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06/23/24 01:06 PM #17136    

 

Glen Hirose

  Good for you Nori

                                 Moist Chocolate Bundt Cake Recipe - Sugar Geek Show

                                   Richly deserved 

 

 


06/23/24 06:36 PM #17137    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Nori, how wonderful you are helping old folks with food deliveries.tgats wonderful. Love, Joanie

06/23/24 07:55 PM #17138    

 

Jack Mallory

Given the demographics of the veteran population, working at the VA Medical Center and the Vet Center is a little like working for Meals on Wheels. But they mostly come to us rather than our going to them (there are some visitation programs involving social/heath care workers). Wish I could say that none of them are grumpy and out of sorts, but that would be profoundly untrue! 

There are certainly many worthwhile moments. I'm sure I told you about the time I was dispatching wheelchairs and working the information desk on a busy day, phone in one hand, radio in the other, vet comes up, asks for wheelchair transport; I've got no more volunteers, but an unknown voice says "I'll take him." I yell thanks over my shoulder while I'm grabbing another phone call. 

30 seconds later I get a chance to look down the hall, where a bilateral below-the-knee amputee on prosthetics is pushing the other vet down the hall in the wheelchair. Damn near cried. 


06/23/24 08:07 PM #17139    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Wow,Jack I would have cried too. Love, Joanie♥️

06/24/24 09:49 AM #17140    

 

Jay Shackford

(If anyone is wondering why their grandchildren are having difficulty buying their first home or finding an safe and affordable rental apartment, here is a recent article in the New York Times that might explain today's housing affordability crisis -- one of the sleeper issues of the upcoming election.)

 

The Housing Market Is Weird and Ugly. These 5 Charts Explain Why.

Home prices have held up better than expected amid high interest rates. But that doesn’t mean the housing market is healthy.

 

By Ben Casselman

The New York Times

June 20, 2024

 

When the Federal Reserve began raising interest rates in 2022, most economists thought the housing market would be the first to suffer the consequences: Higher borrowing costs would make it more expensive to buy and to build, leading to reduced demand, less construction and lower prices.

They were right — at first. Construction slowed, but then picked up. Prices hiccuped, then resumed their upward march. Higher rates made homes harder to afford, but Americans still wanted to buy them.

The result is a housing market that is different, and stranger, than the one described in economics textbooks. Parts have proved surprisingly resilient. Other parts have seized up almost completely. And some seem perched on a precipice, at risk of tumbling if rates stay high too long or the economy weakens unexpectedly.

It is also a market of stark divides. People who locked in low rates before 2022 have, in most cases, had their home values soar but have been insulated from higher borrowing costs. Those who didn’t already own, on the other hand, have often had to choose between unaffordable rents and unaffordable home prices.

 

But the situation is nuanced. Homeowners in some parts of the country face skyrocketing insurance costs. Rents in some cities have moderated. Builders are finding ways to make new homes affordable for first-time buyers.

No one indicator tells the full story. Rather, economists and industry experts say understanding the housing market requires looking at an array of data shedding light on different pieces of the puzzle.

  1. It’s hard to find a home to buy.

 

The rapid rise in interest rates pushed down demand for housing, by making it more expensive to borrow. But it also led to a big drop in supply: Many owners are holding onto their homes longer than they would otherwise because selling would mean giving up their ultralow interest rates.

This “rate lock” phenomenon has contributed to a severe shortage of homes for sale. It isn’t the only factor: Home building lagged for years before the pandemic, and retired baby boomers have been choosing to stay in their homes rather than moving to retirement communities or downsizing to condominiums as many housing experts had expected.

Many economists argue that the lack of supply has helped keep prices high, particularly in some markets, although they disagree about the magnitude of the effect. What is certain is that for anyone hoping to buy, finding a home has been extremely difficult.

2. Homes are unaffordable.

 

Home prices, already high, soared during the pandemic, rising more than 40 percent nationally from the end of 2019 to mid-2021, according to the S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller price index. They’ve risen more slowly since then, but they haven’t fallen as many economists expected when the Fed started raising interest rates.

