A friend sent me this editorial from The Irish Times to show how our Presidential campaign is viewed in a normal country.
The Irish Times titled it:
Trump’s flaming chainsaw circus act is back. And so is the media gravy train
The candidate with openly violent dictatorship ambitions is being allowed to campaign as a normal politician
The point: the media is treating Trump with kid gloves because he’s good for their bottom line. Biden is boring.
Way back in 2016 TV network chiefs knew the destruction they were wreaking with their 24/7 razzle-dazzle Trump coverage. “It may not be good for America, but it’s damn good for CBS,” said the network’s chairman Les Moonves. “The money’s rolling in and this is fun . . .Bring it on, Donald.”
Now we know that Trump was gifted around $2 billion in free media plus substantially more coverage than his opponents.
Fast forward to 2021, a few months after president Joe Biden was sworn in. US journalist and author Julie Ioffe asked some reporters how life had been since the Trump circus left town.
“Trump has been good for many journalists professionally, myself included,” said one.
“I mean, it wasn’t just the fact that Trump was a gravy train,” said another. “It’s also juxtaposed (against) the most boring administration in modern history. You go from a circus with flaming chainsaws to… what? An old man watching his dog?”
That “old man” was just a year older than Trump is now.
Since then the old man’s economy has added a record number of jobs and sees stocks – a Trump fixation during his presidency – at a record high.
Trump, meanwhile, is facing 91 criminal indictments, some relating to attempts to overthrow the government. In October alone he said that shoplifters should be shot and suggested an army general should be executed for treason. He promises a mass deportation programme with internment camps near the border, and plans to use the military to crush street protests via the Insurrection Act, while being a dictator on day one. At a global level he is happy to throw small sovereign countries like Estonia under Putin’s tanks.
Yet this man, with all the mental acuity of a howling dog, is ahead in the polls. The flaming chainsaw circus act is back with a vengeance, and for some in the media so is that sweet gravy train.
Might the two be linked?
The ceaseless drumbeat about Biden’s age and decline – reminiscent of the saturation 2016 coverage of Hillary Clinton’s emails – is once again enabling the candidate with openly violent dictatorship ambitions to campaign as a normal politician, as if this was the Kentucky Derby.
In a speech to the National Rifle Association last Friday, Trump lied dozens of times, slurred his words and confused basic facts, according to a furious Biden campaign adviser. “But you won’t hear about any of it if you watch cable news, read this weekend’s papers, or watch the Sunday shows,” raged TJ Ducklo, accusing beltway reporters of being numb to Trump’s horrifying candidacy. Well, he would say that, wouldn’t he?
Yet in the weekend’s New York Times Biden’s age and memory were addressed negatively by no fewer than three prominent columnists plus the paper’s editorial board, along with multiple news stories. On a Sunday current affairs show a CNN chyron asked, “Is Biden’s age now a bigger problem than Trump’s indictments?” It was the classic circular question which could have begun with the media itself asking about its own role in the growing “problem”.
An outlier was a Washington Post feature describing Biden’s work schedule around the special counsel interviews he sat down for on the two days following the appalling October 7th Hamas atrocity. He was brain-shifting between calls with world leaders about a threatened Middle East conflagration and 2½-hour sessions of questions about decades-old events.
Given that Biden was exonerated on several counts while others were deemed no longer sensitive or not provable, the special counsel’s scathing commentary on his memory was remarkable in terms of timing.
Trump was back again in a federal courthouse in a criminal case involving classified documents and obstruction of FBI efforts. “I’m in court. Again!” boasted his campaign message.
Still, the growing consensus is that Biden is the one with the problem and must bow out.
There are reasons why this is barely feasible, a big one being that the deadline for candidates’ primary ballot submissions, involving a hefty fee and many thousands of voter signatures, has already passed in most states. If, having won enough delegates to be unsurpassable, Biden then withdraws, the nomination could be decided on the floor of the Democratic National Convention in August, where delegates could choose a saviour candidate instead. Not many ambitious big names, timing their run, want to pit themselves against a sitting president. Plus Biden has the funds and has already proven himself against Trump.
So the more pressing question is how a responsible media weighs up the declining memory of a mostly successful pro-democracy incumbent versus the threat of a vile, vengeful, authoritarian alternative.
Most people have no idea how dangerously deranged an unfiltered Trump looks on his own platform. So there is a balance to be struck: how to cover Trump as a candidate while printing the unvarnished truth of what he actually says. What most people see instead is the text-heavy, sanitised, balanced – as opposed to objective – headlines of the mainstream media and/or the polarised call-and-response of a social media that rewards hate and ignorance.
Maybe the mainstream solution involves in-your-face tactics such as replacing the big front page images several times a day with unfiltered Trump social statements in a size and font readable at 50m….
Imagine bold-faced headlines in the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, the Washington Post, the Boston Globe, USA Today, the Miami Herald, etc., stating “TRUMP LIES AGAIN ABOUT…..”
That would mean reporting facts, not “what he said.”

When people say that this blog’s host is hyper-partisan, postings like this are the reason why. It is laughable in the extreme to claim that the media treats Trump with kid gloves. I have subscriptions to the NY Times, the Washington Post, and the Wall Street Journal. I also read many other newspaper articles that Real Clear Politics links to. All of those newspapers regularly publish articles, editorials, and opinion pieces critical of Trump. Same for ABC, NBC, CBS, CNN, MSNBC, and many print magazines. 90+% of political jouranlists vote straight Democratic and are left-wing on almost all issues – collectively they are far to the left-of-center on the American political spectrum. I’m not saying that Trump is unfairly treated; I’m saying that the idea that the media lets Trump’s non-stop idiocies slide is patently absurd.
