One of the things that is most maddening about this situation is that it could have easily been avoided. Instead the Dems are stuck with a guy who was born on the same day as WWII's Battle of Tassafaronga.
― butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Saturday, 10 February 2024 19:23 (one year ago)
What would he be doing differently if he were younger? What are they afraid of him doing (or not doing) at the age he is now?
I don't think he's doing much of anything, to be honest. Based on interviews, public appearances, and what's being said "on the beltway," the team surrounding him is doing most of the work while the old guy naps and makes suggestions that are woefully behind the times.
― butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Saturday, 10 February 2024 19:27 (one year ago)
What are they afraid of him doing (or not doing) at the age he is now?
I think he was mostly picked because of a perceived ability to beat Trump in an election (which was proved correct, though we've no way of knowing which of the alternatives would have also won). What they're afraid of now isn't his ability to be president, its the loss of his perceived ability as a candidate to win again
― anvil, Saturday, 10 February 2024 19:34 (one year ago)
He did say the genocide that he’s funding is going a little faster than he expected
― bae (sic), Saturday, 10 February 2024 19:35 (one year ago)
xp to table: I am not sure that is true, but even if it is ... so what? When I voted for Biden, I wasn't just voting for him but for the people he would appoint to run the government alongside him.
― jaymc, Saturday, 10 February 2024 19:36 (one year ago)
Pretty sure Biden has been responsible for the enthusiastic support of Israel by this admin, a support that troubles even AIPIAC-endorsed doofs like Dick Durbin. He saw beheaded babies.
― B. Amato (Boring, Maryland), Saturday, 10 February 2024 19:49 (one year ago)
“It’s actually ageist to suggest that there might be a downside to gerontocracy” has always been an insane argument
― Boris Yitsbin (wins), Saturday, 10 February 2024 19:54 (one year ago)
Whomsoever amongst us can forget the Battle of Tassafaronga
― Virginia Wolfman (Ye Mad Puffin), Saturday, 10 February 2024 20:13 (one year ago)
What they're afraid of now isn't his ability to be president, its the loss of his perceived ability as a candidate to win again
otm. My concerns about his age have almost entirely to do with its non-negligible impact on his chances of winning the election. What happens after the election is a secondary issue that we can worry about if he actually manages to win.
― a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony (tipsy mothra), Saturday, 10 February 2024 20:17 (one year ago)
I don’t think you need a list of things younger person would be doing better to not assume you’d feel better if someone who wasn’t declining in front of our eyes was in control of the world’s largest military and a nuclear arsenal that can destroy humanity.
The President is the vibes leader and low energy and confused is not a good vibe.
― papal hotwife (milo z), Saturday, 10 February 2024 20:20 (one year ago)
We still need a better alternative suggestion than "none of the above"
― Virginia Wolfman (Ye Mad Puffin), Saturday, 10 February 2024 20:22 (one year ago)
If they both keel over one month before elections, how does everyone's predictions change? Would Harris be the backup against ... ?
― Philip Nunez, Saturday, 10 February 2024 20:22 (one year ago)
Sorry, but I think you kinda do. Most young people are fucking morons and I can't think of one I'd want as president.
― Tahuti Watches L&O:SVU Reruns Without His Ape (unperson), Saturday, 10 February 2024 20:27 (one year ago)
Philip, I know you know this, but we don't vote for candidates; we vote for electors who are pledged to a candidate.
When the candidate is unavailable, electors can do whatever the fuck they want. Mostly. Kinda. I think. Who the hell knows?
Maybe we just dissolve the whole dumb project and return to the tundra or jungle or whatev
― Virginia Wolfman (Ye Mad Puffin), Saturday, 10 February 2024 20:30 (one year ago)
I have a pretty good loincloth ready to go, and a decent slingshot
― Virginia Wolfman (Ye Mad Puffin), Saturday, 10 February 2024 20:32 (one year ago)
Any Generic National Democrat between the ages of 40 & 65 is going to be functionally indistinguishable from Biden aside from not being senescent (and probably being better on Israel). I would choose any of them. Pete, Kamala, Klobuchar, Whitmer, Pritzker, whatever.
The only argument for Biden at this point is the incumbent advantage and when the national conversation for the rest of the year is going to be “are we sure he isn’t senile?” that advantage is negated.
― papal hotwife (milo z), Saturday, 10 February 2024 20:32 (one year ago)
A president's staff and appointees are supposed to do most of the work of running the executive branch. As for ageism vs. gerontocracy, yes, it's much better to have a president who is vigorous and able to absorb new information rapidly and decisively, but these qualities aren't an absolute necessity. What you really don't want is a situation where a president's incapacity or indecision creates a power vacuum and there is no way to resolve conflicting factions at the top levels of the administration. That can happen to any president, but the risk is much higher with an elderly one.
