Friday, July 19, 2024

A Secret Agent of South Korea Was Just Arrested by the FBI. Guess Who She's Married to.

Max Boot - The Washington Post
Moscow-born writer Max Boot

Taking a page out of Eric Swalwell's playbook, it's been revealed that a prominent anti-Trump Washington Post columnist is married to a secret spy for South Korea who previously worked for the White House.

The wife of Moscow-born writer Max Boot, who has falsely accused former President Donald Trump of being a Russian asset, was arrested this week for allegedly acting as an unregistered agent of the South Korean government.

Boot's spouse, Sue Mi Terry, is charged in a federal indictment with secretly spying for the Republic of Korea (ROK), commonly known as South Korea, by selling U.S. intelligence information, enabling access to high-ranking U.S. officials, and disseminating pro-ROK propaganda disguised as advocacy in exchange for luxury gifts, like designer handbags, and expensive dinners, among other bribes she's accused of accepting.

Terry, a former White House official and ex-Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) employee, was on the National Security Council (NSC) under Presidents Barack Obama and George W. Bush as the director of Korean, Japan, and Oceanic Affairs. Prior to that, she served as a senior CIA analyst on East Asian issues from 2001 to 2008. In that role, she produced hundreds of intelligence assessments, including a record number of contributions to the president's daily brief.

According to the 31-page indictment charging Terry with one count of conspiracy to violate the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA) and one count of failing to register under FARA, she advocated for South Korean policy positions, shared non-public U.S. government information with South Korean intelligence officers, and allowed South Korean government officials to access their U.S. counterparts.

In return for her years-long services to the South Korean government, Terry was allegedly rewarded with Bottega Veneta ($2,950) and Louis Vuitton ($3,450) purses; a $2,845 Dolce & Gabbana coat, which she returned for a $4,100 Dior dud instead because the other designer brand wasn't to her liking; and over $37,000 in "covert" funding for a public policy program on Korean affairs that she operated. According to the indictment, as a means of masking the true source of the money, the cash was concealed by being deposited into an unrestricted "gift" account Terry controlled at the think tank where she was employed at the time. The checks were "nominally issued" by the South Korean Embassy.

The charging documents contain surveillance camera still-shots of Terry's shopping spree with her handler at her side. The purchases, charged to her handler's credit card, didn't incur a sales tax due to his diplomatic status.

Boot, a notorious Never Trumper writing weekly for The Washington Post as a columnist covering national security, laid out "18 reasons Trump could be a Russian asset" in a 2019 listicle, which he widely promoted.

Boot and Terry, both fellows at the Council on Foreign Relations, have co-authored countless Washington Post articles together commenting on U.S. foreign policy. In particular, last year, they wrote a joint op-ed for The Washington Post, where they praised the foreign policy "achievements" of President Joe Biden, who they said "deserves considerable credit" and "has a much surer sense of what is realistically achievable than did his predecessor," former President Donald Trump.

One of these Washington Post opinion pieces she co-bylined, titled "South Korea Takes a Brave Step Toward Reconciliation with Japan," was cited in the indictment as an article Terry published at the urging of South Korean intelligence officers (via the indictment):

In March 2023, Terry received a call from a Korean Foreign Ministry official. Afterward, Terry texted that there were "already many articles written on this topic," pointing to pieces pertaining to geopolitical relations between South Korea and Japan. In a follow-up message, Terry wrote, "So for me to write an oped, I need the following information," and listed a series of questions about ROK-Japan relations, which the ROK officer answered in detail. Later that day, The Washington Post ran Terry's report, which was "broadly consistent" with the crafted responses sent to Terry. Upon publication, Terry texted, "Hope you liked the article," and linked to the article. The intelligence officer said senior ROK officials had "read and appreciated" Terry's work: "Thank you so much for your zeal and endeavors! Of course we do. Actually, Ambassador and National Security Advisor were so happy for your column."

