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The Biden Administration and All Things Politics

Biden has by far been the best president in most of our lifetimes. Better than both Bushes, Clinton, and far more effective than Obama. He’s up there with Reagan and LBJ for most impactful in the last several decades. So while his age isn’t great, the man is getting the job done and doing it well!
 

Wall Street is rising again Thursday following its big rally the day before on excitement that several cuts to interest rates may indeed be coming next year, as hoped.

The Standard & Poor's 500 was 0.6% higher in early trading and within 1.3% of its all-time high set early last year. The Dow Jones industrial average was up 93 points, or 0.3%, and on track to set a record for a second straight day, as of 9:35 a.m. Eastern. The Nasdaq composite was 0.6% higher.

But the rally for stocks and drop for Treasury yields seem to be banking on the Federal Reserve pulling off what was considered a long shot not long ago.

The hope is that the Fed can manage its interest-rate policy exactly right: first, by slowing the economy and hurting investment prices enough through high interest rates to snuff out inflation, and then by making conditions easier at the right time to prevent the economy from slowing too much and sliding into a painful recession.

That’s still not assured, as both Fed officials and cautious investors are warning.

One threat is that the economy stays too hot, which would keep upward pressure on inflation and could force the Fed to at least keep rates high for longer or hike them again.

A couple reports on Thursday may have flagged such threats. One showed U.S. shoppers spent more at retailers in November than October, when economists were forecasting a slight decline. Another report said fewer U.S. workers applied for jobless benefits last week, a signal of a remarkably resilient job market.

Treasury yields briefly undid some of their declines following the reports, which were both stronger than economists expected. But traders are still betting on a better than three-in-four chance that the Federal Reserve will cut its main interest rate by at least 1.50 percentage points next year, according to data from CME Group. That’s double what the median Fed official is expecting.
 

Wall Street is rising again Thursday following its big rally the day before on excitement that several cuts to interest rates may indeed be coming next year, as hoped.

The Standard & Poor's 500 was 0.6% higher in early trading and within 1.3% of its all-time high set early last year. The Dow Jones industrial average was up 93 points, or 0.3%, and on track to set a record for a second straight day, as of 9:35 a.m. Eastern. The Nasdaq composite was 0.6% higher.

But the rally for stocks and drop for Treasury yields seem to be banking on the Federal Reserve pulling off what was considered a long shot not long ago.

The hope is that the Fed can manage its interest-rate policy exactly right: first, by slowing the economy and hurting investment prices enough through high interest rates to snuff out inflation, and then by making conditions easier at the right time to prevent the economy from slowing too much and sliding into a painful recession.

That’s still not assured, as both Fed officials and cautious investors are warning.

One threat is that the economy stays too hot, which would keep upward pressure on inflation and could force the Fed to at least keep rates high for longer or hike them again.

A couple reports on Thursday may have flagged such threats. One showed U.S. shoppers spent more at retailers in November than October, when economists were forecasting a slight decline. Another report said fewer U.S. workers applied for jobless benefits last week, a signal of a remarkably resilient job market.

Treasury yields briefly undid some of their declines following the reports, which were both stronger than economists expected. But traders are still betting on a better than three-in-four chance that the Federal Reserve will cut its main interest rate by at least 1.50 percentage points next year, according to data from CME Group. That’s double what the median Fed official is expecting.
"Be fearful when others are greedy, and be greedy when others are fearful."
-Warren Buffett.

Right now, Warren Buffett is fearful.
 

Ranking presidents over the past 8 decades by their final approval rating

#12. Richard Nixon
#11. Harry S. Truman
#10. Donald Trump
#9. George W. Bush
#8. Jimmy Carter
#7. Lyndon B. Johnson
#6. Gerald Ford
#5. George Bush
#4. Barack Obama
#3. Dwight D. Eisenhower
#2. Ronald Reagan
#1. William J. Clinton

From what I can tell Biden would rank #9. (or 10 I guess and then you move trump to 11 and Truman to 12 etc)

I still maintain that if the republicans put out anyone other than donald trump to run against biden then they will cruise to an easy win.
If the democrats put out anyone other than biden to run against trump then they will also cruise to an easy win.

So of course it will be trump vs biden which will be a bit of a toss up (I think biden wins again) because apparently both parties are incredibly stupid.
 
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If I had to make a guess based on recent polling, I'm thinking Biden will make an announcement on expanding student loan forgiveness. He is going to misuse taxpayer dollars to buy his way in to reelection.

Polling has been released that shows Biden's support among Gen Z has been falling. He still has majority support but it isn't as strong as it was last election. The leading reason: "43 percent of Gen Z voters saying he has not done enough to address student loans"

 
If I had to make a guess based on recent polling, I'm thinking Biden will make an announcement on expanding student loan forgiveness. He is going to misuse taxpayer dollars to buy his way in to reelection.

Polling has been released that shows Biden's support among Gen Z has been falling. He still has majority support but it isn't as strong as it was last election. The leading reason: "43 percent of Gen Z voters saying he has not done enough to address student loans"

Yeah we need Donald Trump back so that he can fix student loan debt, because that's what he'll do for sure.

