Jim Crow era, one reporter asked? He answered simply: “Yes.”

At another point, Biden said he “planned” to run for a second term, a somewhat meaningless response to a question about his intentions regarding reelection. In response to a mind-numbing question on whether he expected to run against his predecessor, Biden launched into an ode on helping working-class people, called out Republicans’ hypocrisy on debt and denounced GOP tax cuts as mostly benefiting the rich. He seemed delighted to point out that Republicans are out of sync with many of their own voters.

On foreign policy, he gave measured answers on Afghanistan (which he intends to leave) and North Korea (for which he will pursue diplomacy with goal of denuclearization). On China, he made clear we need to invest in U.S. workers and science to compete, repair our alliances and speak out firmly on human rights. He spoke eloquently about the world being in a “battle between the utility of democracies and of autocracies.”

The media did not distinguish themselves. By asking about immigration multiple times and echoing the false narrative that Biden had created a “surge," they showed they were more interested in sound bites than actual news. Their failure to ask about the pandemic, the recession, anti-Asian violence, climate change or even infrastructure (Biden had to bring it up himself) was nothing short of irresponsible. They pleaded for a news conference and then showed themselves to be unserious. They never laid a glove on Biden; they did, however, make the case for why these events are an utter waste of the president’s time.
Right wing echo chamber of propaganda are reporting that Biden stayed rational, coherent and on message -- which is evidence the press was soft on him.


Trump says media asked ‘softball’ questions at Biden presser
Former President Donald Trump on Thursday night blasted what he called “softball” questions asked by reporters during President Joe Biden’s first press conference earlier in the day.

Speaking to Fox News host Laura Ingraham, Trump said Biden’s presser was like a “different world” compared to when he faced questions from the Washington press corps.

“It was like softballs, like you’re throwing softballs — and it’s just a different world,” the former president said.

“Nobody’s seen anything like it. It’s very sad to watch actually, they’re feeding him questions, they’re easy questions,” Trump said.


Trump gave nothing specific, he was actually complaining that Biden stayed on message, and wasn't driven into tirades by persistent and repeated questions intended to generate sound bites but Biden didn't bite. What has it been 45 years of Biden dealing with the press? As Biden would say, "cmon".
 
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DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Right wing echo chamber of propaganda are reporting that Biden stayed rational, coherent and on message -- which is evidence the press was soft on him.

logic fail One does not prove the other. What has it been 45 years of dealing with the press? As Biden says, "cmon".
Joe is doing ok and as far as I can tell is firing on all cylinders, his answers to questions were lucid and deeply knowledgeable. He has assembled an A team, is following their advice while leading and getting things done (one of a presidents jobs, especially in a crises). Remember Obama picked him as VP for a reason and he is as clean as he was too, Joe's standard of integrity, professionalism and excellence was the Obama administration and Joe was a big part of creating it. I think Joe and Ron Klein analyzed where Obama went wrong and fully apprehend the immediate danger America is in with the right wing fascists and Putin. He seems to be making all the right moves, the issues on the southern border are more cleaning up after Trump's cruelty and mismanagement, they deliberately left a mess in many cases, in others it was incompetence. Joe appears to have his priorities straight with an eye on 2022 and gains in the senate, the way to do that is to level the playing field and get popular shit done.
 
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