It is far more accurate to say that the non-conservative media protect Joe Biden and have during his entire presidency. There has been coverage of the recent Hur report noting its conclusion that Biden is cognitively impaired. But I have yet to see any non-conservative outlet inform their audience that Biden will not take a test for cognitive impairment at his upcoming physical. Not a word about the Biden team refusing to allow the video of his five hour deposition to be released. One exception here: to their credit, NBC News disclosed that Joe Biden himself – not the Special Counsel staff – brought up Beau Biden’s name during the deposition, after which Joe could not remember even within several years when that son had died – a clear indicator of likely cognitive impairment.
Does Diane Ravitch believe that the public has the right to know about the cognitive states of BOTH Biden and Trump? Or does she want the media to continue to protect the candidate she favors?
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Does Diane Ravitch believe that the public has the right to know about the cognitive states of BOTH Biden and Trump? Or does she want the media to continue to protect the candidate she favors?
What leads you to think that Diane Ravitch wishes to protect Joe Biden or any sitting president from undergoing routine cognitive testing? I have never heard her comment on this issue one way or the other.
Trump does, in fact, have the mental acuity of a howling dog. Every speech he makes confirms this. He is also a career con man currently under more than ninety criminal indictments, a pathological liar, profoundly ignorant (what sort of guy confuses a dementia test with an IQ test or thinks that stealth airplanes are actually invisible?), an adjudged rapist, and a breathtakingly immoral man who oversaw mass kidnappings and ordered his Secretary of Homeland Security to have the Border Patrol SHOOT unarmed, legal asylum seekers and delivered to his buddy indicted international war criminal Vladimir Putin everything he wanted, much to the danger of ourselves and our allies–just for starters. He is fit for prison, not for the Oval Office.
The Irish Times is simply reporting the facts. Trump is an utterly loathsome POS.
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So, quite a few people who never posted here before have shown up suddenly to rail against Diane Ravitch as “hyper partisan.” The sudden, out-of-the-blue and uninformed nature of these posts suggests that they might be part of some sort of organized attack on Diane and her blog. Is this the case? Are you involved with a group doing this? If so, what group, organized by whom. And who are you people?
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I’ve been a casual reader of this blog for the last two years, never commenting before today. How about just responding to the questions I raised rather than launching personal attacks against the questioner? A big weakness of this blog is the anger displayed against anyone who dissents even slightly from the party line.
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You have a point, Mr. Pearson. I responded as I did because this “Diane is hyperpartisan” meme has suddenly started appearing a lot, and it seems suspicious. There is so much troll farm stuff going on these days. First, with regard to your particular points, while it is true that a study found that only 3.4 percent of American journalist identify as Republicans, the same study found that only 36.4 percent identify as Democrats. Second, I have never heard Diane say that the media lets Trump slide. Third, I haven’t seen any study of this, but my impression is that Hur’s questioning of Biden’s mental acuity has been truly widespread–everywhere one turns in the “liberal” media. Fourth, it is entirely possible that Biden has chosen not to take a cognitive test at his upcoming physical because simply acquiescing in doing this would provide fodder to the conservative smear campaign about his acuity. Fifth, what I have seen in the news is not that Biden has refused to have the transcripts or video released but that the White House has not come to a decision about that. I understand. These things can be cherry picked, and single incidents can sink a presidential campaign (Gerald Ford stumbling getting out an airplane and hitting someone with a golf ball; Dukakis in the tank; George Bush, Sr., not knowing how grocery checkout counters work; etc.). Sixth, the loss of a child is so devastating that many people choke up mentally when thinking about it. Most couples who lose a child end up divorcing. It’s breathtakingly traumatic. I would not draw any conclusions from what happens when someone is asked to think about the death of his or her child. Anyone, impaired or not, could well lose it in response.
So, there. I addressed your issues.
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Matt, have you not been reading Diane’s repeated responses to you and other trolls who pose these typical trollish questions. Diane has made it clear that she would vote for anyone over Trump, the pro-Putin candidate. I agree with Diane, I would vote for Biden over Trump who is far more discombobulated than Biden on any given day.
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In a contest between Biden and the vandal, fascist Trump, I will vote for the candidate that supports democracy. I am pleased with Biden’s efforts to rebuild the middle class, and, frankly, I would really like to see what Biden would do in a second term without being beholden to donors. My gut instinct is telling me that he would continue to help working families. Any member of the GOP only works for the interests of the 1%. I am not concerned about Biden’s recall of dates. He is experienced and rational, and he understands the consequences of his actions.
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RT, you are so right.
Being president is not the same as winning a game show or picking the right bubble on a standardized test.
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Matt Pearson,
This is my blog. I write what I want and I post what I want. If you don’t like it, don’t read it.
I am a partisan for democracy and the Constitution. Yes, I am hyperpartisan for democracy and the Constitution.
If you think it’s fine to ditch the western alliance, you should not read my blog. If you think it’s fine to lie about the 2020 election and stage a coup to overturn it, you should not read my blog.
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Ms. Ravitch,
A very disappointing response, in keeping with what I said to Bob Shepherd about the party line here. In my first comment I refer to “Trump’s non-stop idiocies.” I am clearly not a Trump apologist.