Though The Post's editorial team never disclosed the pair's marital status in their bylines or editor's notes, in a write-up on Terry's arrest Tuesday, the newspaper acknowledged that they "did not disclose Korean government involvement" in the article now flagged by federal authorities.

"The Washington Post is committed to publishing independent journalism and is reviewing the indictment. We do not have further comment," said Kathy Baird, a Post spokeswoman.

South Korean officials allegedly commissioned Terry on multiple occasions to write to U.S. and Korean media conveying ROK-provided positions and phrases, including $500 for writing positive press in a South Korean newspaper praising a summit between Biden and South Korea's President Yoon Suk Yeol. "Ideally, what would you like me to write on? (I mean angle of the Op Ed)," Terry is alleged to have texted. She was instructed to write "that the summit means a lot for the alliance and good for Korea and the alliance," the indictment says. She apparently acquiesced, writing that she sees "A More Solid Road Ahead for 70 Years of Alliance" following the Biden-Yoon summit that she said "Strengthens US-ROK Alliance."

They also wined and dined her at Michelin-starred restaurants, federal authorities allege, as well as upscale sushi spots.

During these fancy dinners with her handler, Terry was allegedly fed talking points that she would subsequently parrot in media appearances on U.S. airwaves.

In the past, Boot has also appeared alongside Terry on CNN, where they were touted as an on-air dynamic duo, to talk about North Korea.

Boot has joked about betting that Terry will become the "first female dictator in hundreds of years after she ascends to power in North Korea."

Terry, a senior Council on Foreign Relations fellow for Korean studies, has since been placed on unpaid administrative leave, according to her now-scrubbed biographical page on the invitation-only think tank's website. A spokesperson for the Council on Foreign Relations told The Post that the alleged activities predate Terry's tenure at the think tank. Boot, who has not been criminally charged in the spying scheme, remains a senior fellow there specializing in national security studies.

Terry is facing criminal charges in federal court in Manhattan. If convicted on all counts, she faces a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison, a U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) press release announced. According to court records reviewed by Townhall, Terry was released after posting a $500,000 bond, which was co-signed by Boot. As part of her conditions of release, Terry's travel is restricted to the continental U.S.

Terry's secret spy gig allegedly stretches back a decade to 2013, a few years after she exited the U.S. federal government.

Terry confessed in a Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) interrogation that she was a "source" for South Korea's National Intelligence Service (ROK NIS) and handed over "valuable" information. Terri also admitted that she had resigned from the CIA "in lieu of termination" because the agency had "problems" with Terry's ROK NIS contacts.

The FBI had suspicions about Terry's activity as early as 2014. As she was questioned in an interview she gave voluntarily, Terry became "visibly nervous, changed her speech pattern and began to stutter and shift in her seat," the indictment says. Terry was warned that because of her position within the policy community, the ROK might try to approach her by offering to covertly pay for conferences related to Korean policy. Terry responded that she was "glad to have contact with the FBI should such a situation arise." They then tracked Terry over the ensuing years. 

Terry's lawyer Lee Wolosky said in a statement shared with Reuters: "These allegations are unfounded and distort the work of a scholar and news analyst known for her independence and years of service to the United States."

"In fact, she was a harsh critic of the South Korean government during times this indictment alleges that she was acting on its behalf. Once the facts are made clear it will be evident the government made a significant mistake," Wolosky added.

U.S. Attorney Damian Williams for the Southern District of New York said in a press statement that Terry had "sold out her positions and influence" for personal gain and "subverted foreign agent registration laws."

In June 2022, Terry participated in a private, off-the-record meeting attended by U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken and his senior staff regarding national policy towards North Korea, the DOJ says. The purpose of this meeting was to provide Blinken with an opportunity to engage with North Korean policy experts, one of whom was Terry, in a discreet setting. Immediately after the event ended, Terry allegedly met her primary ROK point of contact and passed him detailed handwritten notes disclosing what happened in that hour-long, closed-door briefing at the U.S. State Department building. Terry's handler picked her up in a vehicle with diplomatic plates registered to the South Korean Embassy. Inside, her handler photographed two pages of Terry's note-taking, written on her think tank's letterhead, as depicted by redacted copies of the pictures taken in the interior of the car.

