There’s a new report out from the New York Times about Joe Biden based upon talking with two dozen current and former Biden associates regarding Biden’s demeanor.
The report describes Biden as having “scolded his aides in profanity-laced episodes.” The interviews paint Biden as having “a short fuse.” It also says he needs “hours of debate” and that it “takes days or weeks to make up his mind as he examines and second-guesses himself and others” before he’s able to come to decisions.
Let's be honest here folks, things have not gone will for Joe Biden so far. While the media does what they can to protect him, the current conditions of the country and the world is in a freefall. We have seen unexpectedly bad economic news, the border is in crisis, we have seen turmoil in the Middle East for the first time in years, we have seen gas shortages, a rise in inflation, and very little in the idea that Joe Biden would bring anyone "together".
That being said, does this NYT story show that even the media is losing patience with slow Joe? Are we going to see more hit pieces coming around shortly?
Either way, things pretty much suck right now...
But apparently, none of that really matters because Joe Biden doesn't write mean tweets.
109 comments:
It also says he needs “hours of debate” and that it “takes days or weeks to make up his mind as he examines and second-guesses himself and others” before he’s able to come to decisions.
THIS, from the man who opposed the killing of Bin Laden.
LOL.
Never forget.:
https://pbs.twimg.com/profile_images/1352448258790944768/o7LnNm8h_400x400.jpg
I'll tell you what, Ch/Scottie, since you are so objectively honest, I am sure you will be willing to quote a few actual paragraphs from this NYT article so that we can judge for ourselves how terrible it makes Biden look.
That 80 + year old man is hideous.
I posted it yesterday.
Jamie, why did your Economic team miss the spike in inflation?
The have admitted they did.
"I posted it yesterday."
In which thread and at what time?
Retail Sales growth
0.00%
The difference between the two is evidence that the is much more qualified than the former, because he demands to hear all sides of his personal advisors and intelligence agencies and the Department of Justice, before he acts.
Instead of refusing to read the daily intelligence briefings and tweets to post about foreign policy in 125 words diatribes.
This is another example of your lack of objectivity.
Trump used the same words, but because the MSM reported it, you said it was fake news
I'm not sure which one
I didn't post the link
JamesNewLeaf said...
I'll tell you what, Ch/Scottie, since you are so objectively honest, I am sure you will be willing to quote a few actual paragraphs from this NYT article so that we can judge for ourselves how terrible it makes Biden look.
Roger Amick said...
I posted it yesterday.
JamesNewLeaf said...
In which thread and at what time?
I looked and couldn't find it.
So now maybe Ch will do us the honor of actually quoting a few longer sections of it.
Then we can judge for ourselves how terrible it makes Biden look.
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/05/14/us/politics/joe-biden-policy-decisions.html
"The White House admitted Friday they were surprised by the rise in consumer prices in March, the largest jump since 2008.
“So we hadn’t forecasted that. The forecasters hadn’t expected that,” White House Chair of the Council of Economic Advisers Cecilia Rouse said, adding the Federal Reserve was also “a bit surprised by the jump.”
The Neo-Socialist Biden Party All-star Economic team
The fake media account said that he swears
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/05/14/us/politics/joe-biden-policy-decisions.html
The difference between the two is evidence that the is much more qualified than the former,
The difference is between peace in the middle east and war
The difference is between control at the border and chaos
The difference is between energy independence and gas shortages
etc... etc... etc...
10:59, 11:03
I would love to read that, but the NYT will not let me because I have used up the number of free views allowed.
But I'm sure someone will quote extensively from the article so we can all see how terrible a President Joe Biden is (according to Scottie/Ch and RedState and other foaming at the mouth sources.)
Where is that extensive quoting, Ch? Don't weasel out of this.
Mr. Biden is gripped by a sense of urgency that leaves him prone to flares of impatience, according to numerous people who regularly interact with him. The president has said he expects to run for a second term, but aides say he understands the effect on his ability to advance his agenda if Republicans regain power in Congress next year.
He never erupts into fits of rage the way President Donald J. Trump did. And the current president rarely exhibits the smoldering anger or sense of deep disappointment that advisers to Mr. Obama became familiar with. What is wrong with this Scott???
But several people familiar with the president’s decision-making style said Mr. Biden was quick to cut off conversations. Three people who work closely with him said he even occasionally hangs up the phone on someone who he thinks is wasting his time. Most described Mr. Biden as having little patience for advisers who cannot field his many questions.
“You become so hyperprepared,” said Dylan Loewe, a former speechwriter for Mr. Biden. “‘I’ve got to answer every conceivable question he can come up with.’”
11:09 Sounds like a president being presidential.
But Ch will show us where I'm wrong.
WASHINGTON — The commander in chief was taking his time, as usual.
It was late March, and President Biden was under increasing pressure to penalize President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia for election interference and the biggest cyberattack ever on American government and industry. “I have to do it relatively soon,” he said to Jake Sullivan, his national security adviser.
