Showing posts with label Bernie Sanders. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bernie Sanders. Show all posts

Saturday, January 30, 2021

Jeff Bezos' Nightmare

jeffbezosnightmare


From September 8, 2019, that's "Jeff Bezos' Nightmare."  C.I. noted:


Isaiah's latest THE WORLD TODAY JUST NUTS "Jeff Bezos' Nightmare."  As Joe Biden cchases his tail, Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders rise in the polling much to Jeff's dismay. 
Isaiah archives his comics at THE WORLD TODAY JUST NUTS.

Jeff and the oligarchy got their way -- Bernie didn't get the nomination, Elizabeth didn't get the nomination.  It went to craven and corrupt Joe.  Any idiot dumb enough to tell you we have to be hopeful is just postponing reality.  Joe's plan is to do nothing.  And we can't afford that.

We need to be aware that climate change isn't be addressed, that the wars are continuing and that Joe and the Congress have no plans to help the American people.


Go read Ann's "Joe Biden is not an improvement" because she gets it.  Also read Marcia's "It is time to cancel Batwoman" -- I liked the Ruby Rose BATWOMAN.  I'm done with the show now.  I watched two episodes and the show sucks.  When Ruby left the show, they should have cancelled it.  Stan's covering a book in "Adrienne Barbeau's bad book THERE ARE WORSE THINGS I COULD DO" so check that out.
"


Here's C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"

 Friday, January 1 2021.  History is largely ignored by the press.


REUTERS notes, "Iraqi security forces have killed Abu Yaser al-Issawi, an Islamic State commander who had claimed to be the leader of the group in Iraq and its 'deputy caliph', Prime Minister Mustafa Al-Kadhimi said on Thursday."  Said?  Well he Tweeted:



We promised and fulfilled. I gave my word to pursue [ISIS] terrorists, we gave them a thundering response. Our heroic armed forces have eliminated [ISIS] commander Abu Yaser Al-Issawi as part of an intelligence-led operation. Long live Iraq and its patriotic armed forces.


And while Tweeted is more accurate than "said,"  even more accurate would be "claimed."


How many times did we hear, for example, that Abu Ayyub al-Masri was killed -- starting as far back as 2006 and he wasn't killed until 2010.  And what of the other leader, Abu Omar al-Baghdadi?  How many times was the world told he was dead? Repeatedly in 2007, as I remember, and also true, the Iraqi government insisted they had arrested him in 2009 -- even produced photos claiming it was him.  It wasn't.  He would be killed in 2010 -- in the same attack that killed al-Masri, by the way.


More to the point, those two deaths didn't really matter.  David Rising (AP) reported on those two deaths:

The U.S. and Iraq claimed a major victory against al-Qaida on Monday, saying their forces killed the terror group's two top figures in this country in an air and ground assault on their safehouse near Saddam Hussein's hometown.

Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki announced the killings of Abu Omar al-Baghdadi and Abu Ayyub al-Masri at a news conference and showed photographs of their bloody corpses. U.S. military officials later confirmed the deaths, which Vice President Joe Biden called a "potentially devastating blow" to al-Qaida in Iraq.

[. . .]

But Biden, President Barack Obama's point person on Iraq, said the deaths of the al-Qaida leaders underscored their overall improvement.

"The Iraqis led this operation, and it was based on intelligence the Iraqi security forces themselves developed," said Biden, who came before reporters in the White House briefing room to draw added attention to the results.


Potentially devastating blow, Joe?


No.  No, four years later, they'd not only be stronger, they'd become one of the most infamous terrorist groups in the world when they seized control of the second largest city in Iraq, Mosul.  Now terrorist groups terrorize -- hence their name.  They don't attempt to rule.  Somehow, ISIS -- not at all weakened -- managed to do what none before them could and they occupied and controlled Mosul not for days, not for weeks, not for months, for years.


And something else let's not forget, a US service member was killed in that attack.  Private 1st Class Charlie Cabay Antonio.  He was 28 years old, his friends called him Bong, he was from Kahuhi, Hawaii.  He suffered.  His family and friends suffered.


But for all of Joe's blustering -- which never included mentioning Charlie Antonio by name -- ISIS wasn't ended or even really harmed.