Rising interest rates have put those prices even further out of reach for many buyers. Someone buying a $300,000 house with a 10 percent down payment could expect to pay about $1,100 a month on a mortgage in late 2021, when interest rates on a 30-year, fixed-rate loan were about 3 percent. Today, with rates at about 7 percent, that same house would cost about $1,800 a month, nearly a 60 percent increase in monthly costs. (That doesn’t even take into account the rising cost of insurance or other expenses.)

Economists have different ways of measuring affordability, but they all show pretty much the same thing: Buying a house, particularly for first-time buyers, is further out of reach than at any point in decades, or maybe ever. One index, from Zillow, shows that the typical household buying the median home with 10 percent down could expect to spend more than 40 percent of their income on housing costs, well above the 30 percent that financial experts recommend. And in many cities, such as Denver, Austin and Nashville — never mind longtime outliers like New York and San Francisco — the numbers are much worse.

 

3. New homes are filling (some of) the gap.

 

Perhaps the most surprising development in the housing market over the past two years has been the resilience of new-home sales.

Developers typically struggle when interest rates rise, because high borrowing costs drive away buyers while also making it more expensive to build.

But this time around, with so few existing homes available for sale, many buyers have been turning to new construction. At the same time, many big builders were able to borrow when interest rates were low, and have been able to use that financial firepower to “buy down” interest rates for customers — making their homes more affordable without needing to cut prices.

As a result, sales of new homes have held relatively steady even as sales of existing homes have plummeted. Developers have especially sought to cater to first-time buyers by building smaller homes, a segment of the market they all but ignored for years.

 

It isn’t clear how long the trend can continue, however. Many builders pulled back on activity when rates first rose, leaving fewer new homes in the pipeline to come to market in the years ahead. And if rates stay high, it may get harder for builders to offer the financial incentives they have used to attract first-time buyers. Private developers in May broke ground on new homes at the slowest rate in nearly four years, the Commerce Department said on Thursday.

4. Rents are unaffordable, too.

 

Rents skyrocketed in much of the country during the pandemic, as Americans fled cities and sought space. Then they kept rising, as the strong labor market increased demand.

Rising rents helped fuel an apartment-building boom, which has brought a flood of supply to the market, particularly in Southern cities like Austin and Atlanta. That has led rents to rise more slowly or even to fall in some places.

But that moderation has been slow to work its way through the market. Many tenants are paying rents negotiated earlier in the housing cycle, and the new construction has been concentrated in the luxury market, which doesn’t do much to help middle- or lower-income renters, at least in the short term.

 

All of that has produced a rental affordability crisis that keeps growing worse. A record share of renters are spending more than 30 percent of their income on housing, Harvard’s Joint Center for Housing Studies found recently, and more than 12 million households are spending more than half their income on rent. Affordability is no longer just a problem for the poor: The Harvard report found that rent is becoming a burden even among many households earning more than $75,000 a year.

5. A shift may be underway.

 

For much of the past two years, the housing market — especially for existing homes — has been stuck. Buyers can’t afford homes unless either prices or interest rates fall. Owners feel little pressure to sell, and aren’t eager to become buyers.

What could break the logjam? One possibility is lower interest rates, which could bring a flood of both buyers and sellers back to the market. But with inflation proving stubborn, rate cuts don’t appear imminent.

Another possibility is a more gradual return to normal, as owners decide they can no longer put off long-delayed moves and become more willing to cut a deal, and as buyers resign themselves to higher rates.

 

There are signs that may be beginning to happen. More owners are listing their homes for sale, and more are cutting prices to attract buyers. Builders are finishing more new homes without a buyer lined up. Real estate agents are sharing anecdotes of empty open houses and homes that sit on the market longer than expected.

Hardly anyone expects prices to collapse. The millennial generation is in the heart of the home-buying years, meaning demand for homes should be strong, and years of under-building mean the country still has too few homes by most measures. And because most homeowners have plenty of equity, and lending standards have been tight, there isn’t likely to be a wave of forced sales as there was when the housing bubble burst nearly two decades ago.

But that also means that the affordability crisis isn’t likely to resolve itself soon. Lower rates would help, but it will take more than that for homeownership to feel achievable to many younger Americans.

