Empty Joe
“I’ll be an ally of the light, not the darkness,” the nominee tells virtual DNC.
“Joe Biden knows how to read,” host Julia Louis-Dreyfus took care to remind viewers Thursday, “and he reads everything.” In an undated clip, Joe Biden quoted Kierkegaard that “faith sees best in the dark.” The television audience may have wanted more, but the virtual event kept them waiting while other Democrats had their say.
“Joe and Kamala are real people,” said former candidate Andrew Wang, who also hailed “the magic of Joe Biden.” Sen. Chris Coons said Biden’s faith is strong and he “knows the power of prayer.” Such a man of faith and conscience, Coons said, can “confront the original sins of this nation, slavery and racism.” Atlanta mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms hailed the late John Lewis, celebrated earlier in a short film. And now we need “real leaders like Joe Biden and Kamala Harris.”
California secretary of state Alex Padilla has registered at least one million illegals to vote through the state DMV, and refuses to participate in probes of voter fraud. On Thursday, Padilla charged that Trump is “trying to sabotage the Post Office” and “made it hard to cast ballots.”
Sen. Cory Booker did not experience another Spartacus moment, but he told viewers his auto-worker father “would be proud of Joe and Kamala.” Sen. Tammy Baldwin said Joe’s record on health care “was a big f---king deal,” and Joe and Kamala were “the only answer.” American troops now have a “coward in chief,” said Sen. Tammy Duckworth, and “Joe Biden would never turn his back on our troops.”
Mayor Pete Buttigieg said Joe Biden “stepped out ahead on marriage equality,” and “imagine what could change by 2030.” So Pete and husband Chasten are “proudly supporting Joe and Kamala.” It’s a contest for the soul of a nation and “black lives matter.” Former rival Michael Bloomberg told viewers Biden and Obama created more jobs than Trump. For Vermont socialist Bernie Sanders, “Joe is honest and decent,” and the nominee from Delaware seemed to be in his preacher mode.
“Give people light and they will find a way,” Biden said. “I’ll be an ally of the light, not the darkness.” He was out to “choose hope over fear, facts over fiction,” instead of the “truth over facts” of a previous speech. On Thursday, Biden said, “the days of cozying up to dictators is over,” and “there’s never been anything we’ve been able to accomplish.” For the most part, the rest was error-free, but all too familiar boilerplate about the existential threat of climate change, tax breaks for the wealthy, and of course “systemic racism.” And so on.
“This is not a partisan moment,” Biden said. The nation is “poised to make great progress again” and “find the light once more.” And as he closed out, “may God bless you and may God protect our troops.”
Joe Biden said not a word about the violence currently convulsing the nation, and neither did any other Democrat. It also escaped notice that DNC casting directors had missed some Democrat Big Stars such as former California Assembly Speaker Willie Brown.
Back in the day, when he was 60, Brown spotted Kamala Harris, 30 years his junior. Brown set her up in lucrative sinecures and she became his main squeeze. That act of poontronage helped launch a career that has landed Harris on the 2020 ticket, under Joe Biden. Also missing from the virtual DNC was Angela Davis, the 1980 and 1984 Communist Party USA candidate under the Stalinist Gus Hall.
Davis, keynote speaker at the 2017 Women’s March, is on record that “to vote for ourselves I think that means that we will have to campaign for and vote for Joe Biden.” Even so, the Democrats’ 2020 show saved no room for Angela.
Joe Biden’s first DNC was in Miami, in 1972, so for Joe this is DNC number 12. In all that time, and maybe before, Joe Biden is the first presidential candidate truly to defy satire. Tom Shillue and Bruce Bawer do their level best, but the best portrayal may be Chauncey Gardner in the 1979 movie Being There.
According to housekeeper Louise, who raised him, Chauncey was “short-changed by the Lord and dumb as a jackass,” yet he cavorts with the rich and powerful and winds up a famous television commentator. As Louise explains, “All you have to be in America is white to get anything you want.” For all their talk that black lives matter, the Democrats pick an old white guy who tells a black radio host that if he doesn’t support him, “you ain’t black.”
At the funeral of magnate Benjamin Rand, his handlers say their only chance to retain the presidency is Chauncey Gardner. In similar style, Democrats are banking on Joe Biden to win back the presidency from Donald Trump, but maybe old Joe is just, as President Trump said Thursday, “a puppet of the radical left movement,” and the one they really want on top is Kamala Harris, who got her start under Willie Brown.
If Biden wins, Democrats may have a plan to depose him, or maybe something will happen before the election. After all, in 1972 George McGovern dumped highly-qualified running mate Thomas Eagleton because he had been hospitalized for depression. As President Trump likes to say, we’ll have to wait and see what happens.
IT IS HARDLY
A ‘SECRET’ TO THOSE OF US WHO LIVE IN MEXIFORNIA THAT THE LA RAZA SUPREMACY
DEMOCRAT PARTY IS, AND HAS LONG BEEN, HELL BENT ON GETTING ILLEGALS INTO THE
VOTING BOOTHS!
