Tuesday, August 20, 2024

Joe's Subliminal Message At The DNC

I keep saying that the election cycle this year is closest to 1972, and another parallel is Joe's big farewell speech, which was pushed back almost to midnight Eastern time, reminiscent of McGovern in 1972:

The convention, which has been described as "a disastrous start to the general election campaign", . . . with sessions beginning in the early evening and lasting until sunrise the next morning. . . . A protracted vice presidential nominating process delayed McGovern's acceptance speech (which he considered "the best speech of his life") until 2:48 a.m.—after most television viewers had gone to bed.

Last night,

As the speakers leading up to Biden on the schedule began dragging on and on, speculation swirled about how and why the president had been shoved aside to speak when many Americans would already be asleep.

“This is awful. He literally set up a campaign and handed it over to them — do they have to cut him out of prime time?” one longtime Biden aide texted Axios reporter Alex Thompson.

But I would dispute the claim that Joe "literally set up a campaign and handed it over to them". As things have shaken out, 2024 has had two entirely separate general election campaigns, the first one being Joe's up to his withdrawal from the race on July 21, the second with the designation of Kamala as the new candidate in the following days. One thing the conventional commentators have gotten wrong is that Kamala's campaign wil be "short" and a "sprint".

No, it will be the traditional general election presidential campaign that extends from the summer nominating conventions to early November. So what was all that business that began a year ago with the Trump indictments and trials and ended with Joe's brain freezes, the debate debacle, and Trump surviving an assassination attempt?

That was a reprise, a do-over of the 2020 election, and in fact a de facto demonstration that the 2020 election was "stolen". Sometime around late spring, the conventional commentators began to pronounce that the electorate had decided they'd been better off under Trump than under Biden, although the polls hadn't changed much, with Trump leading within the margin of error, for many months. Over the month of June, there was rising public concern over Joe's mental state, driven by his public performance in Europe and brain freezes back home, culminating in the June 27 debate.

However, again, there was no change in the polls, except that there seems to have been a growing subliminal recognition among the elites that any success they'd had in 2020 and afterward in concealing Joe's actual condition had come to an end. In effect, they acknowledged that Trump had won the 2020 election, and in fact the business of January 6, 2021 wasn't all that far fetched.

Again, with no change in the polls, Obama and Pelosi made a final push for Joe to withdraw, and Pelosi, 84 years old, has been taking credit over the last few weeks for the outcome. Her age alone should put her judgment in this matter in question, but there's more to be said about this in a separate post. On one hand, though, this amounted to a much-belated concession of the 2020 election, a tacit acknolwedgement that it had been rigged by Joe's basement campaign, which had successfully concealed his actual condition -- but that doesn't fix the Democrat decisions that led up to either the 2020 or 2024 election.

Nevertheless, the circumstances of Joe's speech last night, a de facto 2020 concession speech as well as a not-so-tacit humiliation at the hands of Democrat stalwarts, were an indication that Joe was never in control; Pelosi had created him, and Pelosi at long last destroyed him, which is closer to the real problem.

But Joe's de facto concession speech sinply kicks off the second 2024 presidential campaign, under a Democrat party that, as it's periodically done, has reverted to the party of 1972, which the Wikipedia entry linked above characterizwd as

Previously excluded political activists gained influence at the expense of elected officials and traditional core Democratic constituencies such as organized labor.

Joe's concession speech is the start of a second, entirely separate presidential campaign.