You of course have the right to post or not post whatever you want. But please answer my question: do you believe that the public has the right to know about the cognitive states of BOTH Biden and Trump?
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Matt,
Does the public have “the right to know” about the cognitive decline of both candidates? Not from me they don’t.
I know nothing about any cognitive decline on Biden’s part.
I think he has been a brilliant president. His legislative accomplishments are magnificent, especially in the face of GOP obstructionism and the slender Democratic control of the Senate. Even in his first two years, the Senate was so precarious that Manchin and Sinema frequently torpedoed his ambitious goals to boost the economy, revive manufacturing, and build the middle class.
On the other hand, Trump’s ignorance and venality are on display every time he opens his mouth. No mental examination is needed to decry his proposal that Putin invade our NATO allies and do whatever he wants. I strongly support our military aid to Ukraine. Trump has blocked it.
What did Trump do during his four years as President to equal Biden’s child tax credit, which cut child poverty in half—but was then eliminated by the GOP?
Trump was a terrible president. I lived in fear of what he might do or say next.
His assault on the integrity of our elections is disgraceful.
Trump is a fascist. It doesn’t matter to me if his cognitive skills are declining. Whatever they are, he is a dangerous, ignorant fascist who wants to be a dictator , but “only on day one.”
I repeat: Biden is a master of legislation. His wisdom and deep experience have produced an economic boom that other nations admire (as a recent article in “The Economist” said)
As I have previously written, I would vote for anyone who is running against Trump. He is a laughing stock on the world stage and a menace to the future of our democracy.
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“I know nothing about any cognitive decline on Biden’s part.”
That says it all – willful blindness. If you’re not suspicious about Biden’s possible cognitive impairment, that’s deliberately living within an ideological bubble. Say the worst about Trump and I will likely agree with you. That doesn’t alter the reality about Biden – something that until recently even Bob Shepherd used to realize.
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I think Biden has been a great president. Period. I think Trump is an insurrectionist and a traitor.
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Matt,
You won’t find both-sides-ism here between Biden and Trump.
Biden mixes up names and dates. So do I. So do many people far younger.
We don’t pick as president someone for their ability to answer a question on “Jeopardy.”
We want a president who is experienced, wise, knowledgeable, and knows how to forge alliances with other nations and create bipartisan agreements to pass legislation.
That’s not a hard choice.
I frankly don’t care if you call me hyperpartisan. If that’s what it means to despise Trump and everything he stands for, I’m in good company.
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Beautifully said, Diane.
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I think that Biden clearly shows signs of aging. I think that this is undeniable. It is also undeniable, I think, that his speech problems are worse now, that there are more miscues. I don’t see evidence of impairment severe enough to keep him from being one of the greatest presidents we have ever seen. And at this point, it’s Biden or Trump, and Trump is the one of the most venal and loathsome and dangerous people who ever lived.
There’s no contest. I’m with Diane, I would vote for a pile of dog shit over Donald Trump. A vote for Trump for president is like a vote for John Gotti or or Ed Gein for president. It’s a vote for a monster.
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Matt,
Diane Ravitch is correcting the difference between misspeaking or having a memory failure — we all do — and INVENTING AN ENTIRE FALSE REALITY AND SHOUTING OVER AND OVER AGAIN THAT YOUR FALSE REALITY IS TRUE (which is not normal).
The NYT is critical of Trump and Biden, and normalizes them both, when only one is normal.
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NYCPSP,
Trump is a masterful and persistent liar. He claimed without any evidence that the 2020 election was stolen from him. He refused to listen to the White House Counsel, who told him he lost. He refused to listen to Bill Barr, who told him he lost. He listened to Guiliani, Sydney Powell, Mike Flynn, and others who told him to keep fighting. He lost 60 of 61 lawsuits in federal and state courts. The 61st would not have changed the outcome. Even the Supreme Court turned down his appeals, twice. Yet he continued to lie and undermine the public’s faith in our most essential institution, the elections. Today, thanks to Trump’s lies, most Republicans believe the 2020 election was stolen—that hundreds of thousands of dead people voted, that machines switched Trump votes to Biden, that millions of illegal immigrants voted. None of this was true. Every one of these claims was thrown out by the courts, even by Trump-appointed judges.
Yet he continues to lie.
Those are facts, not my opinion.
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Diane Ravitch is correcting the difference between misspeaking or having a memory failure — [something] we all do — and INVENTING AN ENTIRE FALSE REALITY AND SHOUTING OVER AND OVER AGAIN THAT YOUR FALSE REALITY IS TRUE (which is not normal).
Exactly right. Nailed it.
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^^^whoops,should have proofread first
Diane Ravitch is correct. There is a difference between misspeaking or having a memory failure — we all do — and INVENTING AN ENTIRE FALSE REALITY AND SHOUTING OVER AND OVER AGAIN THAT YOUR FALSE REALITY IS TRUE (which is not normal).
The NYT is critical of Trump and Biden, and normalizes them both, when only one is normal.
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I have seen some excellent memes about the “both siderism” of the media.
A photo of Emperor Palpatine (also known at the Dark Lord Darth Sidious) next to a photo of Yoda.
Caption: “But they are both so old.”
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THAT IS PERFECT!!!
