US Joe Biden News Megathread - The Other Biden Derangement Syndrome Thread (with a side order of Fauci Derangement Syndrome)

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Let's pretend for one moment that he does die before the election, just for the funsies. What happens then? Will the nomination revert to option number 2, aka Bernie Sanders? Or will his running mate automatically replace him just the way Vice-President is supposted to step in after the Big Man in the White House chokes on a piece of matzo? Does he even have a running mate yet?
 
The U.N army is laughably incompetent. In a matter of days they'd be routed by inner city gangs who have far more combat experience which ironically is what usually happens when the U.S tries to invade the third world.
the UN Army is also a bunch of Pedophiles.

It has nothing to do with them invading, but I just thought we should be reminded of that fact.
 
Want USA military to collapse.
You dont need to be China for that when even the Britbongs can teabag you

2021-11-04 14.01.28 mobile.twitter.com 9968c25b5bd3.jpg
 
the UN Army is also a bunch of Pedophiles.

It has nothing to do with them invading, but I just thought we should be reminded of that fact.
Don't forget organ harvesting rings, can't forget those. Oh, also participating in war crimes. Oh and forgetting that a peacekeeping task force existed and just abandoning them in Africa.

If the UN invades the US all they are going to be is free loot boxes for rednecks with hunting rifles.
 
It’s always funny, shortly after a Happening, to watch the various Propagandists as they scramble to create a single Narrative to explain it. It takes days of throwing every idea they have at the wall to see what sticks, and that’s how you get what you see right there.
 
My friend.....this is actually not a sign of Clown World coming to a halt, but Clown World choo-chooing full speed into a blazing inferno.
Federal vax mandate for private companies starts Jan 4 and they say it overrides any state rules. 14k per infraction



https://nypost.com/2021/11/04/bidens-private-business-vaccine-mandate-begins-jan-4/
13,653?
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Are they fucking with us at this point or what.
5ib4i3.jpg

CHOO-CHOO, MOTHERFUCKERS.
Remember that colleges are banning students from online classes unless they are vaxxed.
That also includes remote work-from-home jobs. A lot of office jobs insist on doing the training at their location.
This, combined with the Moderna news, really does make you think, doesn't it?
Yes, I think that's the core of the issue. Everyone is caught up in debating CRT, Nu-math, English, Advanced Placement classes, etc.

Those are the trees, the forest is that the entire education system is at its best, a time sink that sucks up the prime of childhood and the teenage years and fills them with a useless and stressful curriculum, and at worst, is producing malformed adults ill-suited for modern society (which is itself unhealthy as well).

There are ways out (I think Finland has had some success with this), but the orthodoxy (esp. teachers unions) will resist change that they can't control.
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Replace the juicy glitter shirt with a pride flag shirt, and you'd get the gist.
 
This seems to be from Ed Durr, the guy who won the NJ senate seat with only $153 and knocking on doors:

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Trump/Durr '24
So you're telling me the voters elected:

- cowgirl mommy GF
- black military grandma who is BASED
- a guy who spent $153 and tweets like this
- a write in candidate over a black socialist

Tears of joy let me tell ya.
 
Question. Does the vaccine mandate theoretically apply to employees who work from home or could it? I don't mean "should it" I mean could it. I'm probably getting fired from my job anyways since I've had to take an entire week off unplanned due to a medical issue but am just curious.
According to WSJ https://archive.md/PIE5E

"The administration said the requirements don’t apply to employees who don’t report to a workplace where other individuals are present, employees who only work from home, or employees who work exclusively outdoors."
 
So you're telling me the voters elected:

- cowgirl mommy GF
- black military grandma who is BASED
- a guy who spent $153 and tweets like this
- a write in candidate over a black socialist

Tears of joy let me tell ya.
It feels like the beginning of a direct repudiation of all the racial justice reckoning build back better propaganda we've been force fed for a year now and it's beautiful.
 
