One of the Biden White House’s greatest achievements, from the perspective of its staffers, if not necessarily the country, has been to deny the press the kind of juicy leaks that were constant under Donald Trump and frequent under his predecessors. Save for a very narrow period of time, that is, when there was a push to force an aging president toward the exits: Then and only then we got a drip-drip-drip of fascinating inside information.

For instance, we learned that Biden hadn’t held a full cabinet meeting since last October and that his handlers expected scripted questions from his cabinet officials. We learned that his capacities peak between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. and diminish outside that six-hour window. We learned that congressional Democrats, liberal donors and some journalists all had exposure to Biden’s decline that they didn’t discuss publicly until the debacle of the June debate. We learned that none other than Hunter Biden was acting as a close adviser to his father in the crucial days after that debate.

We even learned that from early in his presidency, the first lady’s closest aides worked to shield her husband from the staff that serves the first family in its living quarters, even as the aides themselves were given unusual access to the residence — as though it were essential to create a cocoon of loyalty and silence around the nation’s chief executive even when he isn’t on the job.

These are all interesting and pertinent facts about the man who officially leads the United States in a time of global danger — and they have not ceased to be pertinent because that president is no longer running for re-election.

(…)

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/08/10/opinion/joe-biden-president.html?unlocked_article_code=1.CE4.0hyL.9CNFJAmhWmk2&smid=url-share

https://archive.is/u2JyP

  • just_another_person@lemmy.world
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    4
    arrow-down
    1
    ·
    5 months ago

    The problems described in the article aren’t problematic, you are just of the same mindset as the author, and so you think it’s a problem.

    We have two popular parties in the US.

    These two parties have a system they use elect their own nominees.

    Biden was the PRESUMPTIVE nominee.

    Nobody was on any sort of legal hook to nominate him.

    He dropped out and nominated Harris.

    At this point, the ENTIRE PARTY was welcome to do whatever they wanted.

    They chose to overwhelmingly endorse Harris.

    Your issue is simply that one person in a party had that kind of pull to make her popular without a zero point discussion. It would happen in any two party system.

    • 14th_cylon@lemm.eeOP
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      1
      arrow-down
      2
      ·
      5 months ago

      The problems described in the article aren’t problematic

      problems aren’t problematic. got it. thank you for this deep wisdom 😂

      We have two popular parties in the US. (…)

      maybe read the article before you react, because the word salad you produced here has nothing to do with its content.

      the text isn’t about two party system or how party nomination works.

      Your issue is simply that one person in a party had that kind of pull

      no, that is not my issue, and you could have easily found out if you could read and bothered to read what you are reacting to.

      my issue is that group of people puppeteer a person who is in no health and mental condition to serve as a president.

      remember, that demented grandpa we saw in the tv debate was HIS BEST EFFORT, he knew the debate was going to happen, he had almost unlimited time to prepare for that, and what we saw was the result.

      the article and links in it describe how it looks on his average day.