― more difficult than I look (Aimless), Saturday, 10 February 2024 20:33 (one year ago)
I have had this argument with friends who are like, "Who would be more electable?" My point is that we can't know that without a competitive primary. That's why we have primaries. If Biden hadn't run, we would've had probably 5 to 10 Democrats vying for it, and one of them would have shown the political skills to win the primary. Whoever that was would have been (imo) more viable and electable than Biden.
Open primaries are good for identifying political talent. It's how we got both Clinton and Obama, who — whatever you think of them as presidents — were very good presidential candidates.
― a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony (tipsy mothra), Saturday, 10 February 2024 20:34 (one year ago)
_I don’t think you need a list of things younger person would be doing better to not assume you’d feel better if someone who wasn’t declining in front of our eyes was in control of the world’s largest military and a nuclear arsenal that can destroy humanity._Sorry, but I think you kinda do. Most young people are fucking morons and I can't think of one I'd want as president.
― Boris Yitsbin (wins), Saturday, 10 February 2024 20:34 (one year ago)
It is mildly interesting that there is exactly one professional field wherein I (52) would be considered a young upstart whippersnapper, and happens to be extremely important
― Virginia Wolfman (Ye Mad Puffin), Saturday, 10 February 2024 20:39 (one year ago)
I wouldn't trust this guy to run a bath let alone the most powerful nation on Earth.
― The British Boy of Film Classification (Tom D.), Saturday, 10 February 2024 20:41 (one year ago)
When I asked a 50+ and 40+ how young a candidate could be, everyone agreed 35 was too young, mostly citing how ignorant and immature they felt at 35. (But I didn't want to tell them they didn't strike me as that much more mature now!)
― Philip Nunez, Saturday, 10 February 2024 20:44 (one year ago)
it would be good to have a president who could frequently and effectively communicate about issues facing the country imo
― symsymsym, Saturday, 10 February 2024 21:06 (one year ago)
Sad thing is Biden once could have
― B. Amato (Boring, Maryland), Saturday, 10 February 2024 21:10 (one year ago)
― jaymc, Saturday, 10 February 2024 21:30 (one year ago)
I don't think Biden was ever good at that sort of thing - he's been a gaffe machine for 40 years now. hes definitely worse than he used to be though.
― frogbs, Saturday, 10 February 2024 21:39 (one year ago)
Biden wasn't even my third pick in 2020. He beat Trump. He has signed more significant legislation than Obama (ACA excepted). He shouldn't have gotten this far, yet here he is. Having lived through Reagan, the second Bush, and Trump -- pretty traumatic experiences! -- I've seen how the presidency largely depends on a chief executive vaguely or forcefully espousing certain views about what he expects from his government, then lets the staff and Congress sort it out. I don't care if he's feeble. I don't care if he's a figurehead. His party supports things I believe in -- Reagan's brain was toilet paper the last two years of his administration while Bush II's never existed. Edith Wilson ran the goddamn government in 1920. I just don't have time to worry about Biden's purported senility.
― poppers fueled buttsex crescendo (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 10 February 2024 21:45 (one year ago)
Of course a younger and more leftist candidate should've run in 2020; instead we got septuagenarians.
― poppers fueled buttsex crescendo (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 10 February 2024 21:46 (one year ago)
Alfred OTM
― Marten Broadcloak, mild-mannered GOP congressman (Raymond Cummings), Saturday, 10 February 2024 21:48 (one year ago)
Paul Campos at LGM:
Biden is three and a half years older, but chronological and cognitive age are separate things, and there’s absolutely no basis for believing that advanced age is a more troubling factor in Biden’s case than it is in Trump’s, given Trump’s terrible lifestyle and propensity to avoid exercising his brain, which is a massive risk factor in terms of age-related cognitive decline.
So focusing on the fact that both candidates are really old is pointless, given that it’s not a distinguishing factor between them, unlike say the fact that one of them wants to install an authoritarian cult of personality in the service of primarily, keeping himself out of prison, and secondarily, theocratic ethno-nationalism, and the other doesn’t.
That Biden is very old is a huge negative in the abstract. In the concrete present of America 2024, it’s totally meaningless — not that this will stop Peter Baker et. al. from talking about it endlessly for the next nine months.
― poppers fueled buttsex crescendo (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 10 February 2024 21:56 (one year ago)
Yeah, again, I don't particularly care about his cognitive abilities from a governing standpoint. And as discussed elsewhere, I won't personally have any trouble voting for the guy, for a number of different reasons (only some of which have anything to do with his performance in office).
But it was an incredibly risky gamble for him to seek a second term — much riskier than not, imo — and I deeply resent him taking that gamble for the whole country. And people (not anyone here) who think perceptions of age and infirmity don't matter in leadership decisions are just whistling past the graveyard. Of course they matter. Probably they even should matter. If Biden wins, OK, I'll forgive him the high-risk behavior. But if he doesn't, I won't. This was his call, so he'd better deliver. Stakes is high.
