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   From: flushit@whitehouse.gov   
      
   The Starmaker wrote in   
   news:spdgbv$rl7$26@news.dns-netz.com:   
      
   > Viktor Tandofsky wrote   
   >   
   >> Biden is a piece of shit and will die on a toilet. Plop! Plop!   
   >> uhhh... crash bang splorge...   
      
   Columnist Robin Abcarian had a piece out with The Los Angeles Times a few   
   months back explaining the evolution of her opinion on President Joe Biden   
   and his capacity to serve as president – concluding that Biden, “like   
   whiskey, wine, and cast-iron skillets,” is getting better with age.   
   Abcarian has been covering politics for a long time, has seen Biden speak   
   in person, and has at times been skeptical about Biden’s age and abilities   
   – so her opinion has some weight.   
      
   But I disagree. Joe Biden is too old for a second term.   
      
   Joe Biden is not a great public speaker   
   “Sometimes when Biden starts to speak,” Abcarian wrote, “I involuntarily   
   hold my breath, waiting for him to stumble over his words, or slur them or   
   otherwise mangle his text in a way that will show up in clips on Fox News   
   or MAGA Twitter.”   
      
      
   Abcarian has seen Biden verbally flailing up close and in person. During   
   the 2020 Democratic primary, Abcarian watched Biden struggle to articulate   
   himself in Iowa, in what many believed at the time was Biden’s “swan   
   song.”   
      
   “It was kind of sad, but hey, he’d had a good long run, and who could   
   begrudge him one last romp on the trail?” Abcarian wrote, acknowledging   
   that Biden’s speaking problems likely had more to do with his advanced age   
   than his childhood stutter.   
      
   Abcarian wrote about watching Biden in Iowa contemporaneously: “Watching   
   him onstage was jarring. He was not the smooth orator of the past. He   
   relied on notes, hesitated and often raised his voice to a shout, as if   
   mistaking volume for passion.” For Abcarian, who had also seen Biden speak   
   articulately in 2007, the contrast was jarring, the decline obvious.   
      
   Biden got rocked in the 2020 Iowa caucus, finishing fourth. Abcarian and   
   most others wrote him off. Then, of course, Biden rolled in and won South   
   Carolina, cleaning up amongst black voters. Biden was able to craft a   
   message that resonated: the election was a fight for the soul of the   
   country – and an argument that carried – he was the best option for   
   beating Trump. Both message and argument worked; Biden won the primary;   
   Biden won the general election – and according to Abcarian, has had a   
   successful presidency, causing her to reevaluate having written Biden off.   
   Nowadays, Abcarian is on board with Biden.   
      
   “He may not always sound sharp,” Abcarian wrote, “but Biden proved that he   
   hasn’t lost his edge. He accused ‘some Republicans of wanting to use   
   Social Security and Medicare as negotiating points in discussions about   
   raising the debt ceiling.’” The address was proof positive, to Abcarian,   
   that Biden is equipped to run for another election. I disagree.   
      
   Biden is too old to run   
      
   Biden is already 80; he’s already the oldest person ever to serve as   
   president. As Abcarian points out, Biden is not as articulate as he used   
   to be – most likely because of age-related decline. Let me reemphasize   
   that: Biden is suffering from age-related decline.   
      
   Personally, I don’t recommend we elect people suffering from age-related   
   decline into the most consequential public office in the United States.   
      
   And despite Abcarian’s point that Biden still has his edge, my question   
   is: how much longer will Biden have an edge?   
      
   Does age-related decline typically stabilize around 80? Is the Joe Biden   
   we see now the Biden we’ll get at the end of a second term?   
      
   Or will Biden’s decline continue – or even accelerate – leaving Biden less   
   than capable to perform the functions of his office? Remember, Biden will   
   be 86 at the end of a second term if he is elected.   
      
   Frankly, the likelihood that Joe Biden lives through a second term seems   
   questionable, given that he has already exceeded the life expectancy for a   
   US male.   
      
   Of course, it goes without saying we wish the president well and long   
   life. However, Joe Biden is too old to run for reelection.   
      
   BONUS: The Fall of Joe Biden Has Started   
      
   BONUS: Donald Trump Looks At His End   
      
   Harrison Kass is the Senior Editor at 19FortyFive. An attorney, pilot,   
   guitarist, and minor pro hockey player, Harrison joined the US Air Force   
   as a Pilot Trainee but was medically discharged. Harrison holds a BA from   
      
   [continued in next message]   
      
   --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05   
    * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)   
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