Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why did Biden call the chairman of joint chiefs of staff "my commander in chief"?
He is a lifelong stutterer, he spoke to that on C-SPAN all the way back in 1994 and he has been making those kinds of gaffes of saying one thing for another for his entire political career. He corrected himself, indicating he isn't somehow in some delusional state of complete confusion where he was actually referring to "commander in chief" - and anyone who watched for the entire hour, seeing him deliver deep, detailed, nuanced, and extremely lucid answers on difficult policy questions would know that.
That's not how stuttering work. Stop spreading misinformation.
Your medical knowledge is sorely lacking. There are many types of stuttering and that is one of them.
Can you explain how he avoided that 4 years ago? 16 years ago? Wouldn't he have been missing up names all that time if it was due to his stutter?
Because this wasn't an issue 4 years ago, or during his VP, people are right to be concerned about what has caused the change. The vacant stare, the stiff gait, the early bedtime give credence to it being a problem that has evolved.
He has always done this. The difference is that the media decided to sabotage democracy by suddenly making this into a whole thing.
+1. Biden has been known for it for decades, it's not all that new.
Lots of people slip up mentally and swap their words. During the press conference, the NPR reporter Asma Khalid accidentally said "the debate" when she meant "the press conference."
Trump does all the time too, he called Tim Cook "Tim Apple" and introduced Marilyn Hewson, CEO of Lockheed Martin as "Marilyn Lockheed" - he mixed up Nikki Haley and Nancy Pelosi, he said we captured the airports during the Revolutionary War, he called Orban "the leader of Turkey," he mixed up George Bush and Jeb Bush, and lots of other things.
If it's a "definite sign of dementia" to swap words like that, then Trump has dementia in spades. There's no getting around that one if that's the argument you want to make.
So both of you mean to tell us that Biden was routinely mixing up names and did so in all his debates in 2020 and not making sense. Because I don't recall that AT ALL.
Biden occasionally mixes words. So does Trump. But even when Biden makes a gaffe he still makes sense, because either he corrects himself or it's plainly obvious what he meant, because it was only one word that was out of place.
Trump on the other hand not only mixes up his words (Tim Apple and so on) but then goes on lengthy minutes-long incoherent rants that definitely DO NOT make sense.
But the debate was a horror show for Biden. Trump looked normal
So Trump should be asked the same questions for an hour. Let’s see how he does. Let’s see how many times Hannibal Lecter comes up.
I'd love to see Trump identify the NATO member countries. I bet he couldn't even find 2-3 of them on a map. He didn't read his briefing documents when he was president, is undereducated, incurious, and frankly not very smart--except for his wily political instincts. Why anyone thinks he'll be better the second time around is beyond me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why did Biden call the chairman of joint chiefs of staff "my commander in chief"?
He is a lifelong stutterer, he spoke to that on C-SPAN all the way back in 1994 and he has been making those kinds of gaffes of saying one thing for another for his entire political career. He corrected himself, indicating he isn't somehow in some delusional state of complete confusion where he was actually referring to "commander in chief" - and anyone who watched for the entire hour, seeing him deliver deep, detailed, nuanced, and extremely lucid answers on difficult policy questions would know that.
That's not how stuttering work. Stop spreading misinformation.
Your medical knowledge is sorely lacking. There are many types of stuttering and that is one of them.
Can you explain how he avoided that 4 years ago? 16 years ago? Wouldn't he have been missing up names all that time if it was due to his stutter?
Because this wasn't an issue 4 years ago, or during his VP, people are right to be concerned about what has caused the change. The vacant stare, the stiff gait, the early bedtime give credence to it being a problem that has evolved.
He has always done this. The difference is that the media decided to sabotage democracy by suddenly making this into a whole thing.
+1. Biden has been known for it for decades, it's not all that new.
Lots of people slip up mentally and swap their words. During the press conference, the NPR reporter Asma Khalid accidentally said "the debate" when she meant "the press conference."
Trump does all the time too, he called Tim Cook "Tim Apple" and introduced Marilyn Hewson, CEO of Lockheed Martin as "Marilyn Lockheed" - he mixed up Nikki Haley and Nancy Pelosi, he said we captured the airports during the Revolutionary War, he called Orban "the leader of Turkey," he mixed up George Bush and Jeb Bush, and lots of other things.