As Matthew Frankel noted two months later that year (2010) at Brookings:


Much has been made of Monday’s announcement of the recent killing of the number three man in all of Al Qaeda. The consensus seems to be that Mustafa Abu al-Yazid’s death will be a significant blow in the war on terror, but it’s much more likely to have no effect at all. If the past seven years in Iraq is any indication, the removal of enemy leaders has little to no impact on the group’s ability to conduct attacks against us.

The recent killing of top two leaders of Al Qaeda in Iraq, Abu Ayub al-Masri and Abu Umar al-Baghdadi, is a perfect example. “The death of these terrorists is potentially the most significant blow to Al Qaeda in Iraq since the beginning of the insurgency,” said General Ray Odierno, commander of US forces in Iraq, after the operation, which took place late last month.

The good feeling lasted less than three weeks, however. A series of devastating jihadist-led coordinated attacks across Iraq, killing over 100 people, soon reduced Odierno’s comments to mere hyperbole. And the fact that Masri’s death didn’t mean the end of Al Qaeda in Iraq shouldn’t be a surprise to anyone who has followed Iraq closely since 2003. In the past, whenever officials have pronounced upon the significance of an enemy killing, it has always proven premature.

So why hasn’t the removal of insurgent and terrorist leadership yielded more successful outcomes in Iraq? My research of twenty different high-value targeting campaigns from Algeria to Chechnya to Japan suggests that such operations have the greatest chance of success when conducted by local forces against a centralized opponent in conjunction with larger counterinsurgency operations. Until recently, American targeting efforts in Iraq failed to meet any of these criteria.

One needs to go back in time only four years to understand this dynamic firsthand. In June 2006, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi was finally killed after a months-long manhunt. “Zarqawi’s death is a severe blow to Al Qaeda. It’s a victory in the global war on terror,” President Bush said at the time. But the “victory”—such as it was—proved to be short-lived. Weekly attacks against Coalition forces climbed from 950 in the week before Zarqawi’s death to 1400 just three months later. High-profile attacks nearly doubled over the next nine months, according to U.S. military data.

And our struggles with high-value targeting operations in Iraq have hardly been limited to Sunni jihadist groups. Overemphasis on targeting operations plagued our efforts in the early years of the war. In the months following the fall of Saddam Hussein’s regime, U.S. forces made finding the fugitive leader, his sons, and other holdouts from the infamous “deck of cards” their top priority, ignoring the fact that anti-occupation sentiment had spread to tribal and non-Baathist Sunni figures and spawned a broad decentralized insurgency.

Poorly-conceived and poorly-managed targeting efforts added fuel to the fire. Brazen midnight US military raids sometimes led to the capture of an insurgent, but often created a new generation of enemies as a result of rough tactics and lack of sensitivity towards local customs.

Furthermore, since the Sunni insurgency was decentralized, with local commanders holding large amounts of autonomy, the targeting campaign did little to stem the levels of violence. The eventual capture of Saddam, and the deaths of his sons, had no effect on the growing insurgency. Instead, it took a combination of persistent attacks by Shia militias and the rise of the Anbar Awakening to defeat the bulk of the Sunni insurgency.

History has shown that a military force that fights insurgents far from its home turf, like American soldiers have done in Iraq, will have a severe disadvantage because troops don’t understand the local cultural dynamics and networks. Despite our technological superiority, the United States often falls short in the area of local intelligence collection, leading to poor target selection and unnecessary collateral damage as we have seen in both Iraq and Afghanistan.


The press, yet again, plays dumb today and treats a claim as proof and treats the claim as significant.  There's no historical evidence to suggest that the death, if it took place, is in any way significant or that it will alter the trajectory of ISIS in any significant manner.


But don't let facts, reality or the examples from the past interrupt the nonsensical ravings, right?


And don't let the claim force you to note the executions in Iraq.  MEMO notes:


Executions are imminent in Iraq following the president's approval of the death sentences for hundreds of Sunni prisoners in response to the suicide bombings in the capital Baghdad last week, the Arab Organisation for Human Rights in the UK (AOHR UK) has warned.

The execution of 340 civilians arrested and detained under Article 4 of the country's Terrorism Law was approved two days after the bomb blasts, in which 32 were killed and for which [ISIS] claimed responsibility.

Three detainees were executed last Monday in the Nasiriyah Central Prison. According to AOHR UK, the condemned men came from the provinces of Nineveh, Anbar. Notably, all three were Sunni Muslims, raising concerns that their execution was based on sectarian grounds.