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@Diane — Well said. Here’s what I know, as we age, we lose a step. There is a thing called “Tip of the Tongue Syndrome” that we all experience. A quality leader will make sure they are surrounded by a strong supporting cast not “yes people”. David Oglivy said this, In his bestselling Ogilvy on Advertising, Ogilvy described how recruiting smart people was the key to transforming his advertising agency into a global advertising, marketing and public relations giant. He wrote,
When someone is made the head of an office in the Ogilvy & Mather chain, I send him a Matrioshka doll from Gorky. If he has the curiosity to open it, and keep opening it until he comes to the inside of the smallest doll, he finds this message:
“If each of us hires people who are smaller than we are, we shall become a company of dwarfs. But if each of us hires people who are bigger than we are, we shall become a company of giants.” Throughout my life, I have alway sought out the “higher experience” of others to teach well, live well, or give quality advice. As a sports coach, I sought the advice of people waaaay better than me and read the likes of John Wooden, Coach K, Hubie Brown, and Pete Carroll (in his book, he discusses how he used CRT — Cognitive Behavioral Therapy) add value to his players; to get the best out of them. In sum, you are in your 80s and one of the sharpest, most well-read, and intelligent people I have had the pleasure of reading, internalizing thought, and learning. As you stated more often than not, we need leaders who do right by the people. As I have witnessed, there is one person who continues to say something like, “…and I am the ONLY one who can fix it.” I, like you, am looking for the truth and good in people before I follow them. Thank you for listening.
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Thank you, Rick.
You are right.
A good leader surrounds him/herself with really good people.
Biden is that kind of leader.
Trump had constant turnover in his Cabinet. Multiple chiefs of staff. Some spilled the beans. He is a know-it-all.
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A great point, Diane. It is truly breathtaking how many former Trump office holders now spend their time speaking out against him.
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@Diane — Here’s what I know…I just got back from mentoring my former student who will be heading to college next year. We discussed his senior project and I reminded him, “Be the change you want to see. Make learning exciting for students; know your audience whether you agree or not, well, because sometimes through conversation you’ll find they want the same things you do…” I reminded him we are here to make the world a better place; leave it better than it was tomorrow; instill knowledge so those can use it for good…” It felt good to engage with him on how to think…I felt warm and ecstatic about working with Alonso and his graduation project. I am hoping students like Alonso WILL be the change and take along hordes of others who fight for good, helping those in need, and making things better for all as opposed to “pissing contests.” As you and Bob stated, your blog has become “curiouser and curiouser” with many diversions. Thanks again for welcoming here.
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Matt, I recommend that you listen to Malcolm Gladwell’s podcast about the fallibility of memory at all ages and its implications. I’ve posted it below. About your conclusions on mainstream news regarding the Hur report. All of the venues I watch or read, including MSNBC, NYTimes, and the Atlantic, blared the headlines concerning Hur’s conclusions about Biden’s age and faulty memory from the very beginning. Pundit after pundit, both never Trump conservatives and progressives behaved like Chicken Little. Three days later the Times put in an op ed by a neurologist dismissing the memory issues. Media reporting is all about attention.
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Matt I suspect you also think it is “hyperpartisan” that Diane Ravitch and so many people on this blog will not talk about the supposedly “very serious” issue of the NAEP scores going down IN THE WAY THAT THE ANTI-PUBLIC SCHOOL CRITICS SAY NAEP SCORES MUST BE TALKED ABOUT.
Of course Diane Ravitch DOES talk about the scores, but IN CONTEXT of what they mean or don’t mean. Diane Ravitch, and most people here, aren’t trying to “cover up” NAEP scores or Biden’s misstatements and memory problems, and it is a blatant lie to present what Diane Ravitch is doing as “hyperpartisan”. She is being TRUTHFUL.
The ones being “hyperpartisan” are are folks who don’t like it that the truth about NAEP scores doesn’t smear union teachers and public schools enough, and the truth about Biden’s memory fails doesn’t smear Biden enough.
They are the dishonest ones.
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Yes. Thanks for pointing this out again. Many of us have been saying this for years. But it won’t change by our just saying it. Boycott Fox advertisers. And the Dems need to go back to the 1st law of advertising or teaching: First of all, you’ve got to get their attention. I was disappointed, though not surprised, that Biden did not have an ad during Super Bowl. If I were advising him, I would have offered a short film of him moving slowly but surely across the screen–a slight smile–trailing all the good things he’s done. Just an idea. Leaving the field to Trump is not an option for winning. Also, where I live in rural Ohio, I’d make robo calls with him speaking personally to the voter and mentioning some of the good things he/they have done. But the DNC folks make the calls and hang up if no one answers. It misses an excellent way to leave a message in the home. Also, radio ads on local radio–using Midwestern, not Seaboard, language and jargon. Biden is not alone in these communications issues–we’ve been mostly losing ground outside the coastal areas for years.
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“So the more pressing question is how a responsible media weighs up the declining memory of a mostly successful pro-democracy incumbent versus the threat of a vile, vengeful, authoritarian alternative.”
The operative word being “responsible.” Our national media, from Fox to the Washington Post, is corporate in culture and operation. This is not new. While wealthy families once ran The NY Times or the Washington Post, the primary focus was always money. We often hear these large conglomerates lament the fall of local media, but their sincerity in this regard is questionable. Their large media operations are rolling in the dough. News is extremely competitive and the companies that gobble up numerous outlets survive reducing meaningful investigative competition. Since the rise of television, the entire enterprise has focused on charisma. This ongoing diatribe about Biden’s age, when few make note of his aged opponent, is a lament about lacking the charisma that attracts audience. In his two previous bids for the White House, Biden was basically ignored for the more telegenic candidates. It says a lot that one of the reporters quoted in this piece complained about a boring Biden administration despite the fact that his legislative successes against prominent headwinds have been the most significant in 6 decades. The addition of social media makes information for the electorate more scattered and less clear. It is important that we understand a healthy democracy requires competence, not showmanship. The two perspectives are neck and neck right now.