If it's a "definite sign of dementia" to swap words like that, then Trump has dementia in spades. There's no getting around that one if that's the argument you want to make.
So both of you mean to tell us that Biden was routinely mixing up names and did so in all his debates in 2020 and not making sense. Because I don't recall that AT ALL.
Biden occasionally mixes words. So does Trump. But even when Biden makes a gaffe he still makes sense, because either he corrects himself or it's plainly obvious what he meant, because it was only one word that was out of place.
Trump on the other hand not only mixes up his words (Tim Apple and so on) but then goes on lengthy minutes-long incoherent rants that definitely DO NOT make sense.
But the debate was a horror show for Biden. Trump looked normal
So Trump should be asked the same questions for an hour. Let’s see how he does. Let’s see how many times Hannibal Lecter comes up.
I'd love to see Trump identify the NATO member countries. I bet he couldn't even find 2-3 of them on a map. He didn't read his briefing documents when he was president, is undereducated, incurious, and frankly not very smart--except for his wily political instincts. Why anyone thinks he'll be better the second time around is beyond me.
They think they’ll get Project 2025 accomplished and will end democracy, or at least democracy for anyone not White rich and Republican. They don’t care beyond that because they like Trump’s treason, they like that he breaks the law.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why did Biden call the chairman of joint chiefs of staff "my commander in chief"?
He is a lifelong stutterer, he spoke to that on C-SPAN all the way back in 1994 and he has been making those kinds of gaffes of saying one thing for another for his entire political career. He corrected himself, indicating he isn't somehow in some delusional state of complete confusion where he was actually referring to "commander in chief" - and anyone who watched for the entire hour, seeing him deliver deep, detailed, nuanced, and extremely lucid answers on difficult policy questions would know that.
That's not how stuttering work. Stop spreading misinformation.
Your medical knowledge is sorely lacking. There are many types of stuttering and that is one of them.
Can you explain how he avoided that 4 years ago? 16 years ago? Wouldn't he have been missing up names all that time if it was due to his stutter?
Because this wasn't an issue 4 years ago, or during his VP, people are right to be concerned about what has caused the change. The vacant stare, the stiff gait, the early bedtime give credence to it being a problem that has evolved.
He has always done this. The difference is that the media decided to sabotage democracy by suddenly making this into a whole thing.
+1. Biden has been known for it for decades, it's not all that new.
Lots of people slip up mentally and swap their words. During the press conference, the NPR reporter Asma Khalid accidentally said "the debate" when she meant "the press conference."
Trump does all the time too, he called Tim Cook "Tim Apple" and introduced Marilyn Hewson, CEO of Lockheed Martin as "Marilyn Lockheed" - he mixed up Nikki Haley and Nancy Pelosi, he said we captured the airports during the Revolutionary War, he called Orban "the leader of Turkey," he mixed up George Bush and Jeb Bush, and lots of other things.
If it's a "definite sign of dementia" to swap words like that, then Trump has dementia in spades. There's no getting around that one if that's the argument you want to make.
So both of you mean to tell us that Biden was routinely mixing up names and did so in all his debates in 2020 and not making sense. Because I don't recall that AT ALL.
Biden occasionally mixes words. So does Trump. But even when Biden makes a gaffe he still makes sense, because either he corrects himself or it's plainly obvious what he meant, because it was only one word that was out of place.
Trump on the other hand not only mixes up his words (Tim Apple and so on) but then goes on lengthy minutes-long incoherent rants that definitely DO NOT make sense.
But the debate was a horror show for Biden. Trump looked normal
So Trump should be asked the same questions for an hour. Let’s see how he does. Let’s see how many times Hannibal Lecter comes up.
I'd love to see Trump identify the NATO member countries. I bet he couldn't even find 2-3 of them on a map. He didn't read his briefing documents when he was president, is undereducated, incurious, and frankly not very smart--except for his wily political instincts. Why anyone thinks he'll be better the second time around is beyond me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why did Biden call the chairman of joint chiefs of staff "my commander in chief"?
He is a lifelong stutterer, he spoke to that on C-SPAN all the way back in 1994 and he has been making those kinds of gaffes of saying one thing for another for his entire political career. He corrected himself, indicating he isn't somehow in some delusional state of complete confusion where he was actually referring to "commander in chief" - and anyone who watched for the entire hour, seeing him deliver deep, detailed, nuanced, and extremely lucid answers on difficult policy questions would know that.