Mosul.  The city was destroyed by bombings carried out by ISIS, the US government and the Iraqi government.  That US and Iraq were 'liberating' the city.  All this time later, Mosul remains in ruins.  AFP reports on one section of the city:

Mosul's Old City still lies in ruins three years after intense fighting drove out Islamic State jihadists. Many Mosul residents long waited for compensation or rebuilding -- in vain, as Iraq remains mired in political and economic crisis, reported AFP. With rebuilding unlikely and Iraq's economy in tailspin, homeowners are desperate to sell. But many who lived through the horrors of IS rule there are now unable to find buyers for their properties in what still resembles a warzone.


A few days ago, THE NEW ARAB Tweeted:


"#Iraq's second largest city remains scarred by the war against the Islamic State. Although peace has returned, much of Mosul still lies in ruins" writes Sylvain Mercadier



Last month, Samya Kullab (AP) wrote:


The U.N. has estimated that over 8,000 Mosul homes were destroyed in intense airstrikes to root out IS. The nine-month operation left at least 9,000 dead, according to an AP investigation.

Memories of the group’s brutality still haunt locals, who remember a time when the city squares were used for the public beheading of those who dared violate the militants' rules.

The Old City on the west bank of the Tigris River, once the jewel of Mosul, remains in ruins even as newer parts of the city have seen a cautious recovery. The revival, the residents say, is mostly their own doing.

“I didn’t see a single dollar from the government,” said Ahmed Sarhan, who runs a family coffee business.


There are many problems with what Kullab wrote -- not reported, typed.  Including where did the reconstruction money go?  


Recently, the last seven or so months, the Iraqi government has claimed (lied) that they diverted it to COVID relief.  Again, that's a lie.  But if they had diverted it, it still wouldn't explain where all the money was prior to the COVID emerging on the world stage in February of last year.  Mosul should have been rebuilt long ago and it is an example of the ongoing corruption of the Iraqi government that continues year after year, regardless of which coward who fled Iraq is installed as prime minister.  


In 2020, AFP noted, "Iraq gathered $30 billion in pledges from international donors in Kuwait in 2018 to rebuild, but virtually none of the funds have been disbursed."  30 billion.  And yet no real rebuilding -- the rebuilding that has taken place has been done by the United Nations.


$30 billion.  Wasted.  A corrupt government that pockets the money -- over and over, we see this.


Turning to the US, David Sirota has a DAILY POSTER report that NEWSWEEK is part of:


On January 4, Joe Biden made an unequivocal pledge, telling voters that by electing Democrats to Georgia's senate seats, "you can make an immediate difference in your own lives, the lives of people all across this country because their election will put an end to the block in Washington on that $2,000 stimulus check, that money that will go out the door immediately to people who are in real trouble."

Less than four weeks later:

  • Biden is pushing $1,400 checks, rather than using his election mandate to demand new, full $2,000 checks.
  • Democrats are now suggesting that it could take at least until March to even pass the legislation, even as the economic crisis worsens.
  • Biden is now responding to threats of Republican obstructionism by floating the idea of reducing the number of people who would even get the checks. "He is open to negotiating the eligibility requirements of his proposed $1,400 COVID stimulus check, a nod to lawmakers who have said they should be more targeted," reported Reuters.
  • The signals of retreat are happening even as new polling data show that the original promise for a full $2,000 stimulus check is wildly popular.


Feel familiar? We've gotten into a flux-capacitor-powered DeLorean, flown back in time and dropped ourselves into 2009.

Back then, Barack Obama and Biden had gotten themselves elected in the middle of an economic crisis after promising to pass a public health insurance option. It was a promise as clear and explicit as the $2,000 checks promise is today—their platform was explicit in pledging that "any American will have the opportunity to enroll in the new public plan."

But then over the course of the year, as Republicans in the congressional minority kicked and screamed, the administration ever so gradually started backing down, rather than using the election mandate to try to shame the GOP into submission.

By the middle of the year, Obama said: "The public option, whether we have it or we don't have it, is not the entirety of health care reform." His Health and Human Services secretary said that it was "not the essential element" of health care reform.

By the winter, Obama lied, insisting "I didn't campaign on a public option."