In July 2022, at her handler's request, Terry hosted a happy hour in Washington, which was funded by the South Korean intelligence agency, and invited staff from various congressional officers to it under the auspices of the policy institute where she worked, prosecutors allege. Posing as a diplomat and mingling with the congressional staff members, Terry's handler, a ROK intelligence officer unbeknownst to the attendees, also attended the social gathering, the indictment continues, saying she arranged this event so she could enable South Korean officials to "identify, evaluate, and potentially recruit" congressional staffers, "whom they otherwise would not have been able to access." The tactic is known in intelligence operations as the practice of "spot and assess." Terry, allegedly aware of the tactic, told the FBI that this was like "bringing the wolf in." The attendees received gift bags containing Yeti-brand tumblers and pamphlets with the logo of the South Korean Embassy. At the happy hour's conclusion, one of the ROK intelligence officers "paid the bill," according to the federal prosecution.

Terry has testified at least three times before congressional panels. Each time, Terry was required to sign a "Truth in Testimony" disclosure form declaring that she was not an active registered foreign agent. In 2016, she delivered testimony in front of the U.S. House Committee on Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Asia and the Pacific for a hearing on "North Korea's Perpetual Provocations: Another Dangerous, Escalatory Nuclear Test." In connection with her congressional testimony, on the federal form, Terry answered "No" to the question, "Are you an active registrant under the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA)?" She said the same in 2017 ahead of her testimony before a U.S. House Committee on Foreign Affairs hearing discussing "Countering the North Korean Threat: New Steps in U.S. Policy." Ahead of another appearance before Congress, where she was a witness offering remarks on "The Way Forward on U.S. North Korea Policy" to the U.S. House Subcommittee on Asia, the Pacific, Central Asia, and Nonproliferation, she signed the paperwork saying she's not a FARA agent.

A naturalized U.S. citizen, Terry was born in Seoul but raised in Virginia and Hawaii. She currently resides in New York.

 

CNN's John King Highlighted the Absolute Meltdown Occurring With Dems Right Now

As the Republican National Convention wrapped up on Thursday, it was another foray into the Democratic Party melting down over Joe Biden. As speakers lined up to offer a united vision of America under Donald Trump, Democrats were knifing each other, dispelling reports of Biden being receptive to dropping out, and noted authors denying involvement in this push to oust the president. It comes after details of Biden's meetings with Nancy Pelosi, Chuck Schumer, and Hakeem Jeffries leaked to the press.

It's led to a flurry of speculation about the president recovering from COVID at his Delaware home. That hasn’t stopped the pressure campaign, with Pelosi now taking the gloves off, hoping Biden can see reason and know he cannot win this election. Biden’s candidacy has become the source of what some call a generational meltdown with the Democratic Party. The Washington Post’s Robert Costa tweeted: 

Sources close to President Biden tell me tonight they’re *furious* that while the president is trying to recover from Covid in Rehoboth, a pressure campaign keeps picking up speed. Lots of anger toward some donors for talking of $ drying up if he doesn’t quit, toward what they see as muted support from Pres. Obama, and toward Dem leaders who one source says are “hiding” behind statements. If they want him out, they’ll have to push, source adds. Feels disrespected. Still, a fluid moment and no one has figured out an effective way to quiet this drift of nervous Democrats away from Biden and know many Dems want Biden to just break at some point soon.

And CNN’s John King, 

 Oh my god!': CNN's John King highlights 'aggressive panic' over Biden's  'dismal' debate - Raw Story

who already shared a damning Electoral College analysis for the Biden campaign this week, piled on, noting Jill Biden canceling trips to Michigan, more canceled fundraisers, and Democratic governors reconvening again on what to do next.