Mr. Biden had already spent the first two months of his presidency debating how to respond to Mr. Putin, and despite his acknowledgment in March that he needed to act quickly, his deliberations were far from over. He convened another meeting in the Situation Room that stretched for two and a half hours, and called yet another session there a week later.
“He has a kind of mantra: ‘You can never give me too much detail,’” Mr. Sullivan said.
Quick decision-making is not Mr. Biden’s style. His reputation as a plain-speaking politician hides a more complicated truth. Before making up his mind, the president demands hours of detail-laden debate from scores of policy experts, taking everyone around him on what some in the West Wing refer to as his Socratic “journey” before arriving at a conclusion.
Those trips are often difficult for his advisers, who are peppered with sometimes obscure questions. Avoiding Mr. Biden’s ire during one of his decision-making seminars means not only going beyond the vague talking points that he will reject, but also steering clear of responses laced with acronyms or too much policy minutiae, which will prompt an outburst of frustration, often laced with profanity.
Let’s talk plain English here, he will often snap.
Interviews with more than two dozen current and former Biden associates provide an early look into how Mr. Biden operates as president — how he deliberates, whom he consults for advice and what drives his decisions as he settles into the office he has chased for more than three decades.
What emerges is a portrait of a president with a short fuse, who is obsessed with getting the details right — sometimes to a fault, including when he angered allies and adversaries alike by repeatedly delaying a decision on whether to allow more refugees into the United States.
On policy issues, Mr. Biden, 78, takes days or weeks to make up his mind as he examines and second-guesses himself and others. It is a method of governing that can feel at odds with the urgency of a country still reeling from a pandemic and an economy struggling to recover. The president is also faced with a slim majority in Congress that could evaporate next year, giving him only months to enact a lasting legacy.
Those closest to him say Mr. Biden is unwilling, or unable, to skip the routine. As a longtime adviser put it: He needs time to process the material so that he feels comfortable selling it to the public. But the approach has its risks, as President Barack Obama found out when his own, sometimes lengthy policy debates led to infighting and extended lobbying, and made his White House feel process driven.
Thecoldheartedtruth not the fake coldheartedtruth of the Trump era.
M. Biden could fall victim to the same fate, though he has far more experience governing than Mr. Obama did in 2009. So far, the Biden administration has moved quickly to confront the nation’s challenges even as Mr. Biden’s own deliberations can linger, often prompting calls as late as 10:30 or 11 p.m. as he gets ready for the next morning.
Quick Temper
The president arrives in the Oval Office for a series of scheduled meetings around 9:30 a.m., after exercising and making the short stroll from the residence, often flanked by his German shepherds, Champ and Major.
In March, as the decision loomed to impose sanctions on Russia for its election interference and its SolarWinds cyberattack, Mr. Biden was true to form, repeatedly insisting on hearing directly from his experts
At one point, Mr. Biden lectured a group of veteran Foreign Service officers and policy advisers on the nuances of Mr. Putin’s personality and tried to channel the Russian leader’s thinking. His conclusion: Mr. Putin wants his rivals to be blunt with him.
In the end, Mr. Biden called Mr. Putin directly and then delivered a public statement on Russia sanctions that lasted only five minutes and 49 seconds. For as much as Mr. Biden projects an aura of ease — with his frequent backslapping, references to Irish poetry and liberal use of the phrase “c’mon, man” — his aides say it takes a lot of behind-the-scenes work to prepare him to project an assured demeanor.
Mr. Biden is gripped by a sense of urgency that leaves him prone to flares of impatience, according to numerous people who regularly interact with him. The president has said he expects to run for a second term, but aides say he understands the effect on his ability to advance his agenda if Republicans regain power in Congress next year.
He never erupts into fits of rage the way President Donald J. Trump did. And the current president rarely exhibits the smoldering anger or sense of deep disappointment that advisers to Mr. Obama became familiar with.
Scott won't publish the real world news
Wow! What a great President!
Give us more! Give us more!
Mismanagement on a spectacular scale.
"Oregon Gov. Kate Brown and California Gov. Gavin Newsom, both Democrats, have declared drought emergencies"
It is their man made failures.
Scottie/Ch, where are all those terrible things in the article?
Please quote at length.
This is why he is the most qualified President of the modern era.
Like most of us baby boomers have seen the largest world change in history. From AM radio stations in South Dakota carried country western music until Amazon prime time music and again the right wing nutcase websites Scott depends upon for his thoughts.
‘I Want the Details’
As a senator for 36 years and as vice president for eight years, Mr. Biden has assembled a tight circle of friends, family and advisers from which he draws personal support and counsel.
In addition to his wife, Jill Biden, their grandchildren — described as the center of the first couple’s world — are often at the White House, spending long weekends or parts of their week there. They have been known to show their grandfather apps like TikTok. One adviser said he had sent the grandchildren money using Venmo.