And then by 2010, the Obama White House had killed the plan, and Senate Democrats refused to even bring it up for a floor vote when they had the chance. Soon after, voters delivered what Obama called a "shellacking" in the midterm election, effectively foreclosing on the possibility of transformative change during Obama's presidency.


At WSWS, Bill Van Auken notes that Joe's already warring with Iran:


Meanwhile, an Iranian government spokesman appealed directly to the Biden administration to lift sanctions that have restricted the country’s ability to import vaccines needed to combat the COVID-19 pandemic, which has hit Iran harder than any other country in the region, with 1.4 million reported cases and nearly 60,000 reported deaths.

“Since [Biden’s] administration claims not to be anti-science like the previous one...one expects it to free the transfer of Iran’s own foreign exchange resources to fight the coronavirus and for health and food, and lift banking sanctions quickly,” government spokesman Ali Rabiei told state television.

With its appeal for “unity” with the Republican Party, the Biden administration has little stomach for a swift and sharp reversal of the “maximum pressure” campaign imposed by Trump. Leading right-wing congressional Democrats, including Senator Robert Menendez, the incoming chairman of the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations, have also opposed any letup of US aggression against Iran.

Biden has also pledged to “engage” with Israel before taking any steps to change the current “maximum pressure” regime against Iran, while Blinken has repeatedly stated that the new administration views Israel’s security as “sacrosanct.”

Tel Aviv has not only opposed any US return to the JCPOA but has threatened to militarily attack Iran and its nuclear facilities in response. This was expressed most directly by the new chief of staff of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), Lt. Gen. Aviv Kochavi, who gave a bellicose speech on Tuesday, declaring a return to the Iran nuclear deal an “intolerable threat” to Israel. He said that “anything that is similar to the current deal is a bad thing, and we cannot allow it,” adding that he had ordered the IDF to prepare new “operative plans” for attacking Iran.



The following sites updated:









 
Read on ...

Sunday, September 15, 2019

Hillary Talks To Bernie


hillarytalkstobernie

From October 31, 2016, that's "Hillary Talks To Bernie."  C.I. noted:

Isaiah's latest THE WORLD TODAY JUST NUTS "Hillary Talks To Bernie."  A leather clad Hillary Clinton explains to a ball-gagged naked Bernie Sanders, "Bernie, I've insulted you, I've insulted your supporters.  But, you little worm, you will lead them to me like lambs to slaughter."  Isaiah archives his comics at The World Today Just Nuts.

Hillary was an awful candidate in 2016.  Will we get another awful one in 2020?

I have no idea but Joe Biden is a racist and I will not be voting for a racist.  He was asked about slavery and its consequences in the debate and chose to insist that African-Americans need social workers in their homes to learn how to raise their own children.

Because we're that stupid?

Joe Biden will not get my vote.  I don't vote for racists.

Here's C.I.'s "Iraq snapshot:"


Friday, September 13, 2019.  A look at last night's  debate.

The most important moment in last night's Democratic Party presidential debate took place in the final section of the nearly three hour proceeding.  The question to identify a professional setback and how you overcame it.  When it was Joe Biden's turn to speak, a protest broke out at.  You could hear chanting but not the actual words.

Moderator George Stephanopoulos told Joe to wait a moment and that the protesters were being escorted out.  He never explained -- excuse me, he never reported what the protesters were saying or chanting.

That is your job.  Candy asses pay attention.  I know you get your egos stroked by pretending you're actually reporters when most of you barely qualify for the much more elastic term of journalist.  But if you're the 'news' portion of the debate and a protest breaks out, you need to acknowledge it and inform the viewers what is taking place.  It's beyond nonsense to pretend otherwise.

A live event moderated by people from ABC and UNIVISION's news department should be able to tell the viewers what is taking place.  But you could have watched the debate to the very end and never known what the protest was about.



  • Just to let everyone at home know the protests at the were DACA protesters reminding the candidates that they won’t be silenced



    daca recipients protesting biden, hell yeah!!!!!!



  • It was DACA recipients:

    "We are DACA recipients and our lives are at risk."

    Letting know that many of us who have DACA (including myself) do not trust him.



    The protestors were yelling, “we are DACA recipients. Our lives are at risk.” Unclear if they were TSU students.




