turingtest
Mistral, mistral wind...
Bipartisanship in Biden's speech--examples:
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I submit that quite to the contrary to Miller's observation, at nearly every single occasion that political parties came up as a topic, Biden expressed support for bipartisan cooperation.
Especially that last one-
That's pretty much the definition of bipartisanship. The problem is that Biden is dealing with people who have their own, special definition of the word. Tim Scott, in his rebuttal the other night, spoke of Biden's "divisive policies" and how they betrayed his promise to try to unify the country. But Biden's policies are the policies of a Democrat, as opposed to the policies the GOP would prefer, so the "divisiveness" Scott sees is really nothing more than the normal division between parties that is how our system works. By Scott's definition, the only way a Democrat elected President could not be divisive is to agree that the proper cost of being elected as a Democrat is to act in office only as a Republican.Quote:
I know Republicans have their own ideas and are engaged in productive discussions with Democrats in the Senate. We need to work together to find a consensus.
Anyway, both these guys need to attend to the beam in their own party's eye before they worry about the mote in the other's. After all, the GOP is still, for the most part, slavishly devoted to that blubberbag down in Florida, the one who made his last three months in office an extended performance of truly divisive partisanship, building it on lies about "stolen election!" and finishing it off by exhorting his faithful to fight! to overturn it. As long as that man is their party's titular head and they continue to tiptoe around him (at best), instead of calling him out for the deliberately polarizing liar that he is, they really do not need to sniff about how Biden isn't living up to his promise to unify. He can't, not when their apparent idea of unity is his plain and simple, unconditional surrender to them- he can be President as long as he doesn't try to be the one he was elected to be.