It's true that Biden will do some shit things while he's POTUS, but the Democrats/Liberals/Leftist can now just handwave it away by using the ole "well, both sides are bad" tactic as a means to not really address the bad shit and it will be kosher.
I personally won't be doing this, I'm also not a Trumper.
Originally posted by RobtardYeah like I'm going to critique Joe the same way I have every President. Even Obama had his flaws.
It's true that Biden will do some shit things while he's POTUS, but the Democrats/Liberals/Leftist can now just handwave it away by using the ole "well, both sides are bad" tactic as a means to not really address the bad shit and it will be kosher.I personally won't be doing this, I'm also not a Trumper.
The problem with Obama was it was hard to separate what he did that failed vs what the GOP was doing to engineer failure to some of Obama's policies.
Like even Obamacare it's hard to discern sometimes why worked in certain areas but failed in others without having to account for state and federal level GOP shennagians.
Originally posted by Newjak
Yeah like I'm going to critique Joe the same way I have every President. Even Obama had his flaws.The problem with Obama was it was hard to separate what he did that failed vs what the GOP was doing to engineer failure to some of Obama's policies.
Like even Obamacare it's hard to discern sometimes why worked in certain areas but failed in others without having to account for state and federal level GOP shennagians.
The GOP did their best to make sure that what finally passed as the ACA was as gimped as possible, so they could use it as a future weapon against the Democrats. Imagine that.
Originally posted by Blakemore
That's why I stay towards the middle. I think Biden is in the middle too. So go him.
The problem with that is that the middle changes. It’s not constantly the same. So who controls what is considered the middle has an immense amount of power. We can see that with slightly left wing economic ideas like Corbyn’s and Sander’s, which were not radical by any means in the past, are now considered far left, because the economic pendulum has swung so far to the right (what we call neo-liberalism)