  • They chanted "Three million deportations" which was a reference to the number of people deported when Barack Obama was president.  Though the country largely looked the other way, for those who paid attention to the issue in real time, we're aware that's why Barack was dubbed "the deporter in chief."  They chanted, "No human being is illegal on stolen land," they chanted "We are DACA, our lives are at risk," they chanted "Defend DACA" among other slogans and truths.

    Now the media tut-tut-ed after the debate about how unfair this was to poor Joe Biden.

    See, Joe was going to speak.  Well, he got to speak, grow up.

    And he got to pull his usual b.s.  'My wife and kids died.  My son Beau got back from Iraq and he died.  Wah-wah-wah, I'm a cry baby who trots to that well every damn time to prove what a titty baby I am.'

    We've all suffered deaths, Joe.  Cindy Sheehan?  Her son didn't come back from Iraq and die because Casey died in Iraq.  And he died in Iraq because people like you wanted war.

    As for your first wife?  You have a second wife.  You've been married for many, many years.  She is a wonderful person and it's a little perverse and cruel that you're always going on about your dead wife who died decades ago.  You have been married to Jill Biden for 42 years.  Most people would see that as a win.  You would have no family without her.  She is the glue.  She took the abuse -- not verbal attacks on her, not physical, but the abuse that is this nonsense of "Wah, wah, my first wife died, wah, wah" -- that is abuse and it's insulting.  She has been your wife for 42 years.  And instead of publicly celebrating that, you keep trotting out your dead first wife for sympathy.  You were married to your first wife for six years.  You've been married to Jill for 42.  Start showing her some respect in public because this whiny, titty baby crap is not only getting old, it's insulting to Jill.

    We have all lost loved ones.  That's what happens in life -- we will all die.

    When Joe was Vice President, I noted that I liked his wife (I know Joe and Jill) and that I would not mention her name at this site because if I praised her, someone could later rightly e-mail, "Why didn't you criticize her" if she said or did something that people misconstrued or whatever.

    I have nothing but respect for Jill.

    I broke the rule once and only once while she was Second Lady.  She did -- with Michelle Obama -- something really important on veterans and there was no way to note that action without mentioning her.  Other than that, I did not say her name here (or at THIRD).

    I'm saying it now because she's being disrespected by her own husband in public and it needs to stop.

    She has given Joe a happy marriage, a happy life and 42 years as his wife, you'd think Joe could show the American people his gratitude.  I'm getting sick of it.  And I do see it as abuse.  If you've been the second wife or second husband, I'm sure you'll see what I'm saying.

    42 years and still married?  She's your wife, she's your life.  Stop being a titty baby.

    The question was professional setback.

    But Joe didn't want to go there.  Might not be able to use dead relatives as a prop if he went there, right?

    The protest, which did not cut him off, he had not begun speaking, was about policies that were ripping families apart.  Joe refuses to acknowledge that in the same way that he refuses to be thankful for the good fortune he has with Jill Biden.

    He has trotted out the story of his dead first wife over and over on the campaign trail.

    But we're supposed to be offended that DACA supporters protested him?

    We haven't even touched on the fact that earlier in the debate he lied yet again about deportations.

    I'm really sorry for the pearl clutchers in the media who can't grasp that the death of wife number one nearly fifty years ago does not match the three million deportations that tore families apart.  These people have every right to protest.  And doing so was not being 'mean' to Joe Biden.

    Joe taking part in destroying their families was being 'mean' to them.

    This was an important moment in the debate.  It goes to the larger debate on immigration taking place in the country.  It goes to what I said weeks ago about how the Democratic Party better realize that this is not an issue they can use to ride to victory and then ignore -- the way they did the Iraq War in the 2006 mid-terms.  This is not going away.  The people will not be silenced.

    After that?

    The second big issue would be Julian Castro.




    The “trope” that Castro was mean to Joe Biden is steeped in white supremacy and translates as how dare that Hispanic boy, be uppity to that entitled white man, and y’all are not about to do that on Harriet Tubman’s interwebs ...FOH🙄🙄🙄🙄


    Replying to 

    They’re in a thread now rage tweeting. It’s horribly telling.




  • Julian worked in Obama’s cabinet...he has just as much right to speak about Obama as Joe! 😊




  • More. A cabinet secretary sets policy, tone and takes initiative. A Veep presides over a debating body, is given projects and upholds the tone of the administration.