That's not how stuttering work. Stop spreading misinformation.
Your medical knowledge is sorely lacking. There are many types of stuttering and that is one of them.
Can you explain how he avoided that 4 years ago? 16 years ago? Wouldn't he have been missing up names all that time if it was due to his stutter?
Because this wasn't an issue 4 years ago, or during his VP, people are right to be concerned about what has caused the change. The vacant stare, the stiff gait, the early bedtime give credence to it being a problem that has evolved.
He has always done this. The difference is that the media decided to sabotage democracy by suddenly making this into a whole thing.
+1. Biden has been known for it for decades, it's not all that new.
Lots of people slip up mentally and swap their words. During the press conference, the NPR reporter Asma Khalid accidentally said "the debate" when she meant "the press conference."
Trump does all the time too, he called Tim Cook "Tim Apple" and introduced Marilyn Hewson, CEO of Lockheed Martin as "Marilyn Lockheed" - he mixed up Nikki Haley and Nancy Pelosi, he said we captured the airports during the Revolutionary War, he called Orban "the leader of Turkey," he mixed up George Bush and Jeb Bush, and lots of other things.
If it's a "definite sign of dementia" to swap words like that, then Trump has dementia in spades. There's no getting around that one if that's the argument you want to make.
So both of you mean to tell us that Biden was routinely mixing up names and did so in all his debates in 2020 and not making sense. Because I don't recall that AT ALL.
Biden occasionally mixes words. So does Trump. But even when Biden makes a gaffe he still makes sense, because either he corrects himself or it's plainly obvious what he meant, because it was only one word that was out of place.
Trump on the other hand not only mixes up his words (Tim Apple and so on) but then goes on lengthy minutes-long incoherent rants that definitely DO NOT make sense.
But the debate was a horror show for Biden. Trump looked normal
Normal, if you think it's fine for a Presidential candidate to launch an incoherent Gish Gallop of 50 proven lies, or to completely dodge important questions about J6 or whether he would pull out of NATO.
I and any normal thinking person do not think Trump looked "normal" at all. He looked deranged.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why did Biden call the chairman of joint chiefs of staff "my commander in chief"?
He is a lifelong stutterer, he spoke to that on C-SPAN all the way back in 1994 and he has been making those kinds of gaffes of saying one thing for another for his entire political career. He corrected himself, indicating he isn't somehow in some delusional state of complete confusion where he was actually referring to "commander in chief" - and anyone who watched for the entire hour, seeing him deliver deep, detailed, nuanced, and extremely lucid answers on difficult policy questions would know that.
That's not how stuttering work. Stop spreading misinformation.
Your medical knowledge is sorely lacking. There are many types of stuttering and that is one of them.
Can you explain how he avoided that 4 years ago? 16 years ago? Wouldn't he have been missing up names all that time if it was due to his stutter?
Because this wasn't an issue 4 years ago, or during his VP, people are right to be concerned about what has caused the change. The vacant stare, the stiff gait, the early bedtime give credence to it being a problem that has evolved.
He has always done this. The difference is that the media decided to sabotage democracy by suddenly making this into a whole thing.
+1. Biden has been known for it for decades, it's not all that new.
Lots of people slip up mentally and swap their words. During the press conference, the NPR reporter Asma Khalid accidentally said "the debate" when she meant "the press conference."
Trump does all the time too, he called Tim Cook "Tim Apple" and introduced Marilyn Hewson, CEO of Lockheed Martin as "Marilyn Lockheed" - he mixed up Nikki Haley and Nancy Pelosi, he said we captured the airports during the Revolutionary War, he called Orban "the leader of Turkey," he mixed up George Bush and Jeb Bush, and lots of other things.
If it's a "definite sign of dementia" to swap words like that, then Trump has dementia in spades. There's no getting around that one if that's the argument you want to make.
So both of you mean to tell us that Biden was routinely mixing up names and did so in all his debates in 2020 and not making sense. Because I don't recall that AT ALL.
Biden occasionally mixes words. So does Trump. But even when Biden makes a gaffe he still makes sense, because either he corrects himself or it's plainly obvious what he meant, because it was only one word that was out of place.
Trump on the other hand not only mixes up his words (Tim Apple and so on) but then goes on lengthy minutes-long incoherent rants that definitely DO NOT make sense.