The president’s evenings include regular calls with his grandchildren, who serve as his lifeline to popular culture and consumer technology. If one of them does not pick up, Mr. Biden — whom they call “Pop” — leaves a voice mail message.
“If you get a chance, call me,” Mr. Biden said in a message that his granddaughter Naomi Biden, 27, posted online during the 2020 presidential campaign.
For political advice and policy direction, he turns to the group one White House aide called the “Biden historians” — Ron Klain, the chief of staff and longtime aide; Bruce Reed, a top policy adviser who sometimes ran his vice president’s office; Mike Donilon, his political counselor and alter-ego; and Steve Ricchetti, his legislative guru and longtime friend.
Outside of that core group, Mr. Biden draws on a sprawling constellation of the administration’s in-house experts, including, among others, Ms. Rice and Brian Deese, the director of the National Economic Council.
On a Zoom call on a Sunday in December, Mr. Biden, then president-elect, asked for a debate about the wisdom of deploying active-duty troops to battle the pandemic. He had long said his aides should consider themselves on a wartime footing against the virus. But exactly what did that mean?
MORE, ok, Biden Is at 4.2% inflation
"U.S. inflation rate for 2019 was 1.81%, a 0.63% decline from 2018.U.S.
inflation rate for 2018 was 2.44%, a 0.31% increase from 2017.U.S.
inflation rate for 2017 was 2.13%, a 0.87% increase from 2016"
What a likeable, principled, inquiring and determined fellow our President is! More!
May, 4th, 2021
"U.S. Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said on Tuesday she sees no inflation problem brewing"
Oh oh.
Ch/Scottie, your thread hit piece is not holding up very well against the actual article, is it?
(Rhetorical question. It's not holding up at all!)
MORE, ok.
Biden jacks up Student Loan rates by 1%.
Got anything you'd like to quote from the article, Ch/Scottie?
We'd LOVE to see it!
He grilled his newly appointed coronavirus task force adviser, Jeffrey D. Zients, with questions: How would Americans react to active-duty personnel being deployed onto the streets? Had anything like it been done before? How big was the scale of the effort, and how fast could it be scaled up?
Mr. Biden did not want to be spared any incremental detail. After the president took office, his defense secretary deployed 1,100 troops in five teams of nurses, vaccinators and other medical staff. He eventually deployed 4,000 more.
On Jan. 21, Mr. Biden’s first full day in office, he met with his coronavirus team again, including Dr. Anthony S. Fauci and Dr. Rochelle P. Walensky, in the State Room, where the group presented him with what it called the “comprehensive plan.”
Over time, the president’s staff has learned the routine. They have padded his schedule with 15-minute breaks because they know he will not finish on time. He is allowed 30 minutes for lunch — a rotation of salad, soup and sandwiches — and because of the pandemic, rarely eats with people other than Vice President Kamala Harris, with whom he has a weekly lunch.
One item not on the daily agenda?
Watching hours of cable news. The television that Mr. Trump installed in the dining room next to the Oval Office is still there, but aides say it is rarely on during the day.
The Loyalists
Mr. Biden is usually back in the residence by 7 p.m. for dinner with the first lady. The president likes pasta with red sauce, while the first lady prefers grilled chicken or fish.
Christopher Freeman, a caterer who worked for them as much as three times a week when the Bidens lived in the vice president’s residence, said that Mr. Biden “eschews alcohol,” but that Dr. Biden was “an oenophile of the first degree.”
WHAT! BIDEN READS HIS BRIEFINGS AND DISCUSSES AND DEBATES POLICY MATTERS IN DETAIL WITH HIS ADVISORS -- BUT DOES NOT WATCH FOX NEWS?
HOW CAN HE BE SO UNINFORMED!!!!
And his wife is an oenophile?
HAVE HER ARRESTED!
Oh wait. Cancel that.
It just means she's a connoisseur of wines.
Thanks, Roger, for giving us so much of the article.
For the life of me, I just can't figure out WHY Ch/Scottie wasn't more forthcoming!
Hey POS "pastor" james
I just saw and responded to your petty ignorant postings over on the previous thread.
I see you are continuing over here.
What a "pastor" you are.
I'm sure your god GODdard is really proud of you.
ROFLMFAO !!!
This is the last section Scott Scott blocked.
. Klain has the most regular contact with the president, with a standing daily Oval Office meeting and a mandate to keep Mr. Biden’s agenda moving forward. He has been a constant in the president’s meetings with his coronavirus team as he maps out the administration’s operational response. He is also the lone Twitter obsessive in Mr. Biden’s inner circle, amplifying reporters when he agrees with them, and questioning them when he does not.
Mr. Reed weighs in sporadically with treatises on the issues he believes voters most care about — his ideas, aides say, shape the arc of Mr. Biden’s most important speeches.
And Mr. Ricchetti, who led Mr. Biden’s 2020 presidential campaign and has deep connections to Capitol Hill, is the designated optimist in the group. He is the president’s golfing buddy and the person most often described as a genuine “F.O.P.,” or friend of the president. Last month in Wilmington, Del., Mr. Biden’s first round of golf as president was with Mr. Ricchetti and the father-in-law to Mr. Biden’s son Beau Biden.