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The days of Edward R. Murrow (who?) and Walter Cronkite are long gone. Today’s media are part of corporate conglomerates which only consider profit — and media profit is generated by ratings. So, whatever and whoever attracts ears and eyeballs goes on the air, regardless of merit, and regardless of the harm.
Any democracy ultimately depends on an informed public which, furnished with accurate, impartial information, can parse the issues and the candidates.
That’s no longer possible in America.
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Your lips move, but I can’t hear
what you’re saying.
I have become comfortably DUMB.
What logical expectations, could one
have, of someone they thought to be
insane?
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The media’s focus on Biden’s age is just another example of the media’s legitimizing of a fact-free, dishonest, right wing narrative:
“Biden should NOT be judged by his performance, like every other president. Biden should be judged on his age.”
Biden took office at a time of one of the worst crises domestically (a huge pandemic not just killing so many Americans, but crushing the health care system and crushing the economy. Despite the lies in the right wing revisionist history, no one knew whether COVID was going to morph into a much more deadly strain or something manageable. Biden walked a middle ground, saved so many lives, brought our economy back, slowly loosened restrictions while always prepared to reinstate them if the situation changed.
Once the pandemic died down, Biden was faced with foreign policy challenges that were intentionally exacerbated by the authoritarian governments of countries whose own citizens fear them. Russia began an unprovoked war so Putin can rule Ukraine instead of an elected Jewish leader who supports democracy. And HAMAS — with the backing of authoritarian, genocidal leaders of repressive countries — used its rule of Gaza to invade Israel and wipe out the inhabitants (including children) of small Israeli communities, spurning their noses at acceptable military conduct to use rape, torture, and kidnapping of some civilians, including the very young and very old, as hostages. And a border crisis.
And while people might not always like the policies that Biden is choosing to manage these crises, those choices are perfectly rationale. They are based on perfectly rational assessments of long term gain, and how to do the least harm, both to the people of the United States AND the most vulnerable people in the world whose interests sometimes conflicts with doing what seems most favorable to the SHORT-TERM interests of the American people. I don’t agree with all of Biden’s choices, but I have yet to see any critic on the left or right offer up some different policy that wasn’t also going to cause significant deaths and damage. The honest ones – like AOC and the squad and Bernie – acknowledge that and don’t use demonizing language and lies to smear Biden. They can be critical without helping the right wing destroy this country.
The anonymous critics on the left clearly are more interested in destroying the Democrats then in the lives of millions of people whose lives have already been harmed when those critics got their wish in 2016 — no Democrat in office to appoint liberal Supreme Court Justices to fill open seats, no Democrat to enact policies that were just a little more progressive instead of a lot more. They got their wish and turned this country into a place poised to descend into right wing authoritarian control. Those on the left willing to sacrifice all the progressive policies of FDR, Truman, LBJ, a moderate Supreme Court – and willing to sacrifice all the people in this country who are the first to be severely harmed by their end — got their wish. The honest ones realized their mistake and voted for Biden in 2020. The angry ones minimize or ignore all the harmful things that 4 years of Trump caused, and look the other way at a Republican Party who has promised – right out there in the open – to triple down on those harmful policies because America is not the theocracy they want. The angry ones on the left would sacrifice not just the people of the US but democracy itself, because their main goal is to destroy the Democrats.
The media’s main goal isn’t to destroy the Democrats. That is the goal of the Republican party and some angry folks on the left. But not the media’s goal. But the Republicans understand that the so-called liberal media is full of so many idiotic, cowardly, arrogant, smug and lazy reporters that they will jump to attention at any anti-Biden story the Republicans give them. The media isn’t normalizing Trump for the same reasons the Republicans and the Dem-haters who claim (or pretend) to be on the left do. They are doing it because they have been brainwashed to believe that two sides equal is hallmark of an excellent, unbiased journalist.
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NYCPSP,
Many years ago, I was friends with a prominent journalist at The NY Times. He wrote a column about some major controversy in education. I disagreed with him. He told me that both sides disagreed with him, proof that he was right. I still thought he was wrong. The right answer is not always the middle.
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Yes, journalists say those inanities “both sides disagree with me, so I must be right”, and believe they should be admired for it.
One disappointment is that Jon Stewart was so, so good at presenting so-called respectable journalists who were basically mouthing those inanities and rightfully making fun of them. His take down of CNN’s show with Tucker Carlson AND Paul Begala is legendary, and arguably did quite a bit to improve media coverage. But his first show seemed to normalize both sides reporting instead of skewering it. We get it, Jon. Both candidates are old. I don’t get how using the lowest hanging fruit to make yet another joke about how both candidates are old is worth coming back to tv for. Jon was brilliant not because he made fun of the candidates but because he made fun of the MEDIA for their inanities.
