DOCUMENTED WORST AND MOST CORRUPT IN MODERN AMERICAN HISTORY!
Nolte: Sleeping Joe Biden’s Nine Cruel Maui Bungles
We have over 100 Americans dead in Maui, over 800 still missing, and Joe Biden continues to cruelly bungle the response at every level.
This tragedy is far from over, so we will undoubtedly be adding to this list, but here are His Fraudulency Joe Biden’s nine cruel bungles … so far:
- Lying on the Beach While Maui Burns to the Ground
The wildfires began on August 8. By the following day, the fires were rampaging, thousands were without power, and thousands had been evacuated. During those two days, Biden lay on the beach and said nothing. It wasn’t until August 10 that Biden finally roused himself from a beach chair to act presidential. Before that, all he did was fire off a tweet a few hours earlier.
- “No Comment” While on Vacation
Days later, while Hawaii burned and the toll of the dead and missing climbed, Biden not only remained on the beach but when asked specifically about the rising death toll, Biden said, “No comment.”
He even smiled like he thought he was being cute. Other than “sociopathic,” I’m at a loss for words.
- No Comments for a Full Week
A week—a week!—would pass before Biden could be bothered to speak at length about Maui. An entire American city is devastated, and the sitting president has nothing to say, no assurances to offer.
- Refused to Visit Maui for Two Weeks
Unless you’re a Republican, the media are fine with a president staying out of a disaster area for weeks and weeks. After all, a presidential visit does overtax a local system already under duress. But rather than assure Americans and, more specifically, Hawaiians that he was focused on getting Maui everything it needed, he was MIA—out attending lavish fundraisers and racing back to vacation.
All the while, Maui residents were crying out for help from their own government.
- Maui Residents Blast Biden’s Lack of Response
A professional surfer named Kai Lenny, who has been leading local, citizen-run relief efforts, told CBS News he hadn’t “seen a government employee in days.”
“Some of us … were kinda sitting back, waiting for help to arrive,” he explained, “and then nothing was sorta happening. We were just in shock.”
It was texts and emails from friends asking for help that led Lenny to start his “boots on the ground” effort to deliver “supplies to those in need with the goal of holding friends and family over until” the government “arrives with everything.” But the government didn’t show, he said, “And it was just like, day after day, ‘Where are they?'”
- Biden Uses Maui Visit to Tell Unintelligible Jokes About “Hot Ground”
So after Biden is roused from his second vacation in as many weeks to show up in Maui, President Sociopath decides to get cute again. Keep in mind over 100 people are confirmed dead, more than 800 are missing, and countless numbers have lost everything, including pets, homes, and belongings… But here’s our Empathizer-In-Chief: “You guys catch the boots out here? That’s a hot ground, man.”
Do we send presidents to disaster areas to sightsee and offer comic relief?
- Biden Offers Devastated Maui Households a Cool $700 Each
Biden has sent more than $100 billion in relief to Ukraine, but he’s offering Americans who have literally lost everything $700.
Biden is spending thousands a month to house and feed the tens of thousands of illegal aliens he’s allowed to invade the country, but Americans who have literally lost everything only deserve a one-time payout of $700. Not a joke.
- Biden Uses Maui Tragedy to Lie About Nearly Losing His Home and Wife
The following shouldn’t be surprising coming from the same man who continues to lie about losing a son in Iraq, but while speaking to the victims of the Maui wildfires, His Fraudulency told a bald-faced lie about how “Jill and I … have a little sense [of] what it’s like to lose a home.”
“To make a long story short,” said Joe, “I almost lost my wife, my ’67 Corvette, and my cat. But all kidding aside, I watched the firefighters, the way they responded…And they ran into flames to save my wife and save my family. Not a joke.”
He was talking about a kitchen fire in 2004.
WATCH: Biden Talking About House Fire During Speech in MauiBiden Appears to Doze Off During Ceremony Honoring Maui Victims
C-SPAN
9. Biden Dozes Off During Ceremony Honoring Maui Victims
Tell me he’s not sleeping:
Age is no excuse. Biden is plenty awake when he wants to be. If ice cream was served at this event or if he was watching Golden Girls, you can bet he’d be plenty alert.
The man doesn’t give a damn. Nothing happening at this sacred event or in Maui interests him.
Follow John Nolte on Twitter @NolteNC. Follow his Facebook Page here.
Watch: Hawaiians Greet Joe Biden’s Motorcade with Middle Fingers
LAHAINA, Hawaii, (AP) — President Joe Biden and first lady Jill Biden on Monday viewed the devastation wrought by the flames that ripped through the western part of the Hawaiian island, seeing for themselves the hollowed homes, structures and singed trees left behind by the deadliest U.S. wildfire in more than a century.
The Bidens lingered briefly on the tarmac after arriving at Kahului Airport to console Hawaii Governor Josh Green and his wife Jaime Green as well as members of Hawaii’s congressional delegation who came to the airport to greet them. The president and first lady embraced each of their greeters before boarding Marine One for an aerial tour of the devastation caused by the fires.
Biden later got a close up look of the wreckage in Lahaina, a historic town of 13,000 people that was virtually destroyed by the flames. His motorcade wound through the community of block upon block of hollowed out homes and structures, palm trees burnt to a crisp and endless debris.