Mr. Ricchetti is also in charge of helping the president sort out another consequential decision: which of his allies will receive ambassadorships that are crucial to preserving the interests of the United States. Initially, the White House said that Mr. Biden would be making his first round of decisions in mid-April.
The president is already well past that deadline. On May 4, Ms. Psaki told reporters that the president would be evaluating nominees “soon.” Asked to define “soon” — Days? Months? Weeks? — Ms. Psaki said out loud what many of the president’s aides were no doubt thinking.
“Well,” she said, “I think it depends on when the president makes some decisions.”
-----
I'm sure his staff finds it difficult because he takes time to make decisions that put others at risk of their lives.
Trump thought casualties were losers and suckers.
But Scott doesn't care about anyone else but himself.
Jerry Dunleavy
https://twitter.com/JerryDunleavy/status/1393381037003218957
NEW: After initially classifying the 2017 shooting at a GOP congressional baseball practice as “suicide by cop” ... the FBI finally admitted in the appendix on page 35 of a new 40-page report it was “domestic terrorism” by a “domestic violent extremist.”
Jesse Kelly
https://twitter.com/JesseKellyDC/status/1392956779651346447
The FBI, CIA, CDC, EPA and virtually every other federal agency are now arms of the Democratic Party.
Any Republican running for president who doesn’t think this is one of the main threats to our nation is disqualified.
as is the MSM and big tech
Robby Starbuck
https://twitter.com/robbystarbuck/status/1393428451332349954
Last night @Timcast brought up Evan McMullin & his fellow RINO’s latest stunt to get attention by saying they’ll leave the Republican Party if we don’t reform to their liking. My response? Is that supposed to be a threat of some kind? The tumor excised itself? It’s a miracle!
Miracles DO HAPPEN !!!
Well, have we now gotten through ALL of the article?
Thief wants to distract us from it, but if there's more, I'm sure the more intelligent of our readers would want to see it.
Breanna Morello 🇺🇸
https://twitter.com/breannamorello/status/1393163176968171525
Joe Biden provided Palestinian with $235 million which is now being used to attack Israel.
Jewish Americans need to realize they’re being played.
The Democratic Party is not an ally.
They are funding the enemy.
C'mon man, they're probably also good guys, guys
And if Joe would allow Israel to buy more defense missiles it would just be a waste of the $235 million
Thief is really desperate, isn't he?
Any more to the article, Roget? Or was that all of it?
Jack Posobiec
https://mobile.twitter.com/JackPosobiec/status/1393540008708038661
Joe Biden cancels Donald Trump's planned 'Garden of Heroes' featuring statutes of Whitney Houston, RBG, Kobe Bryant and Billy Graham
Joe obviously doesn't have any of their records to play on his phonograph
And those aren't his heroes anyway.
They are Americans
Maybe Thief would like to try to prove Ch/Scottie correct by quoting extensively from the article that Ch/Scittie claimed made Biden look so terrible.
Just noticed the "pastor" when I finished my spam blast like he so regularly does
ROFLMFAO !!!
But I see he must have missed this
Hey POS "pastor" james
I just saw and responded to your petty ignorant postings over on the previous thread.
I see you are continuing over here.
What a "pastor" you are.
I'm sure your god GODdard is really proud of you.
ROFLMFAO !!!
no mask and no lockdowns are great !!!
for those of us not stuck in a room
with a tv
and wifi
and no "pastor"
JamesNewLeaf said...
Maybe Thief would like to try to prove Ch/Scottie correct by quoting extensively from the article that Ch/Scittie claimed made Biden look so terrible.
nope, you are just a waste of time and I've already wasted the time for a response on the previous thread
Scott you are a pathological liar
While the media does what they can to protect him, the current conditions of the country and the world is in a freefall.
The New York times reported him and because your mind Scott has become crazy you need help.
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/05/14/us/politics/joe-biden-policy-decisions.html
Biden inherited the biggest challenge in the history of the United States and instead of being objective, you attack liberals and other people who like Cheney who is more conservative than you were before Trumpism stage four brain cancer has destroyed your mind.
Hey, Thief. Not a word from or about Goddard on this thread (till you slinked in here).
Want to give us some quotes from that "terrible" article about Biden"?
I didn't post a couple things because it is difficult
If Thief would be so nice as to give us some lengthy quotes from the NYT article, we could judge for ourselves how it makes Biden look.
Breanna Morello 🇺🇸
VIDEO:
https://twitter.com/breannamorello/status/1392943040109715458
It gets easier and easier to spot a Biden voter.
ROFLMFAO !!!
I'll tell you what, Ch/Scottie, since you are so objectively honest, I am sure you will be willing to quote a few actual paragraphs from this NYT article so that we can judge for ourselves how terrible it makes Biden look.