― a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony (tipsy mothra), Saturday, 10 February 2024 22:30 (one year ago)
To contextualize a little, I don't resent him running only because of his age. If he was Reagan sitting on a 58 percent approval rating, I'd say go for it big guy, you've earned it. But that's not the situation. His popularity is very low, and his age is an intrinsic part of that.
― a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony (tipsy mothra), Saturday, 10 February 2024 22:32 (one year ago)
I have had this argument with friends who are like, "Who would be more electable?" My point is that we can't know that without a competitive primary. That's why we have primaries. If Biden hadn't run, we would've had probably 5 to 10 Democrats vying for it, and one of them would have shown the political skills to win the primary.
I pay pretty close attention to Democratic Party politics and I couldn't come up with 10 potential presidential candidates if you gave me 24 hours and $1000. I suspect you couldn't either.
― Tahuti Watches L&O:SVU Reruns Without His Ape (unperson), Saturday, 10 February 2024 22:38 (one year ago)
Newsom, Shapiro, Whitmer, Pritzker, Kamala Harris, Buttigieg, Warren, Beshear, Wes Moore, and Raphael Warnock.
― Beyond Goo and Evol (President Keyes), Saturday, 10 February 2024 22:55 (one year ago)
Are you sure you pay close attention?
WhitmerPritzkerHarrisPetey ButtsNewsomWalzInsleeBrownDuckworthMarkey
Why not throw in Warren and Beto for good measure.
― papal hotwife (milo z), Saturday, 10 February 2024 22:57 (one year ago)
I didn’t even include people who will certainly run in 2028, like Klobachar, Booker and Adam Schiff. Or dream candidates like AOC or Bernie.
― Beyond Goo and Evol (President Keyes), Saturday, 10 February 2024 23:06 (one year ago)
The clear-eyed realist 'I know the Democratic Party/Biden/etc. sucks but by god it's the only option we've got' schtick doesn't work too well in this case - if "beating Trump" is the important thing (vs. "re-electing Biden") Biden's mental state (or more accurately, public perception of his mental state - 2/3 of Democrats already think he's too old!) matters a great deal.
Even if you want to go with the line that they're both old and losing it - accurate! - someone who is not old and losing it would thus be a competitive advantage.
― papal hotwife (milo z), Saturday, 10 February 2024 23:13 (one year ago)
by god it's the only option we've got' schtick doesn't work
so what other option do you propose?
― more difficult than I look (Aimless), Sunday, 11 February 2024 00:11 (one year ago)
Supposedly Obama tried to talk him out of running in 2020. You just can’t turn this old mule around
― beamish13, Sunday, 11 February 2024 00:15 (one year ago)
Why not throw in Warren and Beto for good measure
The first three names on your list are the only serious options. The others are nobodies (yes, even Newsom) or proven losers.
― Tahuti Watches L&O:SVU Reruns Without His Ape (unperson), Sunday, 11 February 2024 00:34 (one year ago)
nothing in the constitution that says losers can't run for president
― symsymsym, Sunday, 11 February 2024 00:40 (one year ago)
Primaries, notorious for having 10 guaranteed winners each time.
― papal hotwife (milo z), Sunday, 11 February 2024 00:40 (one year ago)
I'm less worried than in 2020, I think Biden is going to win this election and serve out 4 more years, and that will be that
― Dan S, Sunday, 11 February 2024 01:20 (one year ago)
a.) You're probably right; but
b.) We have no way to know! Again, it's why we have primaries. Look how many people touted as frontrunners have flamed out at different points. Politics is hard, you have to be good at it to get elected president. The value of a primary system is finding out who can best put together votes (and money, and marketing, and all of the other things politics requires). You don't know who's actually going to win the game until you play it. Besides the high-risk nature of his candidacy, Biden is also stifling the party figuring out who its next best bet is.
― a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony (tipsy mothra), Sunday, 11 February 2024 02:27 (one year ago)
Honestly this is what Boomers have been doing for years
― butt dumb tight my boners got boners (the table is the table), Sunday, 11 February 2024 02:28 (one year ago)
Amen brother
― a man often referred to in the news media as the Duke of Saxony (tipsy mothra), Sunday, 11 February 2024 02:37 (one year ago)
lol otm
― Surfin' burbbhrbhbbhbburbbb (sleeve), Sunday, 11 February 2024 02:38 (one year ago)
BOOMER LXXX THE FINAL TOUR WE SWEAR
― Surfin' burbbhrbhbbhbburbbb (sleeve), Sunday, 11 February 2024 02:39 (one year ago)
don't stop believing!
― Surfin' burbbhrbhbbhbburbbb (sleeve), Sunday, 11 February 2024 02:40 (one year ago)
oops sorry I meant "don't stop thinking about tomorrow", damn boomers and their songs