The couple is meeting with first responders and is being briefed by state and local officials about the ongoing response.
The Democratic president will deliver remarks paying tribute to the victims of the wildfires, which have killed more than 100 people since they erupted on Aug. 8. The Bidens interrupted a weeklong vacation in the Lake Tahoe area for the five-hour flight to Lahaina.
“It’s going to be an emotional day for everyone,” said Olivia Dalton, the White House deputy press secretary, told reporters traveling with Biden.
The White House announced Monday that Biden has named Bob Fenton, a regional leader at the Federal Emergency Management Agency, to be the chief federal response coordinator for the Maui wildfires, ensuring that someone from his administration will be responsible for long-term recovery efforts. It will take years to rebuild Lahaina, where just about every building was obliterated.
“I know how profoundly loss can impact a family and a community and I know nothing can replace the loss of life,” Biden said in a statement before the trip. “I will do everything in my power to help Maui recover and rebuild from this tragedy. And throughout our efforts, we are focused on respecting sacred lands, cultures, and traditions.”
Dozens gathered on the streets of Lahaina to watch Biden’s motorcade wind its way through the streets. Some greeted the president enthusiastically, but others appeared to be waving their middle fingers at the motorcade.
Biden has faced criticism from Republicans, including 2024 Republican frontrunner Donald Trump, for saying too little during the first days after the catastrophe. The White House, however, has pushed back against the criticism, saying the president kept in close touch with the governor and other emergency officials throughout the unfolding crisis.
Sen. Brian Schatz, D-Hawaii, said that as of Sunday about 85% of the affected area had been searched and nearly 2,000 people remained without power and 10,000 were without telecom connectivity. Water in parts of west Maui is not safe to drink.
While immediate aid such as water, food and blankets has been readily distributed to residents, Schatz said cellphones, ID and other documents that people would need to help them enroll in longer-term aid programs were burned in the fires, adding more challenges to the application process.
Green said Sunday on CBS’ “Face the Nation” that “an army of search and rescue teams” with 41 dogs had blanketed the affected area.
Maui County Mayor Richard Bissen said in a social media post Sunday that 27 victims had been identified and 11 families were notified of the losses. The FBI and the Maui County medical examiner and coroner’s office are working together to identify the recovered remains.
Bissen said 850 names were on a list of missing people, taking hope from the fact that the initial list contained more than 2,000 names.
“We are both saddened and relieved about these numbers as we continue the recovery process,” Bissen said. “The number of identified will rise, and the number of missing may decrease.”
More than 1,000 federal officials remain on the ground to respond to the wildfires in Hawaii, according to the White House. The administration has distributed more than $8.5 million in aid to some 8,000 affected families, including $3.6 million in rental assistance, said FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell.
Schatz, who will join Biden on Monday, stressed that officials were “still responding to the disaster” and “we are not yet in a recovery phase.”
“As bad as this looks, it’s actually worse,” he said in a phone interview on Sunday. “What you can’t see is the damage to utility infrastructure. What you can’t see is the thousands of kids who are trying to figure out how to go to school this fall. What you can’t see is the first responders who went into the flames without regard for their own safety and had their own homes burned down.”
While vacationing in Lake Tahoe, Biden has been on the phone regularly with officials to get briefed on updates to the wildfire response, the White House said.
Biden Tells Devastated Hawaiians About the Time He Almost Lost His Corvette In a Small Fire
A quick note, to the simple-minded: if you’re trying to make someone feel better about losing their home, their livelihood, and everything they’ve ever owned due to a natural disaster, don’t tell them about that one time you stubbed your toe as a way to relate.
But apparently no one gave Joe Biden that memo, being that that’s exactly what he just did in Hawaii Monday when he told displaced islanders about how his kitchen once caught fire, a fairly innocuous story that Biden has grossly exaggerated over years of repeating it.
“I don’t want to compare difficulties, but I have a little sense, Jill and I, of what it’s like to lose a home,” Biden began.
He then launched into the story of how “about 15 years ago” (it was almost 20) he was in Washington, D.C. when he got the call that his house had caught fire thanks to an unfortunate lightning strike.
“Long story short, I almost lost my wife, my '67 corvette and my cat,” he joked.
According to a report at the time, the Bidens’ 2004 near-death encounter was described as a “small fire” that was “contained to the kitchen” and "was under control in 20 minutes." But that hasn't stopped the president from upping the size of the fish and describing the incident as a raging inferno that almost claimed the life of his spouse and nearly destroyed his beloved sports car.
Related: Maui Revelations: There Were Widespread Power-Grid Malfunctions Just Before Wildfires Raged
Biden told the same story to survivors of a Colorado wildfire back in January of 2022, where he claimed that “We only lost about 25% of [the house]. We were able to rebuild. But, you know, the hard part is the memorabilia you lost. The special things that you had put away that you lost.”
He also mentioned the same story in 2021, when he claimed, “And I know, having had a house burn down with my wife in it — she got out safely, God willing — that having a significant portion of it burn, I can tell, 10 minutes makes a hell of a difference.”
The truth makes a hell of a difference, too - not that Biden would know.
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