Or you can buy yourself a subscription.
JamesNewLeaf said...
If Thief would be so nice as to give us some lengthy quotes from the NYT article, we could judge for ourselves how it makes Biden look.
Hey idiot, I already answered you and roger posted the entire article
go back and read it yourself
and then go get some gas
Can't fix stupid !!!
Roger just indicated that he didn't post ALL the article.
But since you agree with Ch, you should be able to do what he (for some strange, unknown reason) has not done.
So---I'm sure you'd like to point out to us in lengthy quotes from Roger what Biden does that is so terrible or upsetting.
Mr. Biden could fall victim to the same fate, though he has far more experience governing than Mr. Obama did in 2009. So far, the Biden administration has moved quickly to confront the nation’s challenges even as Mr. Biden’s own deliberations can linger, often prompting calls as late as 10:30 or 11 p.m. as he gets ready for the next morning.
Quick Temper
The president arrives in the Oval Office for a series of scheduled meetings around 9:30 a.m., after exercising and making the short stroll from the residence, often flanked by his German shepherds, Champ and Major.
In March, as the decision loomed to impose sanctions on Russia for its election interference and its SolarWinds cyberattack, Mr. Biden was true to form, repeatedly insisting on hearing directly from his experts.
Here's what THE WEEK says about the NYT article:
Biden reportedly has a 'short fuse'
Even Uncle Joe gets angry sometimes.
President Biden has "a short fuse" at times, especially when aides and advisers are unable to answer his many hyper-detailed questions, current and former associates told The New York Times in a report published Friday.
"It's a description seemingly at odds with the congenial and easygoing persona the American public usually sees."
Driven by a strong "sense of urgency," the president is reportedly susceptible to "flares of impatience," and a tendency to "cut off conversations," per the Times. Occasionally, he's even hung up the phone "on someone who he thinks is wasting his time."
Yet he is also slow to make important decisions, often gathering advice and detail from "scores" of experts before sharing his findings in the self-assured, "plain-speaking" manner he presents publicly.
"He has a kind of mantra: 'You can never give me too much detail,'" National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan told the Times.
It's a difficult minefield to navigate, however; at risk of an "outburst of frustration," those fielding Mr. Biden's questions must go "beyond the vague talking points [the president] will reject" while also avoiding "responses laced with acronyms or too much policy minutiae."
Advisers, aides and speechwriters become "hyperprepared" so as to avoid irritation.
Despite his displeasure when staff lack answers to reportedly "obscure" (but important) questions, the president is also "prone to displays of unexpected warmth." He never launches into Trump-esque "fits of rage" and frequently phones his grandchildren, who he calls "the center" of his world.
==Brigand Kennedy
SO GOOD to have a man like that at the helm of our nation
rather than the megalomaniacal Trump.
At one point, Mr. Biden lectured a group of veteran Foreign Service officers and policy advisers on the nuances of Mr. Putin’s personality and tried to channel the Russian leader’s thinking. His conclusion: Mr. Putin wants his rivals to be blunt with him.
So GOOD.
Jamie Posted
"President Biden has "a short fuse" The Week
CHT Posted
"Short fuse Joe!"
So they agree.
OK
Joe's view
Russia a "Rival"
$1.7 trillion economy
China not a "Rival"
$15.8 trillion economy
Another reason why he's full of shit
The Washington Post reports on
Sleepy Joe Biden has picked199nominees to fill key roles in his administration so far
We are tracking 792 government positions among about 1,200 that require Senate confirmation.
350
positions have no
Biden nominee.
4
picks are awaiting
formal nomination.
147
nominees are being
considered by the Senate.
48
have been confirmed
by the Senate.
Additionally, we have identified 243 appointees so far who are serving in termed positions or who were held over from previous administrations.
Being the President of the United states of America is the most difficult task for anyone.
Trump had a very short temper too, so Scott should agree with us
Reportedly Trump.and Biden have "very short tempers"
Ok, agreed
I think it is completely posted here by the demented older man
In 2014 I overdosed on something I will post on.
I was in a coma for 13 days and the doctors told my wife and family that I had a 20% chance of survival.
After a few months I had completely recovered according to the psychiatrist.
Getting older doesn't mean you are fucking crazy, but experience can change your mind about lots of things
Biden has made decisions years ago that look terrible now, but 39 years of governing is a great deal.
THIS THREAD didn't go well for Ch/Scottie, folks.
He opened up with snarky remarks about a New York Times article concerning Biden, implying that the article shows him in a decidedly negative light, as one how has a "short fuse" and is so slow of mind that he needs "hours of debate" and "takes days or weeks to make up his mind as he examines and seond-guesses himself and others" before he's able to make decisions.
Then Ch implies that in this article we see that "even the media is losing patience with Slow Joe" and we might expect to see "more hit pieces coming around shortly."
___
I tried to find and read the article and when I couldn't, I challenged Ch/Scottie to back up what he said by giving us more detailed portions of what the article actually said.
