So, addlepated Joe is heading to Buffalo to ease the suffering of the American people and the people of Buffalo.
Funny...none of them traveled to Brooklyn to ease the pain and suffering after a black racist opened fire in a subway train last month.
I don't recall any of them showing up in Waukesha, Wisconsin either.
But never mind that...I wouldn't want that fool showing up in my town if something like this happened anyway.
Point of this is: word is leaking out about what the speech he plans to give contains...now, nobody knows for sure, could just be bullshit, but the gist of it is he plans to double down on his previous remarks declaring white people to be the greatest threat to the US there is.
They are an "existential" threat...as a people and any organization they support.
We'll see...but if he does, be aware, that's now, no bullshit, genocide talk. Being as white as cottage cheese himself, I fail to see how he would excuse himself from his own fatwa, but logic and consistency has no place in Klown World.
If he does, then this is the final intolerable act.
In Buffalo, Biden to confront the racism he's vowed to fight
https://www.nhregister.com/news/article/In-Buffalo-Biden-to-confront-the-racism-he-s-17176730.php
CHRIS MEGERIAN Associated Press May 16, 2022
Updated: May 16, 2022 4:49 p.m.
WASHINGTON (AP) — When Joe Biden talks about his decision to run against President Donald Trump in 2020, the story always starts with Charlottesville. He says it was the men with torches shouting bigoted slogans that drove him to join what he calls the “battle for the soul of America."
Now Biden is facing the latest deadly manifestation of hatred after a white supremacist targeted Black people with an assault rifle at a supermarket in Buffalo, the most lethal racist attack since he took office.
The president and first lady Jill Biden are to visit the city on Tuesday.
Biden was the first president to specifically address white supremacy in an inaugural speech, calling it “domestic terrorism that we must confront." However, such beliefs remain an entrenched threat at a time when his administration has been preoccupied with crises involving the pandemic, inflation and the war in Ukraine.
“It’s important for him to show up for the families and the community and express his condolences,” said Derrick Johnson, the president of the NAACP. “But we’re more concerned with preventing this from happening in the future.”
It's unclear how Biden will try to do that. Proposals for new gun restrictions have routinely been blocked by Republicans,
and the racism that was spouted in Charlottesville, Virginia, appears to have only spread in the five years since.
(Oh, by what measure? Can you prove that...because I am prepared to prove otherwise. - AF)