It’s not as if the media has failed to note Biden’s age over and over again. Not sure why Jon Stewart confirming that there is apparently not enough news coverage of the candidates’ elderly status is helpful. Not sure why Jon Stewart thought there was a need for MORE “Biden is old” jokes so he just had to come back. I hope he goes back to making excellent – and amusing – media criticism. But if Jon’s belief is that the media isn’t properly covering how OLD the candidates are, then I wonder what happened to him.
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Thanks to this blog’s host and to other commenters for revealing what you think the media should do in its political coverage: conceal any information that might harm Biden politically. I despise Trump and I also want an honest news media. People here just want propagandists for their side.
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Matt, that’s nonsense. I think the media should always tell the truth. I try to tell the truth and rely on evidence, though I don’t have the resources of the mass media.
I am not a propagandist. I believe, based on the evidence, that Trump tried to overturn the 2020 election and refused to admit that he lost. Is that true or false?
I believe, based on what I saw with my own eyes, that Trump summoned thousands of his supporters to Washington and encouraged them to March to the Capitol as the vote was being counted (ceremonially) and “fight like hell.” Did he say this or is it propaganda?
I believe he waited for three hours watching the mob ransack the Capitol, until he tweeted to tell them to go home. Is that speculation or fact? His White House Counsel testified that he and others pleaded with Trump to call off the mob. He waited three hours. True or false?
I have never urged the mainstream media to report falsely on Biden’s age.
You have a weird way of twisting words.
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Diane, Matt isn’t twisting your words.
Matt is blatantly lying about you. And Matt is lying about not being a Trump apologist. Matt considers Trump’s statements “idiocies” AT WORST.
Which is why we know he is lying about why he is posting here. His goal is to pretend that Biden and Trump are equally unfit for office. And he comes here — to a blog that he claims is run by someone so untrustworthy that he insults and attacks her — and has the chutzpah to tell you to be more like him and lie more.
Diane, there is one test to see if Matt is honest or not:
Matt says this:
“Say the worst about Trump and I will likely agree with you.”
This isn’t even “the worst”:
Trump is unfit – not just cognitively but ethically and morally – to be president of the United States.
Trump is a liar whose lies about how he – and not Biden – won the 2020 election, and Biden “stole” the election led directly to insurrection that killed and maimed people.
Waiting for Matt to say he agrees.
Waiting for Matt to reveal whether it is Matt who is the liar.
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NYCPSP,
Curious how commenters drop in one day, say insulting things about my being “hyperpartisan,” then disappear.
If I am hyper, so is Heather Cox Richardson, Timothy Snyder, Laurence Tribe, Judge Michael Luttig, Liz Cheney, and a long list of scholars who are very actively appalled by Trump’s ignorance and lies.
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Matt accused me of attacking him and not of addressing the issues that he raised. So, I responded point by point to those issues. No comment from him about that. Odd.
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A drop by whose goal is FUD—fear, uncertainty and doubt.
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Exactly so, Diane. His claim is preposterous.
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I reply to NYCPSP. I agree that Trump is unfit. I also believe that there is a high likelihood that Joe Biden has suffered serious and progressive cognitive impairment that will disable him from serving a full second term. Let’s have medical experts determine if that is so.
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Matt:
“Trump is a liar whose lies about how he – and not Biden – won the 2020 election, and Biden “stole” the election led directly to insurrection that killed and maimed people.”
Why didn’t you express agreement with that?
Was it because you hoped to fool us with a vague statement “Trump is unfit” (for running a marathon?, or being on the NBA all star team? or playing in the NFL? marks you as a troll.) I think Biden is “unfit” too. Happy to say that as long as I don’t have to say what he is unfit for. Biden is definitely unfit to swim the English Channel.
Matt even showed his hand when he made a fact-free claim about Biden that he suspiciously has never made about Trump:
Matt, do you also believe that there is a high likelihood that Donald Trump has suffered serious and progressive cognitive impairment that have ALREADY disabled him from being able to serve as president?
Or are you just a troll who is only allowed to write vaguely negative allusions regarding Trump that only appear to be strong criticisms when they are not?
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Matt: do these news stories get passed your biased “sniff” test?
Biden’s Doctor Says He Is ‘Healthy’ and ‘Vigorous’
President Biden’s physical exam showed he is “fit to successfully execute the duties of the presidency,” his physician said.
Biden, 80, is healthy, ‘fit for duty,’ doctor says after physical
https://www.reuters.com/world/us/biden-80-have-closely-watched-physical-exam-2023-02-16/
Biden healthy, vigorous and fit for job, says doctor
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-64670196
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Matt, you seem to be an elitist.
Here is something you should listen to – unless you don’t trust regular guys like Tennessee Brando who aren’t elitists like you, Matt:
(Expect Matt Pearson to say he is far too important to care about some regular guy from Tennessee says because he knows better.)
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I emphatically DO NOT want the media concealing anything that might harm Biden. There are a couple CRAZIES on here who think that the media should be doing that, but most people here think, I believe, as I do about this. They think that the media should be all about the freaking truth unless a revelation harms national security.
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Am I crazy?
I don’t think the media should be covering up that Biden is elderly and sometimes has a failing memory.
BUT… am I crazy because I understand that the difference between a dementia-related failing memory due to age and the kind of memory fails Biden and all of us have – perhaps more frequently as we age – is that all of us (including Biden) recognize when we misspeak or are reminded of a fact we forgot. None of us, including Biden, keeps saying that the misstatement they accidentally said IS TRUE! Can’t say the same about Trump.
