Home LuckyCola Lucky Cola Casino luckycola slot
jilipark The Blaming of Joe Biden
Updated:2024-12-29 01:58    Views:59

We are now in the final weeks of Joe Biden’s presidency, and I’ve been thinking about the year he had — how different it was from what he hoped last winter as he sought re-election. All presidents think about what they wanted to achieve, in the end, and how Americans will regard them. For some of us, our most vivid memory right now of Mr. Biden is from his televised debate against Donald Trump in June. I’m sure that’s not the moment Mr. Biden wants to be remembered for. But I also know that presidents come to be remembered differently, over time, for better or for worse. Their highs and lows in office, once so clearly and sharply defined, can shift in our perception. I see Mr. Biden differently now from how I did last summer, and I see his last year in office as a window into the messiness of being human.

Like most people who watched the June debate, I was shocked that night at how frail and vague Mr. Biden was. He didn’t seem present. The statements from his aides afterward were what you’d expect — he had a bad night, he was tired from traveling, he was sick. Shortly afterward the president gave a speech in North Carolina and was energetic and focused; “fiery” was how news outlets described him. But the condemnation was already taking shape, from both Republicans and Democrats: America has been deceived; the administration has been lying to us; it’s been a shadow presidency, a cover-up. The fury only grew when Mr. Biden insisted that he was still running for president and was perfectly capable of governing for a second term.

When he finally stepped aside and handed the campaign to Kamala Harris, the anger, particularly among some Democrats, didn’t cool. The accusations were like a firestorm: There was no time for a new primary. There was not enough time to campaign. When the election was lost, much of the rage turned to contempt. And now, as details come to light about advisers in the White House reportedly knowing for years that Mr. Biden was faltering with age, harsh judgments have been handed down — we as a country have been lied to in an orchestrated plot. Even Jill Biden has come under fire for reportedly trying to shield her husband.

I understand people’s anger when they feel they have been misled or even lied to. In hindsight it can seem obvious that Mr. Biden should have known that governing into his mid-80s in a second term would prove unacceptable in a re-election campaign or problematic for the country should he have won a second term. But might I suggest that there is another way to understand this, too? A more humane way? Blame is very simplistic. One person or group of people is the villain, another person or group is the victim. The lines are clear. But oftentimes blame is an easy place to hide from a more complicated and nuanced situation in which there aren’t such clear lines.

That situation, as some people around the president have described, is that Mr. Biden has bad days and good days. The same is true for most of us, no matter how old or young we are. But more to the point, someone who is elderly and has had serious health issues in the past — Mr. Biden had brain surgeries for two aneurysms in 1988 — is going to find that the bad days become more frequent. And the people around that individual, who care about that person, are probably not going to readily accept that.

free slot machines to play

This is the uncomfortable truth in millions of households in which an elderly family member is becoming forgetful, unfocused or overly tired. I want to emphasize that I am in no way diagnosing President Biden, nor should any of us. But having lived through the complexities of a parent with Alzheimer’s, I know well the rough terrain of watching a loved one change before your eyes, including the feeling of being unsure about what you are seeing or noticing. Whether it’s from disease or the whittling away of time, there are no clear paths and no easy answers. You grab onto the good days, you memorize them, and you try to diminish the severity of the bad days. It’s why it’s so hard to tell parents or grandparents or even spouses that they can’t go to work anymore or drive anymore. Just yesterday they were fine, you tell yourself. I not only experienced this firsthand as a daughter, but I also ran a caregiver support group for six years and have listened to hundreds of stories about the complexity of this stage of life.

We are having trouble retrieving the article content.

Please enable JavaScript in your browser settings.

The plaintiffs — who include Wendy Davis, a former Democratic state senator, along with a Biden campaign staff member and the bus driver — also testified, saying that the rolling road protest had been frightening and intimidating.

His lawyers admitted that he had carried out the shooting, but they said he was so unwell at the time that he could not know that what he was doing was wrong.

Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit and log into your Times account, or subscribe for all of The Times.

Thank you for your patience while we verify access.

Already a subscriber? Log in.

Want all of The Times? Subscribe.jilipark



Powered by LuckyCola-Lucky Cola Casino-luckycola slot @2013-2022 RSS Map HTML Map