Success to the power hungry mob means your leader is better off not being seen. LOL. To leftards this means winning. A blind rodent could beat Trump...sure. Just like the ‘most qualified candidate in history’ couldn’t. The Democrats are a joke - their most popular strain are burning down cities, threatening to tear down churches and statues, and are looking to eliminate law enforcement.
Giving in to irrational fear is relatable for many Americans now, not sure that's what a real leader does though. Joe better stay in the hole and stay silent. he can't even manage a video interview with softball questions without fumbling and bumbling. Trump will destroy him in a debate simply by frustrating him with Trumpisms. Whatever game Joe had is gone and staying locked away from it all is no way to sharpen his skills. Being a ghost is his best bet.
If Sleepy Joe Biden can hide in his bunker till November 4, 2020, he should be good to go. However, he has to come out and accept his nomination from the DNC. Then, debate President Donald Trump 3 times. Looks like time for Joe Biden to find a stunt double. Maybe, put a lot of make up and prosthetics on Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez. She would say the dumbest things. Nobody would know it is not Joe Biden. Problem solved.
and so it begins... https://www.washingtonpost.com/opin...a-a510-55bf26485c93_story.html?outputType=amp It’s time to rethink the presidential debates Given how many ugly turns this presidential election year has already taken and how many more are surely yet to come, it is probably a fool’s errand to go in search of silver linings in 2020. But the realities of campaigning amid a pandemic are forcing adjustments to the rituals of politics — some of which are for the better and long overdue. I’ve written before about how the quadrennial party conventions have outlived their purpose. There is no suspense any more to these pointless, lobbyist-funded infomercials, and television audiences find them boring. President Trump and the Republicans are clinging to the idea of holding a huge gathering this summer, but the Democrats made a wise move on Wednesday and announced that theirs will be drastically scaled back, physically speaking. While former vice president Joe Biden will not be accepting his party’s nomination with the cheers of 20,000 people ringing in his ears, 21st-century technology — if used creatively — gives the Democrats an opportunity to make their convention a more broadly shared experience and an organizing tool for mobilizing support as the fall campaign gets underway. Next up: It’s time to do some rethinking about the debates. Trump is claiming he would like to have four faceoffs with Biden, rather than the three (plus one vice presidential debate), that are currently scheduled to take place between Sept. 29 and Oct. 22. This is not a serious proposal. Even under the best of circumstances, scheduling these much-watched events on the busy fall calendar is a difficult challenge for the Commission on Presidential Debates, which has been in charge of the process since the 1988 election. It has to find dates that are not on Friday or Saturday nights, do not conflict with sports and other events networks are committed to, or official presidential business, such as attending the U.N. General Assembly in September. Each debate generally requires the candidates to suspend public appearances for at least a few days to prepare. Finding venues is a challenge, as well, particularly this year. The University of Michigan, which was originally supposed to host the second debate on Oct. 15, backed out earlier this week. University president Mark Schlissel said that with the challenge of trying to reopen the campus safely amid the covid-19 pandemic, it is “not feasible for us to safely host the presidential debate as planned.” It has been moved to Miami. All of this could be simplified if the campaigns would drastically reduce the live audiences who attend the debates — or even do away with them entirely. The debates would probably be better, too, if they were conducted — as the famed 1960 one between John F. Kennedy and Richard M. Nixon was — in a television studio. With modern technology, it would be possible even to hold a town-hall-style debate that way. “I think the reason the audiences are there is to satisfy the demand for seats from contributors and major party figures and from those who support the Commission on Presidential Debates,” says Democrat Bob Shrum, who was a top adviser to candidates Al Gore in 2000 and John Kerry in 2004. “The debates would be better without competing cheering sections, who invariably ignore the advice not to applaud or react.” Cutting back or eliminating the live audience would also make it more difficult for candidates to pull stunts like Trump did in 2016, when he brought four women who had accused Bill Clinton of sexual abuse to a debate in St. Louis and attempted to seat them in his family’s box. At the time, Trump himself was reeling from similar accusations, as well as the revelations of his own crude comments about women, which were recorded on a now-famous “Access Hollywood” tape. The plan had been to have the accusers confront the former president, who is also the spouse of the 2016 Democratic nominee, Hillary Clinton, on national television. When debate commission officials got wind of the gambit, they put a stop to it. There remain a lot of details to be worked out between now and the first debate. Given the president’s love of theatrics, get ready for lots of wrangling over ground rules and the choice of moderators. Nor will it be a surprise if, at some point, Trump threatens to walk away from the debates entirely. History also gives him reason to be wary. Sitting presidents — among them, Jimmy Carter in 1980, Ronald Reagan in 1984 and Barack Obama in 2012 — often stumble in their first debates because they arrived both overconfident and out of practice. This year, the stakes for Trump could hardly be higher. His poll numbers are dropping, and there are signs that even Trump’s bluster-loving base is starting to have its doubts about him, now that it is seeing how he handles himself in a real crisis. So as he looks ahead to the debates, the embattled president might want to focus on winning the old-fashioned way: by studying the issues, showing up prepared and commanding the facts. If Trump were to manage to do that, it could be the biggest October surprise of all.
the guy who liked your post is actually a racist... he uses racial slurs to describe black people he doesn't like... Looking forward to cancelling out your vote of intolerance and hate in November...Do they let guys who like really really young 16 year old boys vote? Back to the lake!!!!!
nvmnd, bring on the debates... Hannity: What's at stake in this election as you compare and contrast, and what are your priorities for a second term? Trump: Well, one of the things that will be really great, you know, the word experience is still good. I always say talent is more important than experience. I’ve always said that. But the word experience is a very important word. It’s an, a very important meaning. I never did this before. I never slept over in Washington. I was in Washington, I think, 17 times. All of a sudden, I’m president of the United States. You know the story. I’m riding down Pennsylvania Avenue with our first lady and I say, ‘This is great,'” But I didn’t know very many people in Washington, it wasn’t my thing. I was from Manhattan, from New York. Now, I know everybody, and I have great people in the administration. You make some mistakes. Like, you know, an idiot like Bolton. The only thing he wanted to do was drop bombs on everybody. You don’t have to drop bombs on everybody. You don’t have to kill people. https://www.businessinsider.com/trum...m-quote-2020-6