Am I crazy to understand the difference between a perfectly normal less sharp memory when that person KNOWS the difference between reality and fiction, and what are REAL cognitive DEMENTIA-related memory fails where an old and senile person doubles down on whatever they believe despite it not being true?
MEMORY FAILINGS AND MISSPEAKING ARE NOT DEMENTIA.
NOT KNOWING THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN REALITY AND FICTION NO MATTER HOW MANY TIMES YOU ARE TOLD IS DEMENTIA.
Am I crazy for asking people to stop posting things that amplify the lie that Biden’s normal memory fails are early dementia.
TRUMP STILL SAYS HE WON THE ELECTION! That is a sign of dementia.
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I have a new policy of not responding to your posts, NYCPSP.
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Right, but I notice that policy is only in place when you don’t seem to be able to make an argument to contradict what I said. When you agree with me, you post agreement. When you disagree, you sometimes post nasty insults or you suddenly decide you have a policy not to respond.
Bob, you could have just written “NYPSP I wasn’t referring to you”.
I hope you intend your reply to mean that your reference to “crazies” excluded me (since I clearly don’t want to cover up Biden’s memory failings, I just don’t want them to be mischaracterized as something they are not.)
Bob, thank you for (maybe?) confirming that I am not who you refer to as a “crazy”.
That’s why it is important that Diane doesn’t delete this post. I am not one of the “crazies” and as long as Bob makes it clear he wasn’t referring to me, I’m good with ending this discussion.
Because I hope Diane Ravitch does not allow her favorite regular commentators to fling nasty personal attacks like “crazy” at people who they disagree with, and then censor the person being personally insulted from defending themselves from unwarranted attacks that they are one of the “crazies”.
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Matt, there is a difference between reporting real balanced news and opinions, a bit difference.
I subscribe to Google’s News feed. What I like about it is that Google provides three or four different sources for the same lead story.
Like this one: All I have to do is look at the headlines to determine the source with the most biased language. The I read reveals the least bias.
To be clear, bias does not mean they are lying.
Here are the four for one story in the first Google News box box I’m looking at this time.
BBC: Fani Willis: Trump prosecutor gives fiery testimony (the bias in this one is the word “fiery”)
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-68300224
CNN: Takeaways from Fani Willis’ stunning testimony in Georgia
(The bias here is the word “stunning”)
https://www.cnn.com/2024/02/15/politics/takeaways-fani-willis-testimony-georgia/index.html
NYT: D.A. Denies Improper Relationship With Special Trump Prosecutor (no bias — just facts)
FOX fake NEWS:POLITICS: (The use of the word “fake” is my opinion of FOX) The biased words in the Fox headline: “explosive, heated”
5 explosive moments from Fani Willis’ heated testimony in Trump Fulton County case: ‘If this happens again …’
https://www.foxnews.com/politics/5-explosive-moments-fani-willis-heated-testimony-in-trump-fulton-county-case-if-this-happens-again
When anyone makes a claim about the media being too biased against President Biden, who reminds me of Mr. Smith Goes to Washington or Traitor Trump, should always point out if they are referring to a news piece or an OpEd.
Opinions are supposed to be biased one way or the other. News should be balanced.
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Lloyd,
Unfortunately, the NYT is just as biased.
They ran not one but FOUR big stories legitimizing the right wing narratives that are not true.
They are:
It is absolutely common and proper to investigate whenever it is learned that two prosecutors on the same case have sex.
It a huge scandal and conflict of interest if two prosecutors on the same team hook up, and finding evidence that they traveled together or one of them paid more on a trip signals something nefarious. (unless they are Republicans like Barr and Durham)
It is the duty of prosecutors to avoid even the APPEARANCE of impropriety and two prosecutors hooking up is something that always calls for them to be recused from all cases.
The definition of “appearance” of impropriety is whether – after NYT devotes weeks of coverage about how important this scandal is – important people who matter (sources and friends of NYT reporters and a typical Republican voter in an Ohio coffee shop) believe it appears improper.
Thus, if the prosecutors are Black and Democrat, a consensual relationship between two prosecutors on the same case is – by definition – a conflict of interest because a conflict of interest is determined by when the media says it appears to be a conflict of interest.
Since the NYT never finds extremely questionable behavior by Republican prosecutor David Weiss or Hur or Durham to be anything but upright and honorable, they never have to worry about appearances.
If a white Republican woman prosecutor was treated like Fani, the NYT would be reporting this as an outrageous attempt to smear a decent woman. Instead of writing 4 big stories today normalizing it and essentially saying that it’s up to the woman to keep the right wing from politicizing her personal life.
The NYT smeared Claudine Gay the way they have been smearing Fani Willis – by presenting Gay’s unintentional plagiarism as an unprecedented and huge scandal – devoting so much news space to covering this Claudine Gay “scandal”.
When ANOTHER small news organization found that a prominent white woman had done the same thing, the NYT suddenly decided that outing women (at least white, connected women) for inadvertent plagiarism was the real outrage. Never covered it again.
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OK, so you do want the public to be informed about the mental states of both Biden and Trump. Will you join me in advocating for both men to have cognitive tests conducted by independent medical experts, with the results released to the public?
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Matt,
You ask:
“Will you join me in advocating for both men to have cognitive tests conducted by independent medical experts, with the results released to the public?”
It’s incredibly insulting to ask the President of the United States to take a “cognitive test.”
I would be very willing to join you in calling for a thorough review of the two candidates’ record for honesty and ethical behavior.