But the debate was a horror show for Biden. Trump looked normal
So Trump should be asked the same questions for an hour. Let’s see how he does. Let’s see how many times Hannibal Lecter comes up.
I'd love to see Trump identify the NATO member countries. I bet he couldn't even find 2-3 of them on a map. He didn't read his briefing documents when he was president, is undereducated, incurious, and frankly not very smart--except for his wily political instincts. Why anyone thinks he'll be better the second time around is beyond me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why did Biden call the chairman of joint chiefs of staff "my commander in chief"?
He is a lifelong stutterer, he spoke to that on C-SPAN all the way back in 1994 and he has been making those kinds of gaffes of saying one thing for another for his entire political career. He corrected himself, indicating he isn't somehow in some delusional state of complete confusion where he was actually referring to "commander in chief" - and anyone who watched for the entire hour, seeing him deliver deep, detailed, nuanced, and extremely lucid answers on difficult policy questions would know that.
That's not how stuttering work. Stop spreading misinformation.
Your medical knowledge is sorely lacking. There are many types of stuttering and that is one of them.
Can you explain how he avoided that 4 years ago? 16 years ago? Wouldn't he have been missing up names all that time if it was due to his stutter?
Because this wasn't an issue 4 years ago, or during his VP, people are right to be concerned about what has caused the change. The vacant stare, the stiff gait, the early bedtime give credence to it being a problem that has evolved.
He has always done this. The difference is that the media decided to sabotage democracy by suddenly making this into a whole thing.
+1. Biden has been known for it for decades, it's not all that new.
Lots of people slip up mentally and swap their words. During the press conference, the NPR reporter Asma Khalid accidentally said "the debate" when she meant "the press conference."
Trump does all the time too, he called Tim Cook "Tim Apple" and introduced Marilyn Hewson, CEO of Lockheed Martin as "Marilyn Lockheed" - he mixed up Nikki Haley and Nancy Pelosi, he said we captured the airports during the Revolutionary War, he called Orban "the leader of Turkey," he mixed up George Bush and Jeb Bush, and lots of other things.
If it's a "definite sign of dementia" to swap words like that, then Trump has dementia in spades. There's no getting around that one if that's the argument you want to make.
So both of you mean to tell us that Biden was routinely mixing up names and did so in all his debates in 2020 and not making sense. Because I don't recall that AT ALL.
Biden occasionally mixes words. So does Trump. But even when Biden makes a gaffe he still makes sense, because either he corrects himself or it's plainly obvious what he meant, because it was only one word that was out of place.
Trump on the other hand not only mixes up his words (Tim Apple and so on) but then goes on lengthy minutes-long incoherent rants that definitely DO NOT make sense.
But the debate was a horror show for Biden. Trump looked normal
So Trump should be asked the same questions for an hour. Let’s see how he does. Let’s see how many times Hannibal Lecter comes up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why did Biden call the chairman of joint chiefs of staff "my commander in chief"?
He is a lifelong stutterer, he spoke to that on C-SPAN all the way back in 1994 and he has been making those kinds of gaffes of saying one thing for another for his entire political career. He corrected himself, indicating he isn't somehow in some delusional state of complete confusion where he was actually referring to "commander in chief" - and anyone who watched for the entire hour, seeing him deliver deep, detailed, nuanced, and extremely lucid answers on difficult policy questions would know that.
That's not how stuttering work. Stop spreading misinformation.
Your medical knowledge is sorely lacking. There are many types of stuttering and that is one of them.
Can you explain how he avoided that 4 years ago? 16 years ago? Wouldn't he have been missing up names all that time if it was due to his stutter?
Because this wasn't an issue 4 years ago, or during his VP, people are right to be concerned about what has caused the change. The vacant stare, the stiff gait, the early bedtime give credence to it being a problem that has evolved.
He has always done this. The difference is that the media decided to sabotage democracy by suddenly making this into a whole thing.
+1. Biden has been known for it for decades, it's not all that new.
Lots of people slip up mentally and swap their words. During the press conference, the NPR reporter Asma Khalid accidentally said "the debate" when she meant "the press conference."