    1. End of conversation
  • Replying to 

    LOL @ "Harriet Tubman’s interwebs"




  • They tried it Twin! 🤣🤣🤣🤣


    1. End of conversation

  • I thought Castro was ageist and gross talking about memory.  Sam Stein rewound the tape and said he was wrong.  His attacks on immigration made sense.  Attack policy, like Kamala did in the first debate.




  • Julian specifically said he was attacking the fact Biden gave a different answer in the span of two minutes, not his age




  • He the said "are you forgetting what you just said?"

    Same Stein rewound the tape and said Castro was wrong.


    1. End of conversation
  • Replying to  

    Don’t think I’ve ever heard pundits call out Sanders for yelling, interrupting, contradicting, being argumentative,  pointing his finger on debate stage as ending him as candidate. Racism writ large tonight.


    Replying to 

    I cheered Castro on when he made that point. He's 100% in the right. Biden can't have it both ways (though I realize I'm preaching to the choir w/you).

    PS: "Harriet Tubman's interwebs" 💕💕💕💕💕💕


    Replying to 

    CASTRO DID THE DAMN THING. Nobody can snatch his executive experience in the Obama administration, which gave him more credibility and a close eye into Biden's whereabouts on matters.






    As the Tweets note, Julian is being treated unfairly.  And I'm sure there's an element of anti-Latino at work.  But there's a bigger issue which is Joe Biden's is the press' pet.  You've heard of teacher's pet, Joe is that for the press.  When, in June, Julian went after Beto O'Rourke, what happened?

    The press hailed him as a hero, he was the star of the debate (there were two, he was the star's of his night, according to the press) and he would be hailed for it and, the press insisted, watch Julian rise in the polls because he was a star now.

    That didn't happen.  As we noted in real time, Julian did a poor job explaining his argument in the debate -- and would continue to do so in the after-interviews until the weekend after the debate.

    But the press loved it, the drama, they were enthralled.

    Last night, Julian's argument was made clearly.  It was a strong one.

    That was the only difference in the way he interacted with Beto in June and Joe last night.

    But the press difference is very clear.  The press and racist Amy Klobuchar.  Amy's long had a reputation as being a racist and I'd argue she really delivered on that last night.  We'll come back to her and her house divided nonsense.

    Here's Joe (NBC's transcript, by the way):


    BIDEN: Fifteen seconds. Look, everybody says we want an option. The option I'm proposing is Medicare for all -- Medicare for choice. If you want Medicare, if you lose the job from your insurance -- from your employer, you automatically can buy into this. You don't have -- no pre-existing condition can stop you from buying in. You get covered, period.
    And if you notice, nobody's yet said how much it's going to cost the taxpayer. I hear this large savings, the president thinks -- my friend from Vermont thinks that the employer's going to give you back if you negotiated as a union all these years, got a cut in wages because you got insurance. They're going to give back that money to the employee?

    Read the above closely.  ABC's Jonathan Karl didn't which is how he ended up with egg on his face yet again -- how many errors do you get to make at ABC before they fire you?  Or is he protected under some ugly looking clause that requires the network to employ X number of physically unattractive males?  I would think ABC had exceeded that quota.

    Now here's the exchange that upset so many.


    CASTRO: Thank you. And, you know, I also want to recognize the work that Bernie has done on this. And, of course, we owe a debt of gratitude to President Barack Obama. Of course, I also worked for President Obama, Vice President Biden, and I know that the problem with your plan is that it leaves 10 million people uncovered.
    Now, on the last debate stage in Detroit, you said that wasn't true, when Senator Harris brought that up. There was a fact check of that, and they said that was true.
    You know, I grew up with a grandmother who had type 2 diabetes, and I watched her condition get worse and worse. But that whole time, she had Medicare. I want every single American family to have a strong Medicare plan available.
    If they choose to hold on to strong, solid private health insurance, I believe they should be able to do. But the difference between what I support and what you support, Vice President Biden, is that you require them to opt in and I would not require them to opt in. They would automatically be enrolled. They wouldn't have a buy in.
    That's a big difference, because Barack Obama's vision was not to leave 10 million people uncovered. He wanted every single person in this country covered. My plan would do that. Your plan would not.

    BIDEN: They do not have to buy in. They do not have to buy in.

    CASTRO: You just said that. You just said that two minutes ago. You just two minutes ago that they would have to buy in.

    BIDEN: Do not have to buy in if you can't afford it.