This seems to be from Ed Durr, the guy who won the NJ senate seat with only $153 and knocking on doors:

View attachment 2688342

View attachment 2688343

Trump/Durr '24
Holy shit that's gold. And cuckservatives say that the GOP can't win elections going the Trump route. Yet this guy proves that idea completely wrong!!
Between this dude and Winsome Sears how much is twitter melting down internally trying not give these two their blue checkmarks?
Probably. I would love to see the backlash if they don't give them blue checkmarks.
So you're telling me the voters elected:

- cowgirl mommy GF
- black military grandma who is BASED
- a guy who spent $153 and tweets like this
- a write in candidate over a black socialist

Tears of joy let me tell ya.
Who was the Cowgirl Mommy GF exactly?

It feels like the beginning of a direct repudiation of all the racial justice reckoning build back better propaganda we've been force fed for a year now and it's beautiful.
I agree. This makes me very optimistic for 2022.
 
A follow-up of sorts from an article I posted a while ago about donors being angry at the Democratic Party for doing nothing. It isn't just a political capital crisis, it's an actual capital problem too. Also, unlike the last article this one actually names specific donors who are pissed.

Big Donors Financed Biden’s 2020 Run. Now They Get a Chilly Reception.​

(archive)
Some of the top Democratic contributors have become increasingly frustrated with a lack of communication from the White House — and impatient with inaction on voting rights.

As Joseph R. Biden Jr. hopped from Manhattan high-rises to Silicon Valley mansions to gather campaign checks in 2019, he developed a certain way of thanking the well-heeled donors who invested in his presidential campaign.

The hardest part, Mr. Biden would say to them, was not just the money. It was putting their names and reputations on the line for him. And he would promise to “never, ever let you down,” as Mr. Biden told donors at the home of a Hollywood executive in late 2019.

Now, nearly 10 months into his presidency, some of Mr. Biden’s most loyal contributors and top fund-raisers are feeling neglected if not outright cast aside, according to more than 30 interviews with Democratic donors, fund-raisers and the operatives who work with them.With the loss of the Virginia governorship this week making plain the darkening political climate for Democrats, the White House has accumulated precious little good will among some of the party’s most important financiers.

Their frustrations also include impatience with the pace of substantive policy changes: One of the party’s top donors is now signaling he is planning to withhold funds entirely over the languishing of voting-rights legislation.

Donor grousing is nearly as old a tradition as campaigning itself. Wealthy and entitled contributors always want more influence and access than they have. But the sheer breadth of complaints about the Biden White House’s operation is striking, and a source of growing concern among allies and Democratic officials who fear it could cause a backlash among contributors that the party will need to mobilize soon for the 2022 midterm elections.

“There is a basic chorus, which is we’re forgotten and discarded,” said John Morgan, a major bundler who hosted Mr. Biden at his home in Florida in May 2019. “It’s very discouraging. We don’t exist.”

Donors who have made suggestions or recommendations for lower-level jobs in the Biden administration complain they never heard back from anyone. The typical courtesy thank you cards or calls to people who raised hundreds of thousands of dollars, and even those who contributed $1 million or more, have largely not arrived. And the pandemic has put on hold any glad-handing gatherings.

Of course, whining from the well-to-do is hardly going to draw any public sympathy. But Democrats close to the Biden administration still see the griping as a worrying sign of disorganization from the White House’s political operation, especially after so much of the party infrastructure eroded during an Obama presidency that saw historic down-ballot losses.

The rise of small online donors has somewhat lessened the power and sway of bundlers, who gather larger checks from friends and associates for campaigns. But the Biden operation still raised vast sums from its top fund-raisers, counting more than 800 people who collected at least $100,000 last year.

Biden advisers described the frustrations as ordinary and temporary donor grumbling and maintained that the president is prioritizing solving domestic and international challenges.

Chris Meagher, a White House spokesman, said that Mr. Biden was “laser focused on the agenda that people elected him to get done,” including voting rights, the infrastructure and social spending bills being negotiated in Congress, “shutting down” the pandemic and growing the economy.

