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History Will Not Have Mercy on Joe Biden

  

Category:  News & Politics

Via:  s  •  yesterday  •  15 comments

History Will Not Have Mercy on Joe Biden
The defining qualities of Joe Biden the political man were arrogance and dishonesty.

S E E D E D   C O N T E N T



resident Joe Biden— forgotten but not gone   as Jim Geraghty so nicely put it over at   National Review —is a much-reduced figure, and one naturally wants to be charitable toward him as his   failure as a politician   and his failure as a father are fused together in the waning days of his presidency, a period dominated by his dishonest and impolitic   pardon of his son   Hunter, who was duly convicted of tax and gun offenses in a case brought not by some overreaching political enemy but by Biden’s own Justice Department.



Charity is a virtue. But, as journalists refresh their pre-writes of the president’s obituary (and I do not mean the political one) and the historians begin their first drafts in earnest, honesty is a superseding virtue. There is simply no way to tell the truth about Joe Biden’s life and career without kicking him while he is down—it is not like he is about to get back up and make of himself a more sportsmanlike target.



The defining qualities of Joe Biden the political man were arrogance and dishonesty, compounded by stupidity. That Biden lasted as long in politics as he did—he first was elected to the Senate the year your gray-bearded correspondent was born—and that he rose as high as he did is an indictment of the state of Delaware, the Democratic Party, and the American electorate, which was wise to choose Biden over Donald Trump in 2020 but foolish to put itself in such a dilemma to begin with.




Biden will forever be paired with Trump in the history books and will be the smaller figure—Shemp to Trump’s Curly. But there is a certain justice in that: Biden became vice president in part because Barack Obama believed, with good reason, that Biden, having already failed in more than one presidential campaign, was unlikely to ever be a serious contender for the big chair. No, Biden managed to become president due almost entirely to the fact that he was not Donald Trump—a figure whom he, perversely enough, resembles in many important ways: Both are East Coast white men born to prosperous (the Trumps much more so than the Bidens, of course) families in the 1940s, both are habitual liars and serial fabulists, both are plagiarists, both substitute insult for argument, both are intellectual mediocrities, neither speaks a foreign language or ever has uttered an original thought in English, each believes that his surname carries   some sort of incantatory power , both embrace economic nationalism of a particularly ham-fisted and superficial kind, both abstain from alcohol, both have embarrassing adult children in their 40s and 50s who require more hand-holding than you’d think, and both revel in the abuse of presidential powers. 



(Jill Biden’s ex-husband reports, in some detail, that Biden also   resembles Trump in the matter of adultery , a claim the Bidens deny.)



If you need someone to accommodate your whataboutism here, I am happy to oblige: Yes, I think Donald Trump is the worse of the two by a nontrivial margin and would have preferred that the voters in November had elected Kamala Harris, a deranged hippopotamus, or an egg-salad sandwich rather than Trump. I also wish that my dachshund would not express joy and surprise by becoming incontinent, the difference being that there is some hope that a dachshund can be trained while voters heroically resist learning their lessons no matter how many times history rubs their collective nose in it.



My only personal memory of Joe Biden was watching him on the train, an affectation that was part of his Scranton-lunchbucket routine. His minders taped off about half of a first-class car, and a dozen or more Secret Service agents and other minions would swarm the platform every time the train came to a stop, as Biden—and this was a decade ago, well before he was elected president—sat there looking terrified and confused, lost as last year’s Easter Eggs. It was a lot of dog-and-pony show business to allow a vice president to pretend that he was a regular guy, or maybe to accommodate a graybeard loon already entering his second childhood and indulging his love of choo-choos. It was a contemptible little spectacle. 



Biden fancies himself a foreign-policy man, a man of diplomacy, and here the history books will probably all cite   former Defense Secretary Robert Gates : “He has been wrong on nearly every major foreign policy and national security issue over the past four decades.” One could go through the greatest hits: Biden’s   despicable performance   in the Clarence Thomas confirmation fiasco, his batty racial politics (“ You ain’t black !” “ Put y’all back in chains !” “ Jim Crow 2.0! ”), his   creepy handsiness , his   administration’s bizarre if maybe not technically criminal coddling of Iran , his reality-proof incompetence in the face  of persistent corrosive inflation, his   lawlessness on student loans , his   stupidity on uranium , allowing the chaos at the border to fester and intensify,   hobbling Ukraine   at every turn   until forced   to relent, etc.



But what sticks in my mind about Biden is his slander of an obscure nobody, truck driver Curtis Dunn, whom he spent years lying about. Dunn was the other driver in the accident in which Biden’s first wife and his infant daughter died, an accident investigators at the time said was almost certainly caused by Mrs. Biden, who apparently pulled into oncoming traffic with the baby in her lap. Biden   repeatedly claimed   that Dunn was a drunk driver, a menace “who drank his lunch,” even though there was absolutely no evidence that this was true. It was, politically speaking, a better story, and Biden has always put his own selfish, greasy little interests ahead of those of ordinary people in the real world.



Biden is a failed politician. The only thing he had going for him was that he had denied Donald Trump a second term, and, now, he has   given that second term   to Trump at a time when the once and future president is   even more dangerous and depraved   than he was in 2020. Biden’s final significant act in office will have been going back on his word and pardoning his impenitent, drug-addled, pocket-lining miscreant of a son—who   isn’t the only Biden   who traded on the family name for personal enrichment. Biden could have protected his son from whatever it is that Kash Patel might get up to as head of the FBI without vacating the legitimate tax and firearms convictions that have already been handed down, but, as it turns out, his “word as a Biden” has the same value as an IOU signed by Donald Trump.