    CASTRO: You said they would have to buy in.

    BIDEN: Your grandmother would not have to buy in. If she qualifies for Medicaid, she would automatically be enrolled.

    CASTRO: Are you forgetting what you said two minutes ago? Are you forgetting already what you said just two minutes ago? I mean, I can't believe that you said two minutes ago that they had to buy in and now you're saying they don't have to buy in. You're forgetting that.

    BIDEN: I said anyone like your grandmother who has no money.

    CASTRO: I mean, look, look, we need a health care system...

    BIDEN: She -- you're automatically enrolled.

    CASTRO: It automatically enrolls people regardless of whether they choose to opt in or not. If you lose your job, for instance, his health care plan would not automatically enroll you. You would have to opt in. My health care plan would. That's a big difference. I'm fulfilling the legacy of Barack Obama, and you're not.

    BIDEN: That'll be a surprise to him.


    Julian was correct.

    And he called out Joe.

    And we're talking about life and death here.

    Julian didn't do anything different than he had with Beto.  But Joe's a beloved figure to the press and they know he can't get the nomination without them carrying him to the finish line.



    White pundits on TV - was too mean to Joe Biden.

    POCs - we are dying and need access to high-quality, accessible, and affordable health care.

    Sorry, not sorry.







    So if Julian offers actual criticism, it's time to clutch the pearls and scream for the vapors -- they did the same thing when Kamala Harris confronted Joe in the June debate.

    Now, remember, in July, Tulsi Gabbard attacked Kamala.  The press loved that.  They played it up for days, as they had Julian's attack on Beto.

    But whenever anyone attacks Joe, it's time to whine.

    Here's something else you should grasp -- that was Julian's time.  Julian had been called on to speak.  Joe's interrupting him.  Joe's cutting him off.

    You want to talk about disrespect and/or disrespect to a Latino, it's right there.  The moderators would call on the candidates for a rebuttal.  And had been doing that throughout.

    Joe did not abide by the rules -- stated at the start of the debate -- when Julian was speaking.

    Joe had already answered at length.  And then he'd been given a chance for a rebuttal (the first quote from him is his rebuttal to Bernie Sanders).

    Despite that, he has to barge into Julian's space?

    No.

    Lose the sense of entitlement, Joe.

    And shame on anyone in the media who doesn't have the guts to note that Joe has a sense of entitlement and that he's being rude due to prejudice -- whether it's Julian's age or Julian's ethnicity, he's been rude to Julian, refusing to follow the rules and taking up Julian's limited time.

    Who spoke the most in the debate?

    Joe Biden.

    He needs to learn to shut his mouth.

    People in the press are whining that Joe was protested.  Joe still got his full time, he got to deliver that same craven and disgusting talking point where he trots out dead relatives as props.

    But Julian didn't get his full time because Joe kept barging in on what was supposed to be Julian's response.

    If, like Joe, you're not getting it, let's go to the immediate remark before Julian spoke:

    STEPHANOPOULOS: This is -- health care is the top issue for everyone in the country. I want to make sure everyone gets one minute to respond. So, Secretary Castro, Andrew Yang, and then Senator Booker, you will get a minute.


    Joe had spoken and respoken on the topic.  Julian had not been given the chance to speak once.  It was finally his turn and Joe's cutting him off when it's Julian's time and, per the rules, Joe is supposed to be quiet and wait for the moderator to call him -- after Julian's done speaking -- to rebut.

    I'll note Bernie on Saturday and he did a strong job as did Elizabeth Warren who we'll note on Sunday (I've got to wrap up, we're about to speak on this topic).  (The snapshots are dictated, if you're late to the party.)

    The worst?

    Mayor Pete who is a snide and snarky tiny fellow.  Watching him on the stage I kept wishing Goldie Hawn was there with her broom (FOUL PLAY reference).  I loved that Century 21 was able to send their delegate in.  That would be Amy Klobuchar who has a seemly property in a bad area but she'll pretend it just needs a little tlc and you've got quite the fixer upper.  She was an embarrassment and she was a joke.  I noted after the June debate that she had scored on "Hey, I'm not a bitch like the press says."  That's still what she's going for all this time later.  I have never seen anyone fight less to get their own positions out there.  But she has nothing worth fighting for so that explains it.  Pete, Amy and Joe were the losers.


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