Most donors and fund-raisers declined to speak on the record, for fear of alienating the White House. But there was widespread agreement that the Biden team had failed to provide meaningful outreach or ways for most big contributors to engage or help in the first months of the administration. The reception has been so chilly that some donors have started to presume that Mr. Biden is simply not planning to run for re-election in 2024, finding few other reasonable explanations for neglecting a core constituency.

“There’s no outreach whatsoever,” said one bundler who raised money during the primary. “Nonexistent,” said two other early Biden bundlers. “People feel hung out to dry,” said a fourth Democratic fund-raiser who raised money for Mr. Biden.

There have been exceptions.

Big donors have scored some prominent postings in the administration, including two ambassadorships last week. And Mr. Biden has held two or three virtual thank-you events for some of the party’s largest contributors since he became president, according to people familiar with the matter. One Biden adviser said roughly 60 donors spoke with the president virtually in one evening.

Almost by accident, though, the White House has moved in the direction of curbing donor influence, a long unfulfilled goal of campaign reformers and good-government groups. The Biden team believes it is playing the long game by staying focused on the pandemic and the economy, which they believe will chiefly shape the midterms.

Separate from the outreach issue, a number of major Democratic donors, in particular in Silicon Valley, have been pressing Mr. Biden to move more forcefully on passing voting-rights legislation, seeing state-level Republican restrictions on voting as an existential crisis for democracy. And they have grown increasingly frustrated as the issue has stalled behind the social spending package still being negotiated on Capitol Hill.

Prominent donors pushing for more movement on the issue, according to people familiar with the efforts, include Ron Conway, a Silicon Valley venture capitalist; Jeff and Erica Lawson, the founder of Twilio and his wife; Eric Schmidt, the former chief executive of Google; and Karla Jurvetson, a physician and philanthropist who spent more than $27 million in the 2020 election.

But none have gone as far as the hedge fund executive S. Donald Sussman, who has communicated that he is pausing his political giving until such a package advances, according to people familiar with the matter. Mr. Sussman is one of the financial pillars of the Democratic ecosystem, investing roughly $50 million during the four years that Donald J. Trump was in the White House in federal campaigns, candidates and super PACs.

A spokesperson for Mr. Sussman declined to comment.

Ning Mosberger-Tang, a Democratic donor in Colorado who put nearly $300,000 into 2020 federal campaigns, has been organizing regular meetings with like-minded donors focused on voting-rights legislation and said there was “frustration about the lack of prioritization of this issue.” She estimated the group had raised $7 million this year to press the cause.

Advancing voting-rights legislation is especially tricky politically. It would almost surely require doing away with the filibuster, which still divides Democrats. And Mr. Biden has said the issue must wait until the spending package passes, though he recently expressed openness to “fundamentally altering” the filibuster to advance voting-rights legislation.

Some party officials and allies of the White House worry that the combination of benign neglect for early bundlers and the potential for voting legislation to languish could hamper fund-raising in 2022 and beyond.

But Robert Wolf, a prominent bundler for former President Barack Obama, who had faced his own complaints about keeping up relations with donors after his 2008 win, said it was good that the contributor class was not the White House’s current priority.

“They have an incredible list of priorities to fix and, going after President Trump, the list got exponentially greater,” Mr. Wolf said. “My view is the last thing that should be on anyone’s mind should be the donor community.”

While almost everyone acknowledged that the pandemic has prevented some of the easiest staples of donor management — photo opportunities and in-person schmoozing — the communication so far has been so lackluster that some donors have been privately searching among themselves for explanations, holding sidebar conversations to ask if they had somehow offended the Biden team.

Not all donors saw a problem in being, at least temporarily, pushed to the sidelines.

“They took office with a national plague going on,” said Ed Rendell, the former governor of Pennsylvania and a Democratic fund-raiser, adding that he and others were “rational about giving them a pass.”

Mr. Biden has followed in the long tradition of elevating major donors to ambassador postings overseas. He recently appointed Randi Levine to be ambassador to Portugal and Marc Nathanson to be ambassador to Norway. Both hosted fund-raisers at their homes for Mr. Biden in 2019. Mr. Nathanson also hosted a 2020 virtual fund-raiser that raised $2 million.

