What'd they say?

All right, so, I watched most of the debate last week, and the thing I came away with was something like what Anand Giridharadas said the weekend after - that I had watched what should amount to Joe Biden's retirement party. The odd thing about that phenomenon is that almost no one on mainstream television appears to agree with that. In fact, some of the usual pundits were saying that this was Biden's best night of the three debates. I have to scratch my head when I hear this stuff - did they see the same show I saw? Or is it just that they have lowered the performance bar for Biden to such an extent that he basically can do no wrong. That is not the Biden I saw.

His worst moment, namely his response to the question about the legacy of slavery in America, was aptly dissected by the Majority Report crew, who I think nailed it on the head. In his halting way, Biden began his response by talking about his fight against segregation, then pivoted quickly, recalling that this was a trouble area for him. He then talked about education, specifically poor kids in inner city schools, and once again he equated black kids with being poor. His solution sounded positively draconian: let's send social workers into these kids' homes, because their parent(s) don't know how to handle them. What? Kind of astonishing, but that's where the guy is coming from, so he was doing a public service of sorts.

Get off my lawnism.

The health care debate was probably the most contentious that forum got. This is probably where the usual pundits got the notion that Biden did better than usual. He was old man-splaining Elizabeth Warren and Bernie Sanders as to why Medicare for All can't work and is too expensive. The questioning, of course, sought to support Biden's case - It will raise taxes, right? Right?? The ABC team, like their predecessors at CNN and MSNBC, are trying their best to generate a soundbite of Warren saying "Yes, I'm going to raise your taxes!" If they ever succeed, they'll probably blow some kind of ship horn. Biden seemed to think that $1,000 out of pocket was no big deal. Not surprised that that wasn't the headline.

I think the biggest threat on that stage is the possibility of Biden becoming the nominee. I don't know how to tell centrist Democrats this, but nominating him would be like rewinding to 2016 and running it again. We've already seen that show - let's get someone on that ticket who will inspire the masses, not grab a couple of centrists here and there. That didn't work out real well in the last election, and it won't this time either.

luv u,

jp

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