Trump does all the time too, he called Tim Cook "Tim Apple" and introduced Marilyn Hewson, CEO of Lockheed Martin as "Marilyn Lockheed" - he mixed up Nikki Haley and Nancy Pelosi, he said we captured the airports during the Revolutionary War, he called Orban "the leader of Turkey," he mixed up George Bush and Jeb Bush, and lots of other things.
If it's a "definite sign of dementia" to swap words like that, then Trump has dementia in spades. There's no getting around that one if that's the argument you want to make.
So both of you mean to tell us that Biden was routinely mixing up names and did so in all his debates in 2020 and not making sense. Because I don't recall that AT ALL.
Biden occasionally mixes words. So does Trump. But even when Biden makes a gaffe he still makes sense, because either he corrects himself or it's plainly obvious what he meant, because it was only one word that was out of place.
Trump on the other hand not only mixes up his words (Tim Apple and so on) but then goes on lengthy minutes-long incoherent rants that definitely DO NOT make sense.
But the debate was a horror show for Biden. Trump looked normal
So Trump should be asked the same questions for an hour. Let’s see how he does. Let’s see how many times Hannibal Lecter comes up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why did Biden call the chairman of joint chiefs of staff "my commander in chief"?
He is a lifelong stutterer, he spoke to that on C-SPAN all the way back in 1994 and he has been making those kinds of gaffes of saying one thing for another for his entire political career. He corrected himself, indicating he isn't somehow in some delusional state of complete confusion where he was actually referring to "commander in chief" - and anyone who watched for the entire hour, seeing him deliver deep, detailed, nuanced, and extremely lucid answers on difficult policy questions would know that.
That's not how stuttering work. Stop spreading misinformation.
Your medical knowledge is sorely lacking. There are many types of stuttering and that is one of them.
Can you explain how he avoided that 4 years ago? 16 years ago? Wouldn't he have been missing up names all that time if it was due to his stutter?
Because this wasn't an issue 4 years ago, or during his VP, people are right to be concerned about what has caused the change. The vacant stare, the stiff gait, the early bedtime give credence to it being a problem that has evolved.
He has always done this. The difference is that the media decided to sabotage democracy by suddenly making this into a whole thing.
+1. Biden has been known for it for decades, it's not all that new.
Lots of people slip up mentally and swap their words. During the press conference, the NPR reporter Asma Khalid accidentally said "the debate" when she meant "the press conference."
Trump does all the time too, he called Tim Cook "Tim Apple" and introduced Marilyn Hewson, CEO of Lockheed Martin as "Marilyn Lockheed" - he mixed up Nikki Haley and Nancy Pelosi, he said we captured the airports during the Revolutionary War, he called Orban "the leader of Turkey," he mixed up George Bush and Jeb Bush, and lots of other things.
If it's a "definite sign of dementia" to swap words like that, then Trump has dementia in spades. There's no getting around that one if that's the argument you want to make.
So both of you mean to tell us that Biden was routinely mixing up names and did so in all his debates in 2020 and not making sense. Because I don't recall that AT ALL.
Biden occasionally mixes words. So does Trump. But even when Biden makes a gaffe he still makes sense, because either he corrects himself or it's plainly obvious what he meant, because it was only one word that was out of place.
Trump on the other hand not only mixes up his words (Tim Apple and so on) but then goes on lengthy minutes-long incoherent rants that definitely DO NOT make sense.
But the debate was a horror show for Biden. Trump looked normal
True, but Biden may not end up being the nominee. If Trump runs against someone like Kamala, he’s not going to look so normal. He’ll look old and gross, and he’ll sound as batshit crazy as he usually is. His campaign is praying he ends up running against Joe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why did Biden call the chairman of joint chiefs of staff "my commander in chief"?
He is a lifelong stutterer, he spoke to that on C-SPAN all the way back in 1994 and he has been making those kinds of gaffes of saying one thing for another for his entire political career. He corrected himself, indicating he isn't somehow in some delusional state of complete confusion where he was actually referring to "commander in chief" - and anyone who watched for the entire hour, seeing him deliver deep, detailed, nuanced, and extremely lucid answers on difficult policy questions would know that.
That's not how stuttering work. Stop spreading misinformation.
Your medical knowledge is sorely lacking. There are many types of stuttering and that is one of them.
Can you explain how he avoided that 4 years ago? 16 years ago? Wouldn't he have been missing up names all that time if it was due to his stutter?