He did not do that, but when Roger supplied us with the bulk of the article, it became clear that it was not at all the way Ch had mischaracterized it.
IT WAS NOT A "HIT PIECE" AT ALL, BUT MAKES JOE BIDEN LOOK VERY, VERY GOOD INDEED.
Would that all our Presidents could be more like him.
THANK YOU, CH, for offering me such an excellent opportunity to take you apart and show everyone how enormous and extreme your tendency to distort and lie now is.
I really enjoyed pushing you into a corner and showing you up for what you have become.
In that, you did us all a favor. Thanks.
Jamie Posted
"President Biden has "a short fuse" The Week
CHT Posted
"Short fuse Joe!"
So they agree.
OK
LOL
Roger posted in confirmation, Biden has a short fuse.
That is the subject of this thread.
OK, so Biden has a short fuse.
LOL
The article is about far more than the fact that Biden sometimes gets upset and shows it when advisors are not well prepared enough to give him detailed answers to his detailed questions.
That's good.
Keeps them on their toes.
FDR is the Debt King, he is still adding to it today
Others:
Barack Obama $8.59 Trillon
Joe is going to run victory laps around that.
And the goat fucking idiot is the King of Stupid in his home state of Kansas....where he steals water from others to maintain the dust of his fake farm.......BWAAAAAAAAAAA!!!!!!!
Barack Obama $8.59 Trillon
Debt under trump...7.8 trillion in 4 short years.......with a thriving economy that was left to him....Unlike the Busch disaster...!!!!!!! BWAAAAAAPAAAAAA!!!!!
Hey goat fucker....you can and trump can take credit for the first trillion dollar deficit from his pandemic inaction.....Another great first for the GOP and party of losers!!!!!!
Trump. $6.7 Trillion
Shutting down US oil , gas and mining.
Biden and his Economic team.
The Three Neo-Socialist Stooges of CHT wrong on facts.
AND so effeminate emotionally.
Trump. $6.7 Trillion
BWAAAAAAAAAA!!!!!!! Sorry sport.....The balance is just a little light!!!!!!
Apr 13, 2021 · Under former President Donald Trump, the U.S. national debt rose by nearly $7.8 trillion, following the third-largest primary deficit growth out of all U.S. presidents except for George W Bush........
https://marketrealist.com/p/national-debt-under-trump/
The number are different from different sources.
Ok, still, Obama is ahead.
Joe is going to win IF the Dems don't "Go wobbly".
https://www.thebalance.com › u...
US Debt by President: By Dollar and Percentage - The Balance
Donald Trump: As of the end of FY 2020, the debt was $26.9 trillion. Trump added $6.7 trillion"
They call him dementia Joe for nothing.
National DD 214 Day
James, the Washington Post shows that CH is a fucking crazy mothrfucker
Through April 29, his 100th day, Biden has made 78 false or misleading statements, according to a Washington Post Fact Checker analysis of every speech, interview, tweet or public statement made by the president. That compares to 511 such statements in Trump’s first 100 days.
Misleading claims in the first 100 days
22
Remarks
19
Interviews
16
News conference
78 claims
16
Prepared speech
4
Other
Biden
1
Claims in tweets
511 claims
Claims in
tweets
Trump
Remarks
Interviews
Other
127
117
99
168
In compiling the database of Biden’s claims in his first 100 days, The Fact Checker used the same methodology as the Trump database that counted more than 30,000 claims over the course of Trump’s presidency. Any statement that would merit at least Two Pinocchios — essentially “half true” — was included. Any claim that was repeated was also included, though unlike Trump, Biden generally does not repeat his false claims if they have been fact-checked as false.
Biden’s relatively limited number of falsehoods is a function, at least in part, of the fact that his public appearances consist mostly of prepared texts vetted by his staff. He devotes little time to social media, in contrast to his Twitter-obsessed predecessor, and rarely faces reporters or speaks off the cuff.
His press secretary, Jen Psaki, holds lengthy daily briefings with the media, and Cabinet secretaries also speak on Biden’s behalf.
All told, through April 29, according to a count by Factba.se, Biden spoke about 30 percent fewer words than Trump and tweeted 65 percent fewer times. He gave only seven interviews, compared to 22 for Trump, and held only two news conferences, compared to nine for Trump.
Almost 100 of Trump’s claims came from tweets; only one of Biden’s tweets was deemed false or misleading. Trump made 56 suspect statements at campaign rallies; Biden held only one campaign rally — on his 100th day — where he made one suspect claim.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/interactive/2021/biden-fact-checker-100-days/
Sorry sport.....you are once again light and stupid....which we all know we cannot fix....
https://www.newsweek.com/under-donald-trumps-watch-national-debt-increased-78-trillion-1561627
https://www.davemanuel.com/2021/01/16/president-trump-national-debt/
US National Debt Soars By Nearly $8 Trillion Under President Trump
A look back at what happened with the national debt levels during the Trump presidency.While campaigning in 2016, Donald Trump promised some pretty big things when it came to fiscal responsibility and the US debt.