Trending on Townhall Videos

 

Trump: I Had God On My Side During Shooting

Former US President and 2024 Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump accepts his party's nomination on the last day of the 2024 Republican National Convention at the Fiserv Forum in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, on July 18, 2024. Days after he survived an assassination attempt Trump won formal nomination as the Republican presidential candidate and picked Ohio US Senator J.D. Vance for running mate. (Photo by alex wroblewski / AFP) (Photo by ALEX WROBLEWSKI/AFP via Getty Images)
Former US President and 2024 Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump accepts his party’s nomination on the last day of the 2024 Republican National Convention at the Fiserv Forum in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, on July 18, 2024. Days after he survived an assassination attempt Trump won formal nomination as the Republican presidential candidate and picked Ohio US Senator J.D. Vance for running mate.

In his first public speech since the failed assassination attempt last Saturday, Donald Trump recounted the harrowing moment that almost took his life.

On the final night of the Republican National Convention, Trump described his memory of the event to the crowd. The Republican, who said this is the only time he will talk about the assassination attempt in detail, credited having God on his side for still being alive.

“As you already know, the assassin’s bullet came within a quarter of an inch of taking my life. So many people have asked me what happened, tell us what happened please, and therefore I’ll tell you what happened, and you’ll never hear it from me a second time because it’s too painful to tell,” Trump explained.

“There was blood pouring everywhere and yet in a certain way I felt very safe because I had God on my side” Trump said of his survival.

The 45th president went on to state “I’m not supposed to be here tonight.”

The crowd was quick to roar back “Yes you are!”

“Thank you,” Trump answered. “But I’m not.”

“I stand before you in this arena only by the grace of Almighty God,” Trump added.

The FBI identified 20-year-old Thomas Matthew Crooks as the person who attempted to assassinate Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania.

Crooks fired a shot at Trump from a rooftop perch about 130 yards away. The bullet struck the upper portion of Trump’s right ear as the Trump was addressing the crowd.

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Trump Honors Pennsylvania Firefighter Who Died In Rally Shooting

MILWAUKEE, WISCONSIN - JULY 18: Republican presidential nominee, former U.S. President Donald Trump embraces the firefighter uniform of Corey Comperatore as he speaks on stage on the fourth day of the Republican National Convention at the Fiserv Forum on July 18, 2024 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Delegates, politicians, and the Republican faithful are in Milwaukee for the annual convention, concluding with former President Donald Trump accepting his party's presidential nomination. The RNC takes place from July 15-18. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)
Republican presidential nominee, former U.S. President Donald Trump embraces the firefighter uniform of Corey Compertore as he speaks on stage on the fourth day of the Republican National Convention at the Fiserv Forum on July 18, 2024 in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Delegates, politicians, and the Republican faithful are in Milwaukee for the annual convention, concluding with former President Donald Trump accepting his party’s presidential nomination. The RNC takes place from July 15-18.

During his speech on the final night of the Republican National Convention, Donald Trump took a moment to honor Corey Comperatore

 Trump rally shooting victim: What we know about Corey Comperatore

the man who was killed during an assassination attempt on the 45th president during his rally in Butler, Pennsylvania.

When Trump took the stage for his prime-time address, he was accompanied by Comperatore’s firefighting helmet and jacket. Trump walked over to Comperatore’s items early on in his speech and kissed the helmet.

Comperatore’s last name was misspelled on his fire jacket intentionally, as there was only enough space on the coat for a certain number of letters.

Trump then walked back to the microphone and called for the audience to take a moment of silence to honor the 50-year-olds memory.

Comperatore sacrificed his life to save his family. When the bullets rang out, his first instinct was to protect his family from the gunfire.

“He was incredible, he was a highly respected former fire chief,” Trump said. “…He lost his life selflessly acting as a human shield to protect them from flying bullets. He went right over the top of them and was hit. What a fine man he was.”