 


06/24/24 10:31 AM #17141    

 

Jay Shackford

“Thou Shall Not…”

 

By Dead-Center Shacks

 

I have a confession to make.  In one of my weaker moments, I went out and purchased one of Donald Trump’s personally autographed Bibles for $59.99, even though I could have gotten a regulator Bible for $29.99 — less than half the price— on Amazon or the three still-standing book stores remaining in America. 

 

As they say, you get what you pay for.  In skimming through the text of Trump’s Bible, I came across the Ten Commandments, which upon reading seemed a little strange, although my religious background is a little suspect, too.   People say I’m more like a “Zen Buddhist” monk being punished for bad behavior by his Zen Master than a Bible-thumping Christian singing “onward Christian Soldiers.”  Nevertheless, here’s a few of the Ten Commandments that I found a little strange in the Trump Bible:

 

  • “Thou shall not kill, except for members of the Biden Crime Family; killers, rapists, gang members, Mexican judges and other immigrants (vermin) storming out southwestern borders; and Mike Pence for his treasonous behavior on January 6, 2021.”

 

  • “Thou shall not commit adultery, except when the opportunity arises to have unprotected and very quick sex with an adult film star in beautiful Lake Tahoe two months after your youngest son is born.” 

 

  • “Thou shall not cheat, lie or steal, except when it comes to business, college exams, presidential elections, governing the country and golf.”

 

 

 


06/24/24 01:33 PM #17142    

 

Jack Mallory

And sometimes vets show up unexpectedly! Didn't grab a pic, but on a choppy, blustery Grafton Pond this morning there was a recreation therapy group of two dozen or so kayaking vets, most close to my age. But none visibly grumpy and out of sorts. How could they be, in kayaks?

An outing from the White River Junction VA, the rec therapist leading them had known Deb in her rec therapy days.

 

Hope they got a view of this heron, fishing the edges.

 


06/24/24 02:04 PM #17143    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Jack, what a wonderful heron picture. Love, Joanie

06/24/24 08:26 PM #17144    

 

Jay Shackford

CEOs Hate Trump

 

Some would have you believe that the nation’s top corporate CEOs are flocking to and throwing their support behind Donald Trump’s campaign for the presidency. Not so, says Dr. Jeffrey Sonnenfield, president of the Yale Chief Executive Leadership Institute.

 

According to an op-ed column published in today’s New York Times, Sonnenfield claims that Trump suffers from the lowest level of corporate support in the history of the Republican Party.

 

“CEO executives are not protectionists, isolationists or xenophobic and they believe in investing where there is the rule of law not the law of the ruler,” he noted.  

 

The one exception, I might note, are the oil and energy executives who are being bribed directly by Donald Trump.  “Give me a billion dollar campaign donation and I will throw out all costly federal regulations,” Trump told a group of oil executives recently in what he thought was a private meeting.    These regulations, I might add, are designed to combat climate change and fire weather triggered by our petroleum based economy.  

 

 

 

 

 


06/24/24 08:29 PM #17145    

 

Jay Shackford

Hey Jack, what do you think about the state junior college located in Santa Barbara?  


06/25/24 05:45 AM #17146    

 

Jack Mallory

No knowledge, Jay. I went to Ventura Community College, next town south, before I transferred to UCSB and was very impressed by the community college system of the era but don't have current info. 


06/25/24 11:52 AM #17147    

 

Jay Shackford

Thanks Jack


06/25/24 01:59 PM #17148    

 

Jack Mallory

And my homie heron. 


06/26/24 05:07 PM #17149    

 

Nora Skinker (Morton)

Since the purpose in sharing my previous post was to appeal to those looking for some volunteer work, am thrilled that several have responded privately with questions.  Hopefully here are some answers:  a daily meal consists of a three course hot meal, two fruit items.  On alternate weeks, each receives milk and bread and extra fruits for weekends. Yes, there are social gatherings of the volunteers...a summer picnic and a Christmas party. If no one is home to receive the meals, I happily give them to another recipient or take them back to the office (Lewes DE headquarters). Yes, one can volunteer alone...by doing both the driving and delivering to the residents by one's self.  Written directions are available but I prefer using my GPS until familiar with the route. With two volunteers, one can drive and the other delivers or they take turns delivering (as we do).  There are about 15 to 20 houses on each route. Yes, we can enter the home and place the meals into the refrigerator, if instructed to do so. I have been asked to change bedsheets, empty trash, take in mail, operate thermostats, fold clothes from dryers, feed pets and a myriad of other smail deeds. MOWs does not interfere with my decisions to help whereever I please. I.e., I'm known as the pie lady since i love to surprise them with pies occasionally.  It is my experience that the most valuable service is taking a few minutes to chat. So many are lonely and feel abandoned. That said, there is such gratitude and joy in receiving attention and help, that they forget their troubles, albeit briefly. Lastly, no matter where you live, you most likely can find a MOWs chapter near you. Try it! Oh, and report back...privately or otherwise. We can share stories!