BTW cramps didn't trump promise to eliminate the debt?????? BWAAAAAAAAAAA!!!!! Yeah that worked out!!!!! LOLOLOLOL
This is not dementia, it is what a professional person does.
For years I had meeting with subcontractors on highly complex medical projects and I was prepared by myself and my superiors. Millions of dollars
Biden’s relatively limited number of falsehoods is a function, at least in part, of the fact that his public appearances consist mostly of prepared texts vetted by his staff. He devotes little time to social media, in contrast to his Twitter-obsessed predecessor, and rarely faces reporters or speaks off the cuff.
Even PBS says that he's struggling with a lot of issues.
President Biden continues to get good marks for his handling of the most pressing issue of the day — the coronavirus pandemic. He also remains on average above 50% for his handling of the economy, which is closely tied to COVID-19.
But as things start to open up more and get back to normal — with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's new mask guidance for fully vaccinated people leading the way — there are crises or potential crises looming on the horizon.
For a couple of months, it's been clear that Americans have less confidence in the president's handling of immigration, for example. There has been a surge of migrants, including unaccompanied minors, at the southern U.S. border, and the Biden administration has struggled to respond.
This week, some new things got added to Biden's plate, including inflation, a run on gas and renewed fighting in the Middle East between Israel and Palestinians. They threaten to derail an agenda that has so far, for the most part, stayed on the tracks.
Asked about it Friday at the White House, press secretary Jen Psaki said, "This is exactly what he was elected to do, is to lead the country during a time of multiple crises" and that he put together a team "to be prepared in these moments."
A full plate, but empty pump
Inflation was the economic word of the week. Consumer prices went higher than expected, which sent some jitters through Wall Street.
Gas prices are up, and renewed travel this summer looks likely to keep them relatively high. Long gas lines across the East Coast, due to a ransomware attack on a major U.S. pipeline, caused a degree of panic at the pump this week.
Colonial Pipeline has brought its entire system back online, and Biden said he expects to see improvement this weekend "and into early next week."
"Don't panic, No. 1," he urged Thursday. "I know seeing lines at the pumps or gas stations with no gas can be extremely stressful, but this is a temporary situation."
People clearly panicked, however. There was video of a fight that broke out between a man and a woman over their spots in line at a North Carolina gas station. A couple was caught in Alabama filling multiple gas cans and putting them in the back of their car. A South Carolina woman, who was hoarding gas, tried to evade police, wound up crashing her car and caught on fire.
Add onto all of that unease smaller-than-expected job growth at the beginning of the month and burgeoning Middle East fighting.
Saying he wanted to bring "perspective" on the 266,000 added jobs, Biden noted that the "economy is moving in the right direction, but it's clear we have a long way to go."
He pointed out that the economy has added 1.5 million new jobs since he took office, "the most number of jobs created in the first three months of any presidency in our history."
Of course, there was a very deep hole created by the pandemic and the policy response to it. There are still more than 8 million fewer workers on payrolls than there were before the pandemic
Most amusing.....if trump had done his job and mitigated the virus instead of hoping it would go away.....would we have avoided the trump depression which will take years to fix???????
And once again the goat fucker slithers away like the vermin he always is!!!!!!
my point stands.
Denny your post are unreadable, none sense and full of errors.
Roger , post is informative, of course he penned none of it.
No need to spend $ 7 Trillion Dollars as President Biden wants.
🤣Denny skunked off😂
The Right Wing hates the truth. There people are standing up against Trump and his pathological supporters
THE INTERCEPT STANDS BY ITS REPORTING ON GAB AND THE RIOT SQUADThe specific accusations about our reporting crumble when subjected to scrutiny.
The Intercept
May 14 2021, 5:12 p.m.
OVER THE PAST several days, wild and unfounded accusations have been hurled at The Intercept. We publish corrections and clarifications when we get something wrong, but none of these attacks have any merit whatsoever. In the rancorous and dizzying world of social media, falsehoods are amplified and it is often difficult for well-intentioned readers to discern the truth. So we would like to take this opportunity to correct the record.
These attacks revolve around our reporting on an archive of data from Gab, a far-right social media website, and on the “Riot Squad,” a group of journalists whose viral clips of violence, at times deceptively edited, have been used to smear the Black Lives Matter movement. We are proud of this reporting, which in intent as well as execution bears no resemblance to the caricature being drawn on social media.
Our reporting on the Gab archive, which The Intercept and other news outlets obtained, has focused on what it reveals about public figures on the far right. As we have done with other data archives we have worked on in years past, including the Snowden archive from the National Security Agency and the Vaza Jato archive from Brazil, we published only what is newsworthy and in the public interest, and the only names we published were of public figures. (In one story, we erroneously reported that a prominent conservative’s Gab account was one of many with a weak password. The error was corrected.) Newsrooms commonly come into possession of archives that contain personal information about private individuals. We would never expose people because they hold views we dislike or even abhor. The notion that we have done so is simply false.