Trump had only been talking for a few minutes in Butler when gunman, Thomas Matthew Crooks opened fire on the former president. The 20-year-old was aiming for Trump’s head. Trump moved his head to look at a chart on the screen. With this move the bullet pierced his right ear instead, saving him from a certain death.

Comperatore was sitting in the bleachers behind where Trump was speaking at the time of the attack.

While no one else was killed, bystanders David Dutch, 57, and James Copenhaver, 74, were both shot. They are expect to make a full recovery.

Soon after the shooting, Trump created a GoFundMe page to raise money for the families of the three victims of the shooting.

He notified the RNC audience that as of Thursday evening, more than $6 million had been raised for the victims.

Comperatore is survived by his wife and two daughters.

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Thursday, July 18, 2024

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Under Pressure, Biden Camp Charts Narrowing Path to Reelection

Biden is no different than Trump | Opinions | Al Jazeera
Democrat Puppet Joe Biden

 


President Joe Biden's campaign is pursuing a razor-thin path to reelection against his Republican opponent Donald Trump in November, senior Democrat officials say, with four of the seven key battleground states now looking increasingly out of reach.

Georgia, Arizona and Nevada – all claimed by Biden in 2020 – in addition to North Carolina which Democrats had hoped at one point to take back from Trump have grown more challenging, more than a dozen campaign officials and senior Democrats in battleground states told Reuters in interviews.

Trump, 78, had been leading the polls in all four states well before he was grazed by a bullet last weekend, a position that consolidated after Biden's disastrous debate performance on June 27.

Calculations can change before election day. But the campaign officials' latest assessment allows for almost no margin of error. Biden, 81, can only cobble together the 270 Electoral College votes needed to clinch the presidency if he wins the Rust Belt manufacturing states of Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Michigan and a congressional district in Nebraska that could also soon be at risk.

"It's looking very tight" in Arizona, Georgia and Nevada, a senior campaign official told Reuters. "Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin is the clearest path to 270. That is what we're focusing on."

However, Dan Kanninen, the director for battleground states, said the campaign was adding staff in Arizona and Nevada and that being "highly competitive" in all of the swing states remained a priority.

"I do not see the map narrowing for us," he said in an interview.

Biden was on the second day of a two-day trip to Nevada on Wednesday, when the White House announced he had a mild case of COVID and had canceled a planned speech.

Democrat lawmakers have voiced fears that Biden would lose not only the White House but also the House and Senate to the Republican party.

The campaign had hoped those voices would quiet after the shooting. But Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., who is running for the Senate, warned donors in a private meeting Tuesday the party was likely to suffer major losses if Biden continued to run.

Trump's immediate, televised reaction to the shooting — a raised fist as blood streamed down his face from a grazed ear — contrasted with questions over Biden's mental acuity and whether he has the stamina for four more years in the White House.

Although most polls show Biden lagging Trump in the Rust Belt states the campaign is focused on, the Democratic candidate remains "within the margin of error," the senior official noted.

"This is the strongest path, one we're focused on right now," the official added.

The narrowing map for Biden means a widening one for Trump. Some polls before the shooting showed Trump competitive in Democratic-leaning Virginia, New Hampshire and even Minnesota, which hasn't supported a Republican presidential candidate since 1972.

"When things go south, they go south everywhere," James Carville, a veteran Democrat strategist, said. "This has been the worst summer for a national party since Republicans and Watergate," he added, referring to the Congressional investigation that resulted in Republican President Richard Nixon's resignation in 1974.

Battleground state polls have favored Trump for months, and particularly since the debate in which Biden stumbled and struggled to complete sentences, while Trump repeated a series of well-worn falsehoods. None have been published since the shooting, but the assassination attempt has increased enthusiasm for Trump among his fans, which could boost Republican turnout.

Biden "would have to draw an inside straight without missing a single potential electoral vote in order to just scrape over the finish line of 270," said Republican pollster Whit Ayres, referring to a tough poker hand.