 


06/26/24 08:19 PM #17150    

 

Jack Mallory

Big props to MOW and Nori for the essential work they do!

**********

My homie heron this morning. Had to sneak up, shoot from behind a couple of trees. 
 


 


06/27/24 11:47 AM #17151    

 

Robert Hall

We recommend the softcover book "Stretching" written by Robert Anderson. About $20.00 and used copies are available for less than $5.00. Our dog eared copy is over 10 years old and has "cured" many ailments caused by a less than optiminally active lifestyle (especially during Covid).

........and when was the last time you changed your passwords? Are they 12 or more characters long? There are so many bad actors out there--worldwide--
and it isn't 1964 anymore.

06/27/24 01:05 PM #17152    

 

Glen Hirose

       Add Ice cream to my last post Nori,

               A delicious Banana split ice cream ...


06/27/24 06:05 PM #17153    

 

Jack Mallory

Thanks for "Stretching" suggestion, Robert. Day begins with a 15 minute or so back stretch, repeated in pm. Not a cure for a back sub-optimally evolved for bipedalism, but keeps me walking. And paddling. Slowly. 
 

And to motivate continued motion: Got word today--our new pup is on the ground, to be picked out Aug. 3, picked up Aug. 21! Yellow lab male, one of the litter below.

 


 


06/28/24 01:31 PM #17154    

 

Jack Mallory

From Thomas Friedman of the NYT


 

 

I watched the Biden-Trump debate alone in a Lisbon hotel room, and it made me weep. I cannot remember a more heartbreaking moment in American presidential campaign politics in my lifetime — precisely because of what it revealed: Joe Biden, a good man and a good president, has no business running for re-election. And Donald Trump, a malicious man and a petty president, has learned nothing and forgotten nothing. He is the same fire hose of lies he always was, obsessed with his grievances — nowhere close to what it will take for America to lead in the 21st century.

The Biden family and political team must gather quickly and have the hardest of conversations with the president, a conversation of love and clarity and resolve. To give America the greatest shot possible of deterring the Trump threat in November, the president has to come forward and declare that he will not be running for re-election and is releasing all of his delegates for the Democratic National Convention.

The Republican Party — if its leaders had an ounce of integrity — would demand the same, but it won’t, because they don’t. That makes it all the more important that Democrats put the country’s interests first and announce that a public process will begin for different Democratic candidates to compete for the nomination — town halls, debates, meetings with donors, you name it. Yes, it could be chaotic and messy when the Democratic convention starts on Aug. 19 in Chicago, but I think the Trump threat would be sufficiently grave that delegates could quickly rally around and nominate a consensus candidate.

If Vice President Kamala Harris wants to compete, she should. But voters deserve an open process in search of a Democratic presidential nominee who can unite not only the party but the country, by offering something neither man on that Atlanta stage did on Thursday night: a compelling description of where the world is right now and a compelling vision for what America can and must do to keep leading it — morally, economically and diplomatically.

Because this is no ordinary hinge of history we are at. We are at the start of the biggest technological disruptions and the biggest climate disruption in human history. We are at the dawn of an artificial intelligence revolution that is going to change EVERYTHING FOR EVERYONE — how we work, how we learn, how we teach, how we trade, how we invent, how we collaborate, how we fight wars, how we commit crimes and how we fight crimes. Maybe I missed it, but I did not hear the phrase “artificial intelligence” mentioned by either man at the debate.

If there was ever a time that the world needs an America at its best, led by its best, it is now — for great dangers and opportunities are now upon us. A younger Joe Biden could have been that leader, but time has finally caught up with him. And that was painfully and inescapably obvious on Thursday.