Our reporting on the Riot Squad consists of a meticulously researched video and article. The members of the Riot Squad — this is a name they use — are journalists whose influential clips of violence connected to Black Lives Matter protests have been regularly featured in right-wing media, including Fox News. Our reporting found several instances in which this footage was selectively edited to remove crucial context, in one case editing out footage of a man wielding a machete at protesters. Some of this deceptively edited footage was played by Donald Trump’s defense team during his second impeachment trial and by a Republican senator during a hearing. The charge that the purpose of our project was to identify the Riot Squad so that they could be harmed by antifa is absurd. The article and video make clear that these individuals are journalists and that the violence they have experienced from left-wing protesters is inexcusable. The Riot Squad journalists are very public about what they do; they appear regularly on outlets including Fox News, BlazeTV, Newsmax, OAN, and Infowars. They are well-known to activists already.
The Intercept, like other news organizations, often reports on how the news is made and who makes it. Media criticism is central to our approach to journalism, and always has been. Members of the media should be afforded every protection necessary to do their constitutionally protected work, but they are by no means immune to criticism or off-limits to analysis. Reporters who have influence on the public’s understanding of events — as the Riot Squad clearly has when it comes to BLM protests — are the most important to interrogate. That is a concept our critics understand, and an argument they themselves make relentlessly. It applies no less to this case.
The specific accusations about our reporting crumble when subjected to scrutiny. Take one example: the claim that The Intercept inaccurately reported on Richie McGinniss’s work in Kenosha. In the article, we reported that there was speculation online that McGinniss had recorded footage of Kyle Rittenhouse shooting a protester and had not broadcast the footage or provided it to authorities. The speculation was based on video footage taken at the scene that showed McGinniss’s camera in recording mode immediately after the shooting. The story included multiple links to the speculation, and it included a statement from McGinniss that he did not start recording until after Rittenhouse fired his weapon. Our reporting was accurate, balanced, and substantiated, and we stand by it.
The Intercept’s reporters have become targets of vicious harassment over this reporting. The physical security of not just our staff but even their families has been threatened. The editorial leadership of The Intercept condemns these attacks, and stands 100 percent behind our journalism and our staff and their families.
Several reporters for the Intercept have been doxxed: their home addresses have been published online, and the names of their partners have been published. More members of our staff have been threatened with doxxing. It is particularly sad and infuriating that much of the impulsion for this campaign has been generated by the unbalanced tweets of a founder of The Intercept who resigned and falsely accused The Intercept of censoring him as part of his effort to launch his Substack blog.
We are doing everything we can to guarantee the security of our staff and defend their families and their reputations. Our reporting will continue.
CONTACT THE AUTHOR:
The Interceptti-media@firstlook.org
IDF, Destroyed a Hammas building.
Biden attacks Israel.
Roger carries water that Press is under attack.
A million people signed up for Obamacare. Many are surprised how cheap it's become.
Sheryl Hagen was earning $13.25 an hour after working more than five years at a Missouri grocery store. But even working full time, she couldn't afford the $300 premium for her employer's health insurance plan — so she went without.
Earlier this year, Hagen, 51, broke her ribs and the resulting hospital stay led to a $1,300 bill. She didn't have enough to pay it, and taking time off to recover only put her further behind.
“I couldn't move and couldn't work and couldn't really do anything,” she said. “And then I knew I was going to have these giant bills coming at me. It was terrifying.”
That experience, an arthritic knee and a later doctor’s visit had her looking into the special enrollment period for health care coverage under the Affordable Care Act, or Obamacare. With help, she was able to sign up for a marketplace plan for $73 per month. When President Joe Biden then signed the American Rescue Plan into law, which carries huge health care subsidies for the next two years, she reapplied and her premium was reduced to $0.
“It’s like a light at the end of the tunnel,” said Hagen, who hasn’t had health insurance in 12 years. “I’m blown away.”
Hagen is one of more than a million people who have signed up for Obamacare plans since the Biden administration opened up the special enrollment period, which began Feb. 15 and ends on Aug. 15. With the new subsidies and the limits the Covid-19 relief bill placed on health care costs, many are also paying much less for Obamacare plans than they have in the past.
Yesterday in posts starting at 10:45AM and stretching through 1:55PM
I, JamesNewLeaf, walked all over Ch/Scottie's thread MIScharacterization of the NYT article supposedly making Biden look incompetent, an article Ch lyingly called a "hit piece."
I constantly challenged him and others to give us extensive quotes proving his lies
AND HE NEVER DID.
NOR DID ANY OTHERS.
NO, NOT ONE SINGLE TIME DID CH OR OTHERS EVEN ATTEMPT TO DEFEND HIS LYING THREAD ARTICLE WITH GENUINE QUOTES.
Excuse me while I take a much deserved VICTORY DANCE.
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