U.S. presidential elections in recent years have been decided by a narrow slice of voters in a handful of states, but the new map for Biden – if successful – would eke out a victory with just 270 electoral college votes to Trump's 268, the narrowest victory since Republican Rutherford B. Hayes won by one electoral college vote in 1876.

Nebraska is one of two states which splits their electoral college votes. (Maine is the other).

Biden won the congressional district which includes Omaha in 2020, but Republicans, who are in control of the state, are expected to hold a special session later this month to make Nebraska a winner-take-all election. That would block Biden from a single, clinching electoral vote – and could create an unprecedented 269-269 tie vote.

'Poll-ercoaster'

While some Democrats see a narrower map, many strategists and state party officials say they remain optimistic about wider wins against Trump.

"They're not any independent Democratic voters who looked at Donald Trump get shot in the ear and say, 'Oh my god, I gotta vote for this guy,'" said Bakari Sellers, a Democratic political analyst. "There's no such thing as a sympathy vote in the United States of America."

The campaign is spending $50 million on paid media in battleground states in July, and by the end of the summer those states will have more than 2,000 staffers, officials said.

Democrats had hoped earlier this year that the party could flip North Carolina, which has backed only one Democrat for president since 1976. Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris have visited multiple times, the campaign spent millions on hiring and advertising, and Anderson Clayton, the 26-year-old Democratic party chair there, has spent the year knocking on doors.

The campaign is not counting the state out, Clayton said.

"I don't ride a 'poll-ercoaster,' and I think that, you know, the investments on the ground would say that North Carolina is being prioritized just as much as we need it to be this year in order to, I think, put it on the map."

She added: "I feel like sometimes people that are so engaged in the bubble oftentimes forget to touch grass every once in a while."


Things Do Not Go Well When Secret Service Head Kim Cheatle Shows Up at the RNC

 


The Republican National Convention has been a great event so far with everyone coming together in unity behind former President Donald Trump and Sen. JD Vance (R-OH) for the Republican ticket. There have been fun and inspiring moments, including Trump's emotional entry into the hall just two days after Saturday's assassination attempt.

The things that have come out about the shooter and what the Secret Service knew -- and when they knew it -- have infuriated Americans. The latest news is that the Secret Service had Thomas Matthew Crooks, the shooter, on their radar and were aware he was a threat at least ten minutes before Trump walked out on the stage -- but they still let the former president walk out. That was on top of the news that law enforcement had been aware of Crooks for some time beforehand. Local law enforcement took pictures of him by 5:45, 26 minutes before the shooting. And they had even taken another photo of him an hour earlier than that.

Yet nothing was done to stop him. 

The Secret Service director earned a lot of mockery on X after she claimed that the roof that Crooks was on was “sloped,” claiming that could have been a reason not to put an agent on it because of the “safety factor.” 

The Secret Service held a "briefing" on Wednesday but then reportedly only answered four questions. They did not respond to the mountain of demands asking what was going on here.


READ MORE: Alarming Details Regarding Just When Secret Service Noticed Trump's Would-Be Assassin Given in Briefing


So that further inflamed people, as Sen. Ron Johnson (R-WI) noted. 

So when the Secret Service Director Kim Cheatle showed up at the Republican National Convention on Wednesday, senators wanted answers. I'm not sure why Cheatle was there, but Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) and other senators waylaid her and peppered her with questions, demanding to know why the Secret Service wasn't providing answers. Sen. John Barrasso (R-WY) told her point blank he had called for her resignation. "Resignation or full explanation to us right now!" Barasso demanded. 

I think she said that that wasn't the place to talk, and Barasso said they could find a place. She said she had to go, and then they said they were going with her. Then they followed her through the hall, continuing to pepper her, "No shame, no concern!" "You answer to us!" "This was an assassination attempt! You owe the people answers!" "You owe President Trump answers!" They were all furious and chased her down the hall until they rushed her into a room, and she shut the door on them. 

Here's another angle: 

They are demanding her resignation and have issued a subpoena for her appearance at a congressional hearing. We'll have to wait to see if she shows up.