California
secretary of state Alex Padilla has registered at least one million illegals to
vote through the state DMV, and refuses to participate in probes of voter
fraud.
Empty Joe
“I’ll be an ally of the light, not the darkness,” the nominee
tells virtual DNC.
Fri Aug 21, 2020
“Joe Biden knows how to read,” host Julia Louis-Dreyfus took care
to remind viewers Thursday, “and he reads everything.” In an undated clip, Joe
Biden quoted Kierkegaard that “faith sees best in the dark.” The television
audience may have wanted more, but the virtual event kept them waiting while
other Democrats had their say.
“Joe and Kamala are real people,” said former candidate Andrew
Wang, who also hailed “the magic of Joe Biden.” Sen. Chris Coons said
Biden’s faith is strong and he “knows the power of prayer.” Such a man of faith
and conscience, Coons said, can “confront the original sins of this nation,
slavery and racism.” Atlanta mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms hailed the late John
Lewis, celebrated earlier in a short film. And now we need “real leaders like
Joe Biden and Kamala Harris.”
California secretary of state Alex Padilla has registered at least
one million illegals to vote through the state DMV, and refuses to participate
in probes of voter fraud. On Thursday, Padilla
charged that Trump is “trying to sabotage the Post Office” and “made it hard to
cast ballots.”
Sen. Cory Booker did not experience another Spartacus moment, but
he told viewers his auto-worker father “would be proud of Joe and Kamala.” Sen.
Tammy Baldwin said Joe’s record on health care “was a big f---king deal,” and
Joe and Kamala were “the only answer.” American troops now have a “coward in
chief,” said Sen. Tammy Duckworth, and “Joe Biden would never turn his back on
our troops.”
Mayor Pete Buttigieg said Joe Biden “stepped out ahead on marriage
equality,” and “imagine what could change by 2030.” So Pete and husband Chasten
are “proudly supporting Joe and Kamala.” It’s a contest for the soul of a
nation and “black lives matter.” Former rival Michael Bloomberg told viewers
Biden and Obama created more jobs than Trump. For Vermont socialist Bernie
Sanders, “Joe is honest and decent,” and the nominee from Delaware seemed to be
in his preacher mode.
“Give people light and they will find a way,” Biden said. “I’ll be
an ally of the light, not the darkness.” He was out to “choose hope over fear,
facts over fiction,” instead of the “truth over facts” of a previous speech. On
Thursday, Biden said, “the days of cozying up to dictators is over,” and
“there’s never been anything we’ve been able to accomplish.” For the most part,
the rest was error-free, but all too familiar boilerplate about the existential
threat of climate change, tax breaks for the wealthy, and of course “systemic
racism.” And so on.
“This is not a partisan moment,” Biden said. The nation is “poised
to make great progress again” and “find the light once more.” And as he closed
out, “may God bless you and may God protect our troops.”
Joe Biden said not a word about the violence currently convulsing
the nation, and neither did any other Democrat. It also escaped notice that DNC
casting directors had missed some Democrat Big Stars such as former California
Assembly Speaker Willie Brown.
Back in the day, when he was 60, Brown spotted Kamala Harris, 30
years his junior. Brown set her up in lucrative sinecures and she became his
main squeeze. That act of poontronage helped
launch a career that has landed Harris on the 2020 ticket, under Joe Biden.
Also missing from the virtual DNC was Angela Davis, the 1980 and 1984 Communist
Party USA candidate under the Stalinist Gus Hall.
Davis, keynote speaker at the 2017 Women’s March, is on record
that “to vote for ourselves I think that means that we will have to campaign
for and vote for Joe Biden.” Even so, the Democrats’ 2020 show saved
no room for Angela.
Joe Biden’s first DNC was in Miami, in 1972, so for Joe this is
DNC number 12. In all that time, and maybe before, Joe Biden is the first
presidential candidate truly to defy satire. Tom Shillue and Bruce
Bawer do their level best, but the best portrayal may be
Chauncey Gardner in the 1979 movie Being There.
According to housekeeper Louise, who raised him, Chauncey was
“short-changed by the Lord and dumb as a jackass,” yet he cavorts with the rich
and powerful and winds up a famous television commentator. As Louise explains,
“All you have to be in America is white to get anything you want.” For all
their talk that black lives matter, the Democrats pick an old white guy who
tells a black radio host that if he doesn’t support him, “you
ain’t black.”
At the funeral of magnate Benjamin Rand, his handlers say their
only chance to retain the presidency is Chauncey Gardner. In similar style,
Democrats are banking on Joe Biden to win back the presidency from Donald
Trump, but maybe old Joe is just, as President Trump said Thursday, “a
puppet of the radical left movement,” and the one they really want
on top is Kamala Harris, who got her start under Willie Brown.
If Biden wins, Democrats may have a plan to depose
him, or maybe something will happen before the election. After all,
in 1972 George McGovern dumped highly-qualified running mate Thomas Eagleton
because he had been hospitalized for depression. As President Trump likes to
say, we’ll have to wait and see what happens.
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