Judge them by their works.
Trump led an insurrection and tried to overthrow an election he lost. He’s spent nearly four years lying to the public.
Matt, I have concluded, based on your comments, that you are a Trump agent. Your purpose is FUD, to spread fear, uncertainty, and doubt about our President, for the benefit of an unhinged traitor.
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I for one loved the Jon Stewart bit on the election because it was funny. It made me laugh and I liked that about it. And few things are funnier than things you’re not supposed to laugh at.
I’m trying to have a sense of humor about the election, it seems necessary.
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“It seems necessary.”
HOWLING at the understatement of that. OK, FLERP. You win the internet this week.
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Jokes about Biden and Trump both being old are “things you aren’t supposed to laugh at?” Talk about low-hanging fruit. Reminds me of watching Jonny Carson as a kid and thinking his jokes about Carter’s accent or religious faith or oafish brother weren’t very original — or funny.
I did laugh at most of Stewart’s jokes, including his jokes about Biden, although I couldn’t see the hilarity of the Biden tik-tok joke. I even watched it twice to see what I missed. Biden said the words “chocolate chip cookies” funny? I thought it was totally sweet and I smiled when Biden answered the question “Jason or Travis” with the answer “Mama Kelce” and invoke her chocolate chip cookies. He looked “old”? But the audience found it absolutely hilarious – Biden the elderly incompetent guy said chocolate chip cookies funny and looked so, so old.
Then Stewart shows clips of truly insane Trump speeches, and says “These two candidates they are both SIMILARLY challenged”. Um, nope. Saying chocolate chip cookies funny and “looking old” versus making up reality?!
But the problem wasn’t just Jon Stewart being funny. It was when Jon Stewart decided to be serious instead of funny that I felt sad watching Jon be a parody of what he used to make fun of. Stewart should have stopped at the jokes. Just like he said Biden should have stopped the press conference when he was “winning”. He should have taken his own advice.
Instead, he decided to Jon-splain his jokes to us lest we perceive some partisan bias in his humor:
“We’re not suggesting neither man is vibrant, productive, or even capable….”
Of course, Mr. Stewart. That would have been the old you. The new you wants your listeners to know that both of them are old. And you want your listeners to know you would never suggest that either of them wasn’t vibrant, productive or even capable. Surely you regret ever suggesting such a thing about Trump in the past.
And Jon, we also appreciate you Jon-splaining to us worriers who think this election is important,that it really isn’t so important. How generous that you allow that you don’t mind us worrying, and we so appreciate that, but not as much as we appreciate you Jon-splaining to us naive folks that our candidate winning doesn’t mean the hard work of fighting for the policies we want are over.
If only Stewart had Jon-splained how to “grind away on issues” once an authoritarian and a party that spurns truth, democracy, the Constitution, and rule of law is empowered.
I know, maybe if this were 1950 America we could ask the Jews of 1930s Germany how they did it. Or maybe Jon just doesn’t think the Jews of Germany – or any pro-democracy Germans – tried hard enough to fight for policies they wanted under the Nazis. Maybe Jon Stewart thinks they weren’t “grinding away” hard enough on their issues (before they were exterminated).
“If your guy loses, bad things might happen.
But the country is not over.
And if your guy wins, the country is in no way saved.
I’ve learned one thing over these last nine years.
And I was glib at best and probably dismissive at worst about this.
The work of making this world resemble one that you would prefer to live in is a lunch pail [bleep] job, day in and day out, where thousands of committed, anonymous, smart, and dedicated people bang on closed doors and pick up those that are fallen and grind away on issues till they get a positive result.
And even then, have to stay on to make sure that result holds.
So the good news is I’m not saying you don’t have to worry about who wins the election. I’m saying you have to worry about every day before it and every day after forever.”
I think teachers here understand how condescending it is to be told “public education won’t be over” just because the anti-public school, anti-teachers’ union privatizers are empowered all over the country, especially when those folks lecture to teachers that there is more to making public schools better than electing progressive politicians who support public education, and here is a helpful hint for teachers: you need to keep grinding away and working at the issues that you support.
I bet you teachers just never thought of that! Just keep grinding away once the same privatizers who fight democracy have been empowered to run the education system. Did any of you even consider doing that?
I like Jon Stewart. I think Jon Stewart may improve. But I also think that will only happen when he gets some criticism and not just adulation and praise. Criticism, not demonizing. Jon Stewart isn’t a tool of the right wing. He can do better.
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I’ll pass this on to him.
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Haaaa!
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FLERP!,
How truly kind to hear someone like you, who knows Jon well enough to pass along my comments, offering to do so. I know we have had disagreements in the past, and your offer demonstrates how gracious and thoughtful you are. Thank you and much appreciated! You demonstrate the true civility Diane Ravitch has requested we treat one another with, and I will try to model my own behavior to match the genuine decency of your offer. Once again, thank you, and all due respect for your civility.
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Jon Stewart does not operate on what is best for the country. He says and does what best gives him coverage in the news. He has become the liberal who castigates liberals. Fox will cover him. That gives him attention. It is all about him. The op-ed in the Irish Times nails it.
Biden, on his most challenging day, is better than Trump, who is an extreme, unstable narcissist. Trump claims the world is laughing at America. It is laughing at him.
I was at the Abbey Theatre in Dublin shortly after he was sworn in. The Dubliner next to me whispered, “We think your President is the devil.”
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