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Good evening. It's Wednesday, July 10.
Tonight: the story of Joe Biden's severe cognitive impairment is about so much more than whether the Democratic Party's presidential nominee for this year and the sitting United States president has any idea of what he's saying or doing. Obviously, that is actually an important story on its own – given little things like the president's sole control over the nuclear codes and the ability to deploy U.S. troops into war zones – but it is really an indictment of so many other key institutions of authority, starting with the Democratic Party itself and its allies in the corporate media.
Almost every day now entails some new pro-Biden head popping up to admit that they knew all along – well before the debate – that Joe Biden was severely impaired, including at times when the U.S. media was viciously attacking anyone who was saying that then, as part of the right-wing disinformation machine.
A new op-ed in The New York Times today that is much talked about by actor and major Democratic Party donor George Clooney – and I know his views shouldn't matter but in Democratic Party elite circles, they very much do. He had an astounding admission in that op-ed that standing alone should cause the firing of major media figures in self-admitted shame from many media outlets.
That, of course, would only happen in a world where media outlets have a minimal degree of accountability or shame and since that's not the world we live in, it is very much worth taking a look at just how exposed they have become by this entire growing debacle around Biden and the now civil war between the White House, on the one hand, and the Democratic Party, their donor base and their media class on the other.
Then: there is this creepy rhetorical formulation that has become almost obligatory for anyone to recite who then goes on to call on Joe Biden to step down. Before anyone is permitted to do that – whether in politics, journalism, or anywhere else – they must first publicly profess “I have a profound love for Joe Biden. He is a good and decent man who has demonstrated a genuine commitment to public service and making our country better for the last 50 years. It's not an exaggeration. If you look at every single person claiming to be on Biden's side who calls for him to step down, they preface it with that profession of love and worship.
Aside from the fact that this creates a kind of Leader-worship climate – or at least one that reveals, namely, that one must profess this kind of admiration for this person, namely, that you have to say that the president is this great and kind and compassionate person – it also raises the really important question of what evidence is there that Joe Biden is actually any of those things? What has he done or said in his life that evidences this supposed decency and compassion, these values and high character?
If one looks at his record of behavior and statements over his adult life in the last six decades since he was first elected to the Senate, in the early 1970s, while still in his 20s, most of what Joe Biden has actually done and the impact he has caused in this world, in his own personal behavior, demonstrate exactly the opposite of all of these virtues. But what Washington culture often does, and I think this is such an important point, is that it demands that we separate how we judge American political leaders from the policies that they advocate and the harm they cause in the world. In other words, as long as they treat other DC athletes politely and with courtesy, we're all supposed to genuflect to their depth and greatness of character. We'll look to see whether Biden merits any of this praise and what it actually says about our politics so many people feel obligated to be so reverential to the president before even expressing their views.
And then finally: as the NATO Summit is set to begin in Washington, it actually began just yesterday, it is becoming clearer and clearer that the U.S. and its European allies have no real goal in that conflict, other than to continue to prolong it for its own sake. In other words, to ensure not that one side or another wins, or that there's diplomatic resolution, but the opposite, that the war never ends. That's now the goal. Contrary to all the propaganda about the war in Ukraine from the start, this is clearly now becoming, if not already become, yet another endless war that serves as a bottomless pit of spending and profit for the U.S. arms industry, as well as the indefinite destruction of both Ukraine and the lives of hundreds of thousands of young Ukrainian and Russian soldiers but no actual benefit to anybody else. None of the war aims set by the U.S. at the start is now even remotely possible, as virtually everyone, even the West, admits it. NATO's primary goal is to ensure that this war rages on now, without any other purpose than ensuring that the war itself continues.
For now, welcome to a new episode of System Update, starting right now.