The Ways of the Biden Plantation

DimJoe Biden portrays himself as the white John Lewis.  The Railer can easily imagine DimJoe publicly bragging: “c’mon man, I was there…, I was there when Martin Luther King was shot, I held his bleeding body in my arms.  With his last breath he told me, Joe, Joe, Joe, … I’m heading to the mountain, but you must march on.”  DimJoe would never let facts and actual events get in the way of a good old self-serving lie.  Being a good liar is a narcissist tell and Joe has a long history of this sort of thing.  It begs a couple questions.  In the dark recesses of his soul, how racist is he and does he think that the African American community/voter is really that gullible?

DimJoe has put out some real whoppers over the years.  Lefty apologists say “that’s how he rolls, it is just well-intentioned mouth diarrhea.”  The Railer believes instead that it is in these moments that DimJoe Biden reveals his true thoughts and beliefs.

Let’s analyze a few of his best lines and see if they reveal a theme or hidden agenda.

 “I came out of the civil rights movement,” the candidate told supporters at a small gathering in Claremont, New Hampshire, in April 1987. “I was one of those guys that sat in and marched and all that stuff.”

Wow!  Joe was there!  In 2010, he told his biographer Jules Witcover that the movement had shaped his political consciousness.

“I was always the kid in high school to get into arguments about civil rights, I didn’t do any big deal, but I marched a couple of times to desegregate the movie theaters in downtown Wilmington.”

Well, OK, not memorable, but he showed up “a couple times.”

“I can remember, as a kid in Wilmington, Delaware, working on the east side in 1965 when a guy named Martin Luther King was standing outside the gates of this college, 47 years ago,” Biden added, according to a White House transcript. “I was not with him outside the gates. I was outside the Rialto Theater in Wilmington, Delaware.”

That’s a good story Joe, except it didn’t happen.  The picketing of the segregated Rialto theater took place more than two years earlier, November 1962 until May 1, 1963.

In 1987, he said: “When I marched in the civil rights movement, I did not march with a 12-point program. I marched with tens of thousands of others to change attitudes. And we changed attitudes.”

A real man of action!  Except… he didn’t.  It didn’t happen.  That’s a lie.  Joe never marched with tens of thousands.  At best, DimJoe did a couple of sit-ins at a local theater.  Nothing wrong with that, so why exaggerate that fact until it becomes a cartoonish, self-serving, lie?

Moving on to the 1970’s, DimJoe went to South Africa to meet with then-imprisoned Nelson Mandela.  He frequently claimed that he was arrested on the streets of Soweto.  Years later, after Mandela became President, here is Biden’s account of their conversation.

“He threw his arms around me and said, ‘I want to say thank you,'” Mr Biden told onlookers. “I said, ‘What are you thanking me for, Mr President?’ He said: ‘You tried to see me. You got arrested trying to see me.'”

Except… it didn’t happen.  DimJoe wasn’t arrested and Mandela never uttered those words.  DimJoe scores a twofer.  This was a low-life attempt to conflate his name with the works and legacy of a Nobel winning black peacemaker.  Andrew Young said it was a lie, and the Washington Post awarded him 4 Pinochio’s (the equivalent of The Railer’s “4 Clintons”).

Moving to something more recent, in 2007, while discussing his Democrat Presidential Primary rivals, he said of then Senator Barack Hussein Obama:

“I mean, you got the first mainstream African-American who is articulate and bright and clean and a nice-looking guy,” Biden said. “I mean, that’s a storybook, man.”

Let’s focus on the word “first.”  To all the millions of African Americans, living and dead, who preceded the Junior Senator from crooked Illinois, none of you, not one, were articulate, bright, clean, or nice-looking.  Finally, after an exhaustive search that spanned centuries, Joe found exactly… one.

A few years later, during Obama’s 2012 reelection run, DimJoe took on Republican Mitt Milktoast Romney.

“Romney wants to let the — he said in the first hundred days, he’s going to let the big banks once again write their own rules, unchain Wall Street,” Mr. Biden said. “They’re going to put you all back in chains.”

Who says stuff like that?  Who thinks like that?  You can be sure that DimJoe’s speechwriters did not pen that retort.  This came direct from Biden’s dark ID, from a leader of the party that, in fact, kept African Americans in chains for centuries.

Here’s more.  During a primary campaign stop in Iowa, August 2019, DimJoe let loose a doozy.  Former Vice President Joseph R. Biden Jr. raised eyebrows during a speech in Iowa when he said that:

“poor kids are just as bright and just as talented as white kids”

Seriously, how does he pack that much hate in 13 words?  That’s light bending dense.  He’s saying, of course, that all non-white kids are poor and dumb.  We know when a pandering politician makes a racial comparison that includes the balmy words “… are just as …,” we know that they’re saying one thing but thinking the opposite.

But didn’t the NAACP endorse Joe Biden for President in May 2020?

“Yesterday, former Vice President Joe Biden made a comment about the NAACP’s endorsement. We want to clarify that the NAACP is a non-partisan organization and does not endorse candidates for political office at any level…”

Translation: just another DimJoe lie.  And he remained busy, piling this one on the same month during an interview with radio host Charlemagne the God.

“Well I tell you what, if you have a problem figuring out whether you’re for me or Trump, then you ain’t black.”

There it is.  If you’re black, then you MUST live on the Democrat Plantation.  You don’t have a choice.  All “real” blacks live there.  And all blacks think alike in the musty attic of DimJoe’s head, strewn with Confederate memorabilia.  Once wasn’t enough, so he reiterated this same basic point in August, saying:

“Unlike the African American community, with notable exceptions, the Latino community is an incredibly diverse community with incredibly diverse attitudes about different things,”

Again, all blacks think alike, they look alike, they’re all ugly, dirty, inarticulate, and interchangeable.  There are no black individuals to DimJoe, just a monolithic ghetto of dependent slaves who vote his way, or else “back in chains.”

Even accomplished Black Americans are treated with the same disrespect.  CBS’ Errol Burnett gently challenged DimJoe with a high arc’d wiffleball question.  DimJoe lashed out:

“Come on, man. That’s like saying you, before you got on this program, you take a test where you’re taking cocaine or not. What do you think? Huh? Are you a junkie?”

Politics aside, there’s no one with more class, no better gentleman, than Errol Burnett.  But in DimJoe’s mind, all blacks are the same, think the same, they’re all “junkies.”

Taken together it is obvious that these are not mere slips of the tongue or random word salad.  Every example here drips of contempt, condescension, and racist white supremacy.  DimJoe Democrats have been dehumanizing Black Americans for a very long time.  But The Railer can hear the leftists roar in response, “we don’t care about any of this – DimJoe votes the right way on black issues!”  Are you sure?  The serpent was only too happy to serve up the apple.  Are Democrats and their policies really uplifting Black Americans or rather, or is it all faux benevolence to keep them on the plantation?