But multiple donors said they were unsure of who, if anyone, at the White House was supposed to be a point of contact. And indeed, a Biden adviser said there was no such person. Some have turned to former Biden operatives and the Democratic National Committee for guidance.

Big donors have already been promised in-person events with the president that have not yet happened. Packages for those who gave $100,000 or more to Mr. Biden’s inauguration included tickets to a future in-person event (“date to be determined”) while $250,000 bought two “V.I.P. tickets.”

For now one Democratic fund-raiser has advised donors that “D.N.C.” stands for “Do Not Contribute” — at least until the party figures out how it will be more responsive to its contributors. Still, the D.N.C. continues to amass cash and has nearly $75 million in its coffers.

As donors tracked the action on Capitol Hill and in the governor’s race in Virginia, there has been another, less pressing matter that some have also been watching: whether there will be holiday parties this year at the White House, which donors are typically invited to, along with a chance for a photo with the president.

The decision, according to people briefed on the matter, remains under discussion.
 
I would be piss too. If I was a big Democrat donor. They got massacred in the Virginia election. A state that was ment to be a solid blue victory. A modern example of a solid red state turn into a solid blue.

New Jersy which the governor race got a deadheat tie which shouldn't have happened as its a solid blue state.

Both states Biden won easily.

Also a Democrat candidate got beaten my a write in.

So I get why their piss
 
So you're telling me the voters elected:

- a guy who spent $153 and tweets like this

Tears of joy let me tell ya.
Still can't believe his lead held on. Literally $1,000,000+ v. $153 (+basic campaign funds < $10,000).

David and Goliath tier shit. Surprised they didn't try to fortify for Sweeney. Eh, he and Murphy clashed on issues.
 
google tells me there's only about 2,100 OHSA inspectors. I've always heard hearsay that it would take the agency something like 200 years to properly audit all current existing companies, since they're stretched so thin

this reeks of the same ideocracy that shut the world down without thinking about any of the possible consequences, like all the non-Covid deaths caused by putting everyone on house arrest and denying them all non-Covid medical care for a year

Diverting OSHA from enforcing important shit like fall protection or flammable hazmat storage, to dumb shit like vaccine compliance, is probably going to lead to a bunch of safety violations. Most of those will probably be petty, but some will undoubtedly be serious issues that result in injury and death. I doubt there's going to be any sort of net gain in safety in this, given that most workplaces aren't retirement homes full of Covid's primary victims

Okay, the other question is, how the fuck are they planning on verifying that the businesses who say they are in compliance are, indeed, in compliance?

It’s one thing if some businesses decide to openly defy the mandate and get a bright red target painted on their backs. It’s another thing entirely to just say “yep, all vaxxed!” and rely on the fact that it is literally impossible for OSHA to audit everyone.
I have some experience with OHSA and let me tell you, they haven't been reputable for years. I worked at two companies over ten years ago that had multiple OHSA violations, had multiple people report these violations to OHSA and OHSA did not even investigate the first which had close ties to Wells Fargo, which led to the company collapsing when it got individual law suits from the BBB... Think about that the BBB did a better job at handling the situation than OHSA. The lawyers working for said company are literally what led to the law suits because the lawyers didn't properly check the script they wrote for the callers, and a few employees brought in devices they weren't supposed to and stole a large amount of credit cards (Numbers, not the physical cards). Main thing: Don't trust telemarketing companies.

The second company had people driving vehicles around without license, one guy was practically sleep walking while the OHSA agent was there and had open violations even as the OHSA agent arrived, and he acted as if he didn't see any of it. I assumed he was bribed, but I can't prove that, however some of the food being dispensed was literally molding and instead of taking it to the back some was put on shelves for customers. Again, this was around ten years ago.

More than likely a lot of big companies will just bribe OHSA or OHSA just won't do shit, and the other small businesses will be the ones to be targeted is my guess. Anything to collapse them for major corporations.
 
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