Because this wasn't an issue 4 years ago, or during his VP, people are right to be concerned about what has caused the change. The vacant stare, the stiff gait, the early bedtime give credence to it being a problem that has evolved.
He has always done this. The difference is that the media decided to sabotage democracy by suddenly making this into a whole thing.
+1. Biden has been known for it for decades, it's not all that new.
Lots of people slip up mentally and swap their words. During the press conference, the NPR reporter Asma Khalid accidentally said "the debate" when she meant "the press conference."
Trump does all the time too, he called Tim Cook "Tim Apple" and introduced Marilyn Hewson, CEO of Lockheed Martin as "Marilyn Lockheed" - he mixed up Nikki Haley and Nancy Pelosi, he said we captured the airports during the Revolutionary War, he called Orban "the leader of Turkey," he mixed up George Bush and Jeb Bush, and lots of other things.
If it's a "definite sign of dementia" to swap words like that, then Trump has dementia in spades. There's no getting around that one if that's the argument you want to make.
So both of you mean to tell us that Biden was routinely mixing up names and did so in all his debates in 2020 and not making sense. Because I don't recall that AT ALL.
Biden occasionally mixes words. So does Trump. But even when Biden makes a gaffe he still makes sense, because either he corrects himself or it's plainly obvious what he meant, because it was only one word that was out of place.
Trump on the other hand not only mixes up his words (Tim Apple and so on) but then goes on lengthy minutes-long incoherent rants that definitely DO NOT make sense.
But the debate was a horror show for Biden. Trump looked normal
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why did Biden call the chairman of joint chiefs of staff "my commander in chief"?
He is a lifelong stutterer, he spoke to that on C-SPAN all the way back in 1994 and he has been making those kinds of gaffes of saying one thing for another for his entire political career. He corrected himself, indicating he isn't somehow in some delusional state of complete confusion where he was actually referring to "commander in chief" - and anyone who watched for the entire hour, seeing him deliver deep, detailed, nuanced, and extremely lucid answers on difficult policy questions would know that.
That's not how stuttering work. Stop spreading misinformation.
Your medical knowledge is sorely lacking. There are many types of stuttering and that is one of them.
Can you explain how he avoided that 4 years ago? 16 years ago? Wouldn't he have been missing up names all that time if it was due to his stutter?
Because this wasn't an issue 4 years ago, or during his VP, people are right to be concerned about what has caused the change. The vacant stare, the stiff gait, the early bedtime give credence to it being a problem that has evolved.
He has always done this. The difference is that the media decided to sabotage democracy by suddenly making this into a whole thing.
+1. Biden has been known for it for decades, it's not all that new.
Lots of people slip up mentally and swap their words. During the press conference, the NPR reporter Asma Khalid accidentally said "the debate" when she meant "the press conference."
Trump does all the time too, he called Tim Cook "Tim Apple" and introduced Marilyn Hewson, CEO of Lockheed Martin as "Marilyn Lockheed" - he mixed up Nikki Haley and Nancy Pelosi, he said we captured the airports during the Revolutionary War, he called Orban "the leader of Turkey," he mixed up George Bush and Jeb Bush, and lots of other things.
If it's a "definite sign of dementia" to swap words like that, then Trump has dementia in spades. There's no getting around that one if that's the argument you want to make.
So both of you mean to tell us that Biden was routinely mixing up names and did so in all his debates in 2020 and not making sense. Because I don't recall that AT ALL.
Biden occasionally mixes words. So does Trump. But even when Biden makes a gaffe he still makes sense, because either he corrects himself or it's plainly obvious what he meant, because it was only one word that was out of place.
Trump on the other hand not only mixes up his words (Tim Apple and so on) but then goes on lengthy minutes-long incoherent rants that definitely DO NOT make sense.
But the debate was a horror show for Biden. Trump looked normal
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why did Biden call the chairman of joint chiefs of staff "my commander in chief"?
He is a lifelong stutterer, he spoke to that on C-SPAN all the way back in 1994 and he has been making those kinds of gaffes of saying one thing for another for his entire political career. He corrected himself, indicating he isn't somehow in some delusional state of complete confusion where he was actually referring to "commander in chief" - and anyone who watched for the entire hour, seeing him deliver deep, detailed, nuanced, and extremely lucid answers on difficult policy questions would know that.
That's not how stuttering work. Stop spreading misinformation.