Biden has been a friend of mine since we traveledto Afghanistan and Pakistan together after 9/11, when he chaired the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, so I say all of the above with great sadness.

But if he caps his presidency now, by acknowledging that because of age he is not up to a second term, his first and only term will be remembered as among the better presidencies in our history.He saved us from a second Trump term and for that alone he deserves the Presidential Medal of Freedom, but he also enacted important legislation crucial to confronting the climate and technology revolutions now upon us. 

I had been ready to give Biden the benefit of the doubt up to now, because during the times I engaged with him one on one, I found him up to the job. He clearly is not any longer. His family and his staff had to have known that. They have been holed up at Camp David preparing for this momentous debate for days now. If that is the best performance they could summon from him, it’s time for Joe to keep the dignity he deserves and leave the stage at the end of this term.

If he does, everyday Americans will hail Joe Biden for doing what Donald Trump would never do — put the country before himself.

If he insists on running and he loses to Trump, Biden and his family — and his staff and party members who enabled him — will not be able to show their faces.

They deserve better. America needs better. The world needs better.


06/29/24 11:50 AM #17155    

 

Nora Skinker (Morton)

Ah, the gnashing of teeth.  Is no one furious for being duped all this time? The pretense, the gaslighting? And who's surprised that Biden will not choose to step down? Um....nobody. He may or may not be a good man, but he for sure can not handle this most difficult of jobs. And THAT'S the bottom line. Apparently, he and Dr. Jill cannot (or will not) see that. Can you? 


06/29/24 12:15 PM #17156    

 

Jay Shackford

(Editor’s note: I watched the debate on Thursday night — the entire thing — pre-game, the debate itself and the post game, turning off the   TV at 1 pm. Then was back at it for the morning shows (Morning Joe, CNN and Fox) at 6 am and to read the reactions among the most respected commentators in the land.  It was sad and painful.  

(Joe Biden is a good man, who has served his country well for more than 50 years.  His accomplishments during his presidency have been nothing short of a miracle — adding 15 million jobs, bringing the nation out of the worst pandemic in 100 years, passing a historic infrastructure bill, forgiving college debt for millions, enacting the chips act, reducing health care costs — particularly considering that the GOP controlled House that has fought him tooth and nail at almost every turn. 

(I once had the privilege of talking to Joe Biden in the early 2000s when we (myself and three colleagues) on an Amtrak train from Wilmington to Washington, DC following a memorial service for a good friend of mine, Leon Weiner, who was a Wilmington-based builder of thousands of subsidized housing units in the Mid-Atlantic region over 40 years.   Leon also served as Biden’s chief fund raiser when he first entered politics in his early 20s and during his first races for Congress and later the U.S. Senate. Joe Biden gave an off-the-cuff, funny and heart-warming eulogy of Leon at the funeral service, capturing the essence of Leon who was an accomplished builder of low income housing, bright and quick, an orator in his own right and quite a character. Leon was a once-in-lifetime friend and Biden captured the essence of the man in his eulogy.    

( On the way home on an Amtrak train, Biden was just a good guy — shooting the shit with us, trading Leon Weiner stories,  and talking about politics, sports and other issues of the day.  He knew every porter who walked by, talking to every one of them about their lives and families. He knew the names of their wives, children and grandchildren.  But the time has come for Joe Biden to do the right thing and step down to give the Democratic Party the best chance in defeating Donald Trump, who would be an unmitigated disaster if elected to a second term in November.    

(The New York Times editorial below says it well.  There are numerous Democrats worthy of defeating Donald Trump — and that is and should be the number one priority of the party.  My own favorite ticket would be California Governor Galvin Newsom, with Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer (governor of one of six battleground states) or U.S. Senator Cory Booker of New Jersey as his running mate. But Joe needs to make the decision to pull out of the race on his own. That’s the only way it would work.  My best guess he will do this by next Friday.  The stakes too high to not make this decision.  With Joe Biden remaining in the race, I fear that the country will elect the nation’s first convicted felon — the dangerous, reckless, lying, narcissistic, psychotic and elderly (he’s 78 one week younger than me) Donald Trump as its next President of the United States. ) 

To Serve His Country,

President Biden Should Leave the Race

June 28, 2024

The New York Times Editorial Board

 

President Biden has repeatedly and rightfully described the stakes in this November’s presidential election as nothing less than the future of American democracy.

