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The Not So Great Debate
After Thursday, no matter what Democrats say or how hard they cheat, the case for change—the need to change who is in the White House—will be undeniable
This Thursday, at 9 p.m. Eastern, CNN will air a live special about elder abuse. The 90-minute broadcast will feature an 81-year-old man who does not know who or where he is. His guests will include his wife, who is not a physician but calls herself a doctor anyway and whom the man in question has called his sister, and a company of aides, yes-men, and armed guards. On the other side of the stage will stand President Trump, ready to debate Joe Biden.
The time will test Biden’s ability to stand and speak at length, in spite of the friendliest questions from the enemies of Donald Trump. The time will test more than the constitution of Biden, because the test before us concerns the Twenty-fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
About this issue, regarding presidential succession and disability, there is nothing to debate.
Either we acknowledge the obvious—that Biden should not be onstage, that his presence endangers the presidency, that he is unfit to serve because he is unable to serve—or we resign ourselves to the fact that we do not have a president.
Let us also resolve that whatever happens on Thursday, and let there be no doubt about what the media will say immediately after the debate, that Biden won, the following is true: that a man who ran for president by running away and hiding in his basement, wants to remain in hiding; that seniority is no defense against an endless supply of “senior moments”; that Biden’s candidacy would be impossible without a compliant media; that CNN is complicit in a fraud against the American people.
And yes, let us resolve that Biden will call Trump a felon and a fascist.
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