Thursday, October 6, 2022

Another Quick Glimpse Into Brandon's Mind

The New York Post covered an episode the other day that I noticed in a few video reports, but as the Post story notes, it wasn't reported generally because the main camera feed had already been turned off:

President Biden on Tuesday ranted about the White House press corps for their standard — and longtime — practice of shouting questions as reporters were ushered out of an event focused on legal barriers to abortion and contraceptives.

“They’re among the only press in the world that does this. Seriously. Seriously,” Biden told his guests as he opted not to answer any of the questions from the small daily press pool.

Biden’s disbelieving tone on Tuesday wasn’t the first time the president was caught seeming to diss the press as they clamored for his attention.

There's a video at the link, but it's tied to an annoying Cadillac ad you have to sit through first (an electric version for only $60K), and apparently because the main cameras had been turned off, I can't find a better clip on YouTube.

What I noticed, though, was that as he made the remarks about the press, his face changed in exactly the way it did when he blurted to the teachers about "She was 12 -- I was 30". His remarks took the manner of an aside, and his face became animated. He dropped the affectless, squinty-eyed expression, and his eyes danced with delight. “They’re among the only press in the world that does this. Seriously. Seriously.”

In other words, he's addressing a largely imaginary audience (since the cameras have been turned off) in confidence, giving us the gems of wisdom he's picked up from his decades in Washington. You can see a bit of it in the photo from the event at the top of this post. He's focused. He's interested. This is not the same guy who wanders around the stage wondering if he should be shaking hands or walking out.

This goes to my working hypothesis that there really isn't a medical condition involved, it's just that he's bored with the job of president, and he thinks the public side of it is simply beneath him -- so far beneath him that he won't waste the effort to stay focused. (In private, apparently, he doesn't bother to get dressed if he doesn't feel like it.) What he does like are the perks, the baksheesh, and the all too infrequent opportunities to sniff the hair of nymphets. But as I've said, Stein's Law applies: That which cannot continue must stop. The version in the media is roughly this:

According to Politico’s Eugene Daniels, Jonathan Lemire, Jordain Carney, “[i]f a GOP-led House turns up the heat on Hunter Biden, it could weigh heavily in the president’s decision to run for a second term.”

“White House officials said Biden is preparing to seek reelection, but a final decision likely won’t be made for several months, with the first lady having an outsized influence. Some aides believe that Biden could forgo another campaign if it would shield his family from hostile congressional investigations,” the report states.

I think the real story is that the lizard people have been losing patience with the big guy's general lack of seriousness for some time -- I believe he's simply been cut out of deliberations on Ukraine, for instance, and has been since the public disagreement over the Polish Migs in March. Too much is at risk if he interferes, as he did with Afghanistan.

If the public story is that he'll decide, with the help of Dr Jill, after the election, that's balderdash. He'll in fact be told what his decision will be when it suits the lizard people to tell him.