Donald Trump has proved himself to be a significant jeopardy to that democracy — an erratic and self-interested figure unworthy of the public trust. He systematically attempted to undermine the integrity of elections. His supporters have described, publicly, a 2025 agenda that would give him the power to carry out the most extreme of his promises and threats. If he is returned to office, he has vowed to be a different kind of president, unrestrained by the checks on power built into the American political system.

Mr. Biden has said that he is the candidate with the best chance of taking on this threat of tyranny and defeating it. His argument rests largely on the fact that he beat Mr. Trump in 2020. That is no longer a sufficient rationale for why Mr. Biden should be the Democratic nominee this year.

At Thursday’s debate, the president needed to convince the American public that he was equal to the formidable demands of the office he is seeking to hold for another term. Voters, however, cannot be expected to ignore what was instead plain to see: Mr. Biden is not the man he was four years ago.

 

The president appeared on Thursday night as the shadow of a great public servant. He struggled to explain what he would accomplish in a second term. He struggled to respond to Mr. Trump’s provocations. He struggled to hold Mr. Trump accountable for his lies, his failures and his chilling plans. More than once, he struggled to make it to the end of a sentence.

 

Mr. Biden has been an admirable president. Under his leadership, the nation has prospered and begun to address a range of long-term challenges, and the wounds ripped open by Mr. Trump have begun to heal. But the greatest public service Mr. Biden can now perform is to announce that he will not continue to run for re-election.

As it stands, the president is engaged in a reckless gamble. There are Democratic leaders better equipped to present clear, compelling and energetic alternatives to a second Trump presidency. There is no reason for the party to risk the stability and security of the country by forcing voters to choose between Mr. Trump’s deficiencies and those of Mr. Biden. It’s too big a bet to simply hope Americans will overlook or discount Mr. Biden’s age and infirmity that they see with their own eyes.

If the race comes down to a choice between Mr. Trump and Mr. Biden, the sitting president would be this board’s unequivocal pick. That is how much of a danger Mr. Trump poses. But given that very danger, the stakes for the country and the uneven abilities of Mr. Biden, the United States needs a stronger opponent to the presumptive Republican nominee. To make a call for a new Democratic nominee this late in a campaign is a decision not taken lightly, but it reflects the scale and seriousness of Mr. Trump’s challenge to the values and institutions of this country and the inadequacy of Mr. Biden to confront him.

Ending his candidacy would be against all of Mr. Biden’s personal and political instincts. He has picked himself up from tragedies and setbacks in the past and clearly believes he can do so again. Supporters of the president are already explaining away Thursday’s debate as one data point compared with three years of accomplishments. But the president’s performance cannot be written off as a bad night or blamed on a supposed cold, because it affirmed concerns that have been mounting for months or even years. Even when Mr. Biden tried to lay out his policy proposals, he stumbled. It cannot be outweighed by other public appearances because he has limited and carefully controlled his public appearances.

 

It should be remembered that Mr. Biden challenged Mr. Trump to this verbal duel. He set the rules, and he insisted on a date months earlier than any previous general election debate. He understood that he needed to address longstanding public concerns about his mental acuity and that he needed to do so as soon as possible.

The truth Mr. Biden needs to confront now is that he failed his own test.

In polls and interviews, voters say they are seeking fresh voices to take on Mr. Trump. And the consolation for Mr. Biden and his supporters is that there is still time to rally behind a different candidate. While Americans are conditioned to the long slog of multiyear presidential elections, in many democracies, campaigns are staged in the space of a few months.

It is a tragedy that Republicans themselves are not engaged in deeper soul-searching after Thursday’s debate. Mr. Trump’s own performance ought to be regarded as disqualifying. He lied brazenly and repeatedly about his own actions, his record as president and his opponent. He described plans that would harm the American economy, undermine civil liberties and fray America’s relationships with other nations. He refused to promise that he would accept defeat, returning instead to the kind of rhetoric that incited the Jan. 6 attack on Congress.

The Republican Party, however, has been co-opted by Mr. Trump’s ambitions. The burden rests on the Democratic Party to put the interests of the nation above the ambitions of a single man.

