Guy Chamberlin
Active member
¹ Of course it's a perception of him and not a campaign slogan but thanks for missing the point in bad faith, I guess?
² So you're just choosing to ignore the handful of links I supplied giving evidence he was clearly anxious about Biden, then?
³ Of course I wasn't, that referred to Trump. I don't think Biden is Kerry, Gore or Hillary for reasons you probably wouldn't care about, so that's rather moot to me.
⁴ I think a lot of leftists spend a lot of time in their own media bubbles, which merely serve to reinforce the existing negative perception they have of Biden they themselves helped cultivate in the primary by selectively serving up all the negative takes on Biden with none of the good stuff. And then predictably roll in here to further propagate bulls#!t being used by the GOP to attack him. Of course Biden lies. All politicians lie. None of those lies affected me. Trump's lies do because they're about how he's running the country. That's easy enough to understand, hmm?
Regarding the last bit, no you're not alone. But you're among a decided minority who think that matters in terms of votes.
I won't deny that I'm in a bubble. But it's a suburban liberal bubble. It's most definitely not a leftist bubble. And I try to get out of the bubbles as much as I can. My posts are riddled with ideological conflict.
Anecdotally, virtually all my Dem friends and 100% of my wives voted for Joe Biden or Elizabeth Warren. 100% of us are rooting for Biden to defeat Trump. But 100% of us are nervous about the way Biden is conducting his campaign so far. 100% of us also thought 2020 would bring us someone more inspiring than Joe Biden. 0% of us can trace these opinions to leftist and GOP attack machines.
I do care about the reasons you don't think Joe Biden compares to John Kerry, Al Gore, or Hillary Clinton. It goes to the case that Democrats too often unite around moderate candidates they believe will pull from moderate Republicans and independents, rather than play to their advantage of having 20 million more registered voters — a strategy that got us John Kerry, Al Gore, and Hillary Clinton.