Biden versus Trump: What Can We Do?

Biden versus Trump: What Can We Do? I’ve written about this problem before (see here and here), but events continue to move in the wrong direction. Will we have the opportunity to vote for a candidate we actually prefer during our next presidential election? Doesn’t look like it. Both Biden and Trump have unfavorable ratings of 55% according to recent polls (see Biden’s here, and Trump’s here) And their approval ratings are hovering between the upper 30s to low 40s. Nevertheless, unless a miracle occurs, those two tainted individuals are headed toward an undesirable slug fest in 2024. WHAT CAN WE DO?

First, try to recall a time when two more unpalatable candidates vied for our presidency. Admittedly, there have been some colossal duds in the past, but I submit that never before have our choices been so bleak. Both Biden and Trump are imbued with scary traits. I’ll consider here just two of each candidate’s many drawbacks.

Personal attributes

Mr. Biden:

People talk about his age. A recent Wall Street Journal poll found that 73% of voters think him too old to run for president. Some 60% say he isn’t mentally capable. I’m most concerned about his mental acuity, which is in shreds. Even partisan Democrats must have noticed the endless indications of the man’s dotage. One telling recent blooper occurred at a private campaign event, in which Biden told a story about why he chose to run. Minutes later he told the same story again, almost word for word, as verified by a transcript of the speech later published by the White House. Think about that. An aware person may repeat a word, but not an entire story after just telling it. In short, Mr. Biden’s mental status is dismal, and far below the level necessary to adequately perform duties of the presidency.

Mr. Trump:

Although he is just three years younger than Biden, fewer people focus on his age. His brash, vindictive personality weighs him down far more than his age. Try to recall all the former friends and associates that Trump has turned his vengeance on. It would take some doing to log all the bodies strewn in his wake. Accordingly, it seems likely that the former president, if he were to move back into the White House, would spend much of his time settling what he considers old grievances. Moreover, it was obvious that Mr. Trump did little to dignify the presidency while he occupied the White House, and it is difficult to imagine his behavior would improve if he were reelected. In short, Mr. Trump’s aggressive and vindictive personality likely would inflame the already-divisive Washington climate and thereby hinder his performance as president. 

Legal difficulties

Mr. Trump:

1) The former president is immersed in a swamp of legal problems. He faces charges that legal experts say portends a dangerous road ahead for him.

2) In Washington federal court, he is charged with conspiring to defraud the U.S. by preventing Congress from certifying Biden’s victory over Trump and thus depriving voters of their right to a fair election.

3) A Georgia grand jury has issued an indictment accusing him of efforts to overturn his 2020 election loss to Democrat Joe Biden.

4) A federal court in Miami has charged him with unlawfully keeping classified national security documents when he left office in 2021 and lying to officials who sought to recover them.

5) A New York grand jury indicted him for allegedly falsifying business records in connection with a hush-money payment (allegedly using campaign funds) to a porn star before the 2016 presidential election.

6) A New York attorney has  sued Trump and his family business, the Trump Organization, in September 2022 for alleged fraud by him and his family.

Mr. Trump has pleaded not guilty to all of the above charges. Each of them, it should be noted, carries possible prison sentences. Stay tuned.

Mr. Biden:

1) House Republicans have started an impeachment inquiry of the current president, this concerning whether Mr. Biden collaborated with his son, Hunter, in enriching the son, other family members, and the president himself.

2) I don’t pretend to know fact from fiction here, but one point seems self-evident, that being that Hunter Biden has neither the knowledge nor the expertise to have earned (without help) the millions of dollars he collected from foreign sources. As has been widely reported, a sizeable amount of circumstantial evidence suggests his father, while vice president, was linked to Hunter’s earnings. I’m not alone. Some 61% of those in a recent poll (see here) believe that Mr. Biden had some level of involvement in Hunter’s business dealings — and 42% think that he acted illegally (there has been no proof of wrongdoing by the president). 

3) According to Business Insider, subpoenaed bank records reveal that the Biden family created over 20 shell companies (companies through which they reportedly received about $20 million in payments from foreign sources). Bankrate.com defines a shell company, or shell corporation as an entity that typically lacks active business operations or employees. Shell companies can have many possible uses, from serving as vehicles to raise funds to facilitating corporate mergers, but they may also be used by individuals and companies to evade taxes, launder money and hide the identities of their owners.

4) It also has been reported that a total of nine Biden family members received unexplained wire transfers from foreign businesses. Even two of Biden’s grandchildren received payments. It’s unclear which grandchildren received payments, but most of them are in their early twenties with no personal or business ties to Ukraine, Russia, or China.

5) An IRS whistle blower, Joseph Ziegler, who works in the agency’s International Tax and Financial Crime section, said in his opening statement before Congress that he was the lead IRS case agent on the investigation and that the IRS had recommended both felony and misdemeanor charges against the president’s son.  That recommendation was ignored. “I have a reason to believe that there was gross mismanagement present throughout this investigation,” Ziegler said.

6) According to Hunter Biden’s former associates, the Vice President joined Hunter in telephone conversations with the foreign representatives who provided money to Hunter.

Mr Biden denies that he was in any way connected to his son’s businesses. The investigation continues. Stay tuned.

Final thoughts

I’ll end where I began. Biden versus Trump: What can we do? Well, we can raise a fuss, and many of us can raise many fusses. If that fails, we can individually assess the multiple drawbacks of each of these sorry candidates. Once that is decided, we then can vote against the one considered to be the worst. By doing that, We the People of the United States, will form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, just as the preamble to our Constitution proclaims.

If you agree that a Biden – Trump ticket is not what our country needs, please consider forwarding this post to others, and urge them to do the same. Who knows? Perhaps we can make a difference.

 

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8 thoughts on “Biden versus Trump: What Can We Do?

  1. Ken, this whole election process is a mess. I don’t want to vote for either one. All I can do is go with my party and then feel guilty for voting for that person. What a mess!

    1. I think you’re spot on, Nancy. I believe much of this mess is related to party officials (of either major party) who are timid in one respect, and ruthless in another. As I see it, most party officials care only about their party’s power and little to nothing about what actually would be good for our country.

  2. Excellent commentary. It reminds me of the old saying that if you vote for the lesser of two evils, you still have evil.

  3. Unless Biden’s physical and mental therapists can keep him upright he will have deteriorated too much to run again. Do we need a third party?

    1. I’ve heard some third party talk, Ralph. Maybe a recognizable and strong candidate, one appearing more statesman-like than politician, could make a good showing, or even beat Biden and Trump. But Biden’s increasingly rapid decline that you mentioned raises another frightening possibility, one that I didn’t even want to mention in my post, namely that he might not last out his present term. Replacing him with the current vice president would not be an improvement in my opinion. Kamala Harris has been scatter-brained and incompetent in her role. What in the world would she do as president?

  4. I understand people don’t care for his personality. Most past Republican presidents except Reagan did what said they would do. But he also fell for the old democrat lie. Go along with us now and we all do what you want later. Hence give me amnesty and we will close the border. Suckered time and time again. Trump is strong and a fighter and won’t quit. That’s why they hate him so much and going after him so hard. I’ll go for an imperfect fighter for me and our country rather a nice guy wimp who folds before the Dems. Watch the Republicans fold as usual on the Omnibus budget. Scared to be blamed for a shutdown. I want a fighter.

    1. Others have mentioned the same theme to me, Chuck. I think that’s why a recent poll found that some 52% of Republicans favor him in primary elections, far more than other candidates. And you’re right. However one wants to categorize Trump, I doubt anyone would deny that he’s a fighter.

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