Democrats who have deferred to Mr. Biden must now find the courage to speak plain truths to the party’s leader. The confidants and aides who have encouraged the president’s candidacy and who sheltered him from unscripted appearances in public should recognize the damage to Mr. Biden’s standing and the unlikelihood that he can repair it.

 

Mr. Biden answered an urgent question on Thursday night. It was not the answer that he and his supporters were hoping for. But if the risk of a second Trump term is as great as he says it is — and we agree with him that the danger is enormous — then his dedication to this country leaves him and his party only one choice.

The clearest path for Democrats to defeat a candidate defined by his lies is to deal truthfully with the American public: acknowledge that Mr. Biden can’t continue his race, and create a process to select someone more capable to stand in his place to defeat Mr. Trump in November.

It is the best chance to protect the soul of the nation — the cause that drew Mr. Biden to run for the presidency in 2019 — from the malign warping of Mr. Trump. And it is the best service that Mr. Biden can provide to a country that he has nobly served for so long.


06/29/24 12:25 PM #17157    

 

Joanie Bender (Grosfeld)

Nori I might say can't you see and others that Trump, a convicted felon, and sexual assaulter who lies all the time and is all about retribution and self promoting should step down? The election wasn't stolen. 60 court cases found no there there and many had Republican Trump appointed judges.He didn't have the best economy, but rather the worst deficit ever and on and on . Immigrants are not stealing black people's jobs and they don't poison our country.
As for Biden, he had a bad night but he didn't lie and he spoke the truth. The next day he was out swinging again. He was sick at the debate. The polls still show that Biden has the best chance to beat Trump. For the most part I love this Presidents policies. I hope and pray he wins. Democracy is on the line. Climate is on the line. Women's reproductive rights are on the line. Our Nato alliances are on the line and so much more. Trump forgets that NATO came to our defense after 9/11. Trump prefers dictators like Putin, Kim Jung Un, and Erdigon to our allies. And yes he did say that our soldiers were suckers and losers and he did say re John McCain, I like people who were not captured. Why would you still support him? Love, Joanie❤️

06/29/24 02:20 PM #17158    

 

Jack Mallory


 

Trump claims to be able to define when the Constitution can be terminated. That's what you vote for if you vote for Trump: his right to cancel "all rules, regulations, and articles, even those found in the Constitution." His words, on his social media platform. 
 

No teeth gnashing, no pretense, no gaslighting. Trump says he can put an end to the Constitution. This is what a vote for Trump endorses. And that's the bottom line. 

*********

Enough to piss off an eagle. 


 


06/29/24 02:42 PM #17159    

 

Jack Mallory

But let's not overlook Biden's own misstatements or memory failures when he claimed in the debate not to have lost American military during his tenure in office:

"The truth is, I'm the only president this century that doesn't have any--this decade--any troops dying anywhere in the world like he did." But better a doddering old fart like Biden as President than a doddering old fascist like Trump. 

”THE FACTS: At least 16 service members have been killed in hostile action since Biden took office in January 2021. On Aug. 26, 2021, 13 died during a suicide bombing at Hamid Karzai International Airport in Kabul, Afghanistan, as U.S. troops withdrew from the country. An enemy drone killed three U.S. service members at a desert base in Jordan on Jan. 28 of this year.

https://apnews.com/article/fact-check-misinformation-election-debate-trump-biden-577507522762aa10f6ee5be3a0ced2bb


06/29/24 02:49 PM #17160    

 

Nora Skinker (Morton)

Not sure why there is any discussion about Trump.  I said that Biden is not able to do the job. Has nothing to do with Trump, democracy, politics, policy, laws, truth or anything else.  Our nation has been hoodwinked into thinking our current leader is capable of doing a job that he is quite obviously unable to perform.  Jack posted an article that made sense to me. Not to you? Where is the worry that our enemies see weakness? Where is the worry that we have no idea who has been making hugely important decisions while our leader "has a cold"? Where is the worry that he will only worsen as time goes on? Deflecting with jabs at his political opponent seems rather irrelevent, no? 

Incidentally, at the risk of sounding old, "if we vote for so and so (fill in the blank), it will be the end of democracy" is getting rather tiresome. But, thanks for the giggle.

 

 

 

 

 


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