The matter will soon be in the hands of the obituarists and historians, and, soon enough, in the purview of a higher Authority than these. I hope that God will have mercy on Joe Biden—history will not.


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Sean Treacy
Professor Principal
1  seeder  Sean Treacy    yesterday

This from a Biden-Harris voter:

Biden will forever be paired with Trump in the history books and will be the smaller figure—Shemp to Trump’s Curly... Both are East Coast white men born to prosperous (the Trumps much more so than the Bidens, of course) families in the 1940s, both are habitual liars and serial fabulists, both are plagiarists, both substitute insult for argument, both are intellectual mediocrities, neither speaks a foreign language or ever has uttered an original thought in English, each believes that his surname carries      some sort of incantatory power   , both embrace economic nationalism of a particularly ham-fisted and superficial kind, both abstain from alcohol, both have embarrassing adult children in their 40s and 50s who require more hand-holding than you’d think, and both revel in the abuse of presidential powers. 

It was always striking to me that Democrats chose Biden, the closest thing they have to Trump, to challenge him as they were hysterically claiming Trump would destroy the country etc..

 
 
 
Sparty On
Professor Principal
2  Sparty On    yesterday

We told our friends on the left he would be a trainwreck but …. Butthurt got in the way and logic left their building.

 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
3  JohnRussell    yesterday
Both are East Coast white men born to prosperous (the Trumps much more so than the Bidens, of course) families in the 1940s

Bidens father was never remotely in the same category as Trump's father when it comes to money.  Not even close.  Wildly not close. 

But beyond that by the time Joe was a young boy his father had lost his financial status and they were a middle class family.  

If the writer of this piece doesnt know that then he is a liar too. 

 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
3.1  JohnRussell  replied to  JohnRussell @3    yesterday
Biden Sr. worked as an executive during World War II. According to the obituary that ran in the   Baltimore Sun , Biden Sr. worked for a company that “made a waterproof sealant used on U.S. merchant marine ships.”

The News Journal   obituary added that after the war, Biden Sr. was “co-owner of an airport and crop-dusting service on Long Island, New York.”

But his financial successes eventually took a downward turn. A 2008 feature in the   New York Times   noted that Biden Sr. “suffered a number of business reversals” after the war ended. The family moved in with Jean’s parents, the Finnegans, in Scranton for a few years. According to the newspaper, Biden Sr. eventually started working for a heating and cooling company in Wilmington, Delaware. He commuted back and forth as Jean Biden took care of family life in Scranton. Biden Sr. relocated the entire family to Wilmington in 1953, when Joe Biden was 10.

Time magazine   reported in 1987 that the Bidens lived in a three-bedroom house in Mayfield, a suburb of Wilmington. Joe Biden and his two brothers shared one room while their sister,   Valerie , got her own room.

Joseph Biden Sr., Joe Biden's Father: 5 Fast Facts
 
 
 
Sparty On
Professor Principal
3.1.1  Sparty On  replied to  JohnRussell @3.1    20 hours ago
suffered a number of business reversals

I guess Biden’s aren’t good businessmen like the Trumps.

 
 
 
MrFrost
Professor Guide
3.1.2  MrFrost  replied to  Sparty On @3.1.1    16 hours ago

I guess Biden’s aren’t good businessmen like the Trumps.

C'mon man... Trump has had more business failures than the Biden's had businesses. 

 
 
 
fineline
Freshman Silent
3.1.3  fineline  replied to  Sparty On @3.1.1    16 hours ago

More likely, Biden's aren't criminals like Trump's .

 
 
 
Ronin2
Professor Quiet
3.1.4  Ronin2  replied to  fineline @3.1.3    9 hours ago

Criminal enough to trade in Biden's political power in return for millions from foreign countries.

Both Hunter and Joe's brother did that- and Biden enabled it at every turn; and even profited from it.

Only difference is the Establishment went after Trump (not caring how much it violated the law and Constitution doing so); and protected Biden- who is ingrained deeply in the Establishment.

 
 
 
bugsy
Professor Participates
3.1.5  bugsy  replied to  fineline @3.1.3    8 hours ago
More likely, Biden's aren't criminals like Trump's .

More than likely, they are. You just fail to recognize what has been placed in front of your eyes.

But but but Trump

 
 
 
Sparty On
Professor Principal
3.1.6  Sparty On  replied to  MrFrost @3.1.2    6 hours ago

Whatever helps you sleep at night Frosty.

 
 
 
Sparty On
Professor Principal
3.1.7  Sparty On  replied to  fineline @3.1.3    6 hours ago

Don’t sell the Biden’s short.    They are excellent criminals.    And mostly on your dime as well ……

 
 
 
bugsy
Professor Participates
3.1.8  bugsy  replied to  MrFrost @3.1.2    6 hours ago

I guess that statement is true.

Biden had one business.....family name influence

 
 
 
bugsy
Professor Participates
3.1.9  bugsy  replied to  Sparty On @3.1.7    6 hours ago

One always wonders how a "civil servant" who spent 50 years on the taxpayer dime was able to accumulate 2 beach houses in exclusive neighborhoods. 

Kinda wonder the same about Bernie, who has accumulated similar properties....but hates capitalism. 

 
 
 
Sparty On
Professor Principal
3.1.10  Sparty On  replied to  bugsy @3.1.9    5 hours ago

The denial involved with our friends on the left here, is palpable.

 
 
 
Sean Treacy
Professor Principal
3.2  seeder  Sean Treacy  replied to  JohnRussell @3    yesterday

Bidens father was never remotely in the same category as Trump's father when it comes to money.

He didn't say they were.  He said they were prosperous, not rich.  Although Biden's dad lived like Gatsby as a war profiteer before losing it and settling for  a more middle class lifestyle.  

 
 

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