READ MORE: House Oversight Chair Issues Subpoena for Secret Service Director to Appear for Briefing on Shooting

Biden's Insane Comments About Lloyd Austin, Black Neighborhoods in Trainwreck BET Interview

I wrote previously about some of the reported interventions of top Democrats like Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) with Joe Biden in regard to staying in the race. 

Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) also spoke to Biden one-on-one and urged him to step aside. 

But the reported word is so far Biden has rebuffed the effort, although it looks like they may have gotten to him a little with him supposedly also asking his people about how Kamala Harris would do if she ran instead. 


READ MORE: REPORT: Chuck Schumer Drove to Delaware for 1-on-1 Meeting With Joe Biden


I wonder if they stepped up the effort because of all the reports of his wild interviews and other crazy things he has said. Indeed, the latest BET one is so crazy I wonder if this was what finally pushed them over the edge when it comes to Biden or if someone tipped them off and said, "Come on, guys, really?" Because this one was bad, even on a Joe Biden sliding scale of bad. 

We heard about a little of it already. It was in that interview that he said if he had a "medical condition" and doctors came to him, he indicated that might sway him. 

But it was so much worse. He had some of his typical lies about inflation, blaming corporate greed, not taking any responsibility for driving it up with his policies. Somehow they weren't greedy under former President Donald Trump, but they're now supposedly greedy? Get Trump back in there then. 

Biden also spoke about his ridiculous idea for national rent control, which he not only can't legally impose but would destroy the market. Biden's policies have become more and more far-left. 

Biden also jumbled his comment about affordable internet, saying that he wanted to make sure there was "affordable internet" just like there was back in "Roosevelt's time." 

"We're make sure there's access to affordable internet, just like in in Roosevelt's time, you know, back in, earlier than that, making sure there was electricity in agriculture in the rural areas."

Then this take from Biden was pretty crazy too, saying we don't need more cops, we need more social workers. 

Oh, that would turn out well. Not. 

But then he shifted into overdrive on the wild remarks. 

First, Biden put down young voters, including young black voters, suggesting it was stupid to believe that they would be focused on the election now, that they never "focus" until after Labor Day. 

What makes him think that they would vote for him after Labor Day when they "focus," as he says? He just can't stop putting voters down even as he's supposed to be reaching out to them. 

Then there was this pack of malarkey that he told about his involvement in the civil rights movement. 

He himself debunked his own claims back in 1987, saying he wasn't actively involved in working for that cause anywhere, and there's no evidence to support the arrest story. 

Biden also made a comment about not being able to go into black neighborhoods anymore, which might be affecting his black vote supporters. This was bad, and it made no sense. 

He claimed he closed every campaign by "going into the projects." But he claimed he couldn't do that anymore because it was "too dangerous to be walking unaccompanied." 

Huh, what? He's never unaccompanied. He always has Secret Service, not to mention a boatload of other people. 

But it sounds awfully racist even though he hastens to add that it isn't because it's a "black neighborhood." He can't walk there but he can walk all over anyplace else? What's the difference? What is he trying to say here? 

Notice also that he hears "black voters" and thinks "projects." Just a little more racist.

Not to mention that if you accept his premise, what does it say that under him, neighborhoods aren't even safe enough for him to walk through? That's admitting a lot of failure.

Jim Crow Joe rears his ugly head again. Those comments were pretty bad. But it might have to tag team with this last clip for the worst one of the interview. 

Biden said it was all about "treating people with dignity." Then he appeared to either forget his Secretary of Defense's name, calling him "the black man" or perhaps confusing him with his nominee for the Supreme Court, now sitting Justice "Ketanji Brown," whose name he said right after. 

He named Lloyd Austin his Secretary of Defense and Ketanji Brown Jackson to the Supreme Court. He also didn't get any heat that I ever heard about because of Austin being black. 

How can anyone support this? His brain is toast. 

 

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