Your medical knowledge is sorely lacking. There are many types of stuttering and that is one of them.
Can you explain how he avoided that 4 years ago? 16 years ago? Wouldn't he have been missing up names all that time if it was due to his stutter?
Because this wasn't an issue 4 years ago, or during his VP, people are right to be concerned about what has caused the change. The vacant stare, the stiff gait, the early bedtime give credence to it being a problem that has evolved.
He has always done this. The difference is that the media decided to sabotage democracy by suddenly making this into a whole thing.
+1. Biden has been known for it for decades, it's not all that new.
Lots of people slip up mentally and swap their words. During the press conference, the NPR reporter Asma Khalid accidentally said "the debate" when she meant "the press conference."
Trump does all the time too, he called Tim Cook "Tim Apple" and introduced Marilyn Hewson, CEO of Lockheed Martin as "Marilyn Lockheed" - he mixed up Nikki Haley and Nancy Pelosi, he said we captured the airports during the Revolutionary War, he called Orban "the leader of Turkey," he mixed up George Bush and Jeb Bush, and lots of other things.
If it's a "definite sign of dementia" to swap words like that, then Trump has dementia in spades. There's no getting around that one if that's the argument you want to make.
So both of you mean to tell us that Biden was routinely mixing up names and did so in all his debates in 2020 and not making sense. Because I don't recall that AT ALL.
Biden occasionally mixes words. So does Trump. But even when Biden makes a gaffe he still makes sense, because either he corrects himself or it's plainly obvious what he meant, because it was only one word that was out of place.
Trump on the other hand not only mixes up his words (Tim Apple and so on) but then goes on lengthy minutes-long incoherent rants that definitely DO NOT make sense.
But the debate was a horror show for Biden. Trump looked normal
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here's my theory: When Biden took office, his staff really believed they were saving the country after Trump's mess. This got to their heads and they started to get increasingly insular thinking they know best. After all, the last guy really screwed things up, right? The result is a lack of self-critical reflection and these kinds of screw ups.
I think a good staff - for a President or any executive -- really makes all the difference.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why did Biden call the chairman of joint chiefs of staff "my commander in chief"?
He is a lifelong stutterer, he spoke to that on C-SPAN all the way back in 1994 and he has been making those kinds of gaffes of saying one thing for another for his entire political career. He corrected himself, indicating he isn't somehow in some delusional state of complete confusion where he was actually referring to "commander in chief" - and anyone who watched for the entire hour, seeing him deliver deep, detailed, nuanced, and extremely lucid answers on difficult policy questions would know that.
That's not how stuttering work. Stop spreading misinformation.
Your medical knowledge is sorely lacking. There are many types of stuttering and that is one of them.
Can you explain how he avoided that 4 years ago? 16 years ago? Wouldn't he have been missing up names all that time if it was due to his stutter?
Because this wasn't an issue 4 years ago, or during his VP, people are right to be concerned about what has caused the change. The vacant stare, the stiff gait, the early bedtime give credence to it being a problem that has evolved.
He has always done this. The difference is that the media decided to sabotage democracy by suddenly making this into a whole thing.
+1. Biden has been known for it for decades, it's not all that new.
Lots of people slip up mentally and swap their words. During the press conference, the NPR reporter Asma Khalid accidentally said "the debate" when she meant "the press conference."
Trump does all the time too, he called Tim Cook "Tim Apple" and introduced Marilyn Hewson, CEO of Lockheed Martin as "Marilyn Lockheed" - he mixed up Nikki Haley and Nancy Pelosi, he said we captured the airports during the Revolutionary War, he called Orban "the leader of Turkey," he mixed up George Bush and Jeb Bush, and lots of other things.
If it's a "definite sign of dementia" to swap words like that, then Trump has dementia in spades. There's no getting around that one if that's the argument you want to make.
So both of you mean to tell us that Biden was routinely mixing up names and did so in all his debates in 2020 and not making sense. Because I don't recall that AT ALL.
Biden occasionally mixes words. So does Trump. But even when Biden makes a gaffe he still makes sense, because either he corrects himself or it's plainly obvious what he meant, because it was only one word that was out of place.
Trump on the other hand not only mixes up his words (Tim Apple and so on) but then goes on lengthy minutes-long incoherent rants that definitely DO NOT make sense.