I don't get how this works. In all the ways people who voted for Biden last time are disappointed in what he's done or how little he has accomplished, Trump wouldn't do any of that stuff explicitly. He's against doing that stuff. He's going to not just not do that stuff, he's going to do the opposite of that stuff.

Good reason to "primary" Biden, but we know that won't happen. The DNC is pretty good at getting their preferred candidate to the general in Presidential elections.

Still, I think once we get to the General and we're looking at Kim Jong Trump vs Old Man Biden enough people will make the sane choice and decide not to have an authoritarian dictatorship, even if they aren't enthusiastic about their pick.
 
If I had to make a guess based on recent polling, I'm thinking Biden will make an announcement on expanding student loan forgiveness. He is going to misuse taxpayer dollars to buy his way in to reelection.

Polling has been released that shows Biden's support among Gen Z has been falling. He still has majority support but it isn't as strong as it was last election. The leading reason: "43 percent of Gen Z voters saying he has not done enough to address student loans"

Doesn't really need to do that. Trump will trump his way to another loss by being trump. There are still enough sane people to vote against trump imo.
 
Biden isn’t my first choice but my wallet can’t afford not re-electing him. Have you seen the stock market? Seen the unemployment rate? Seen how salaries are skyrocketing? The economy is rocking! Why would I screw that up by electing the guy who wrecked the economy the last time he was president? Sorry, but my 401k and stock market investments matter!
 
I love freedom. That's why I can't vote for Trump.
For me it's way more simple. There is a certain level of douchebagness that I won't vote for. Quite a few candidates have crossed that level for me which is why I rarely vote.

Trump crosses that level to an unfathomable amount to the point that whoever the other douchebag is will ALWAYS get my vote. No one can out douchebag trump

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I too like freedom and a non douche as president. I also like a boring president. I don’t need a president to give my pathetic life entertainment. I have sports, movies, and my family for entertainment. I don’t need a president who tweets nonstop purposely trying to piss people off because he has no self-esteem.
 
Al gonna hate this article as it hits way too close to home for him im sure

Democracy as we know it — a system formally premised on equal citizenship for everyone — is really a 20th-century invention. The degree to which it has become the consensus gold standard for human governance, both in the United States and around the world, is nothing short of miraculous.

This development is not just a function of democracy’s military victories or constitutional innovations. It has depended fundamentally on the global rise of a democratic culture — a set of ideas, beliefs, and expectations centering on the notion that democracy is the only just and feasible way to run a society.

Democracy has grown and matured by turning into a self-fulfilling prophecy: It persists because everyone in a society believes it should and will exist. If democratic culture dims, democracy’s prospects dim with it.

The United States, the first country to claim the mantle of democracy in the modern era, has long had an exceptionally strong democratic culture. Belief in democratic ideals, liberal rights, and the basics of constitutional government are so fundamental to American identity that they’ve been collectively described as the country’s “civil religion.

This withering of belief in democracy took off during Donald Trump’s rise to power and has continued apace in his post-presidency. The more he attacks the foundations of the democratic system, the less everyone — both his supporters and his opponents — believe American democracy is both healthy and likely to endure.

Moreover, he has birthed an anti-democratic movement inside the Republican Party dedicated to advancing his vision (or something like it). These Republicans vocally and loudly argue American democracy is a sham — and that dire measures are justified in response. This faction is already influential, and will likely become more so given its especial prominence among the ranks of young conservatives.

Polling has consistently shown that large majorities of Republicans believe that Biden stole the election from Trump — that is, that America’s last presidential election was not decided democratically. Political scientists have confirmed that they’re not just saying this: Republicans sincerely believe that American democracy is not functioning in a legitimate fashion, that it’s rigged against them.

Today, it’s common among pro-Trump Republican partisans to jeer at the invocation of democratic values (“muh democracy” is a common sarcastic phrase on right-leaning social media). They see liberals and Democrats warnings about Trump as an insincere ploy to defend a corrupt system and scorn them accordingly.
 
Republicans sincerely believe that American democracy is not functioning in a legitimate fashion, that it’s rigged against them.
This is a problem and unfortunately nothing is being done to address this problem. If left to fester, it could bring down the system. Unfortunately the left is insisting that not only should the concerns over chain-of-custody and transparency not be addressed, but should be expanded.
 
This is a problem and unfortunately nothing is being done to address this problem. If left to fester, it could bring down the system. Unfortunately the left is insisting that not only should the concerns over chain-of-custody and transparency not be addressed, but should be expanded.
There's nothing to be done other than for these Republicans to accept reality. The election wasn't rigged, the system is functioning as intended. The Problem is that Republican politicians are keeping this falsehood alive because it benefits MAGA. That's the thing that needs to be fixed.
 
Hard disagree. Systems like these depend on trust. If there is a lack of trust, as there is now, the solution is not to demand the untrusting trust more. That is asking for disaster.
There is no basis for their distrust. They are choosing to distrust because they are being told to distrust.

I gave you the ****ing solution. Republicans need to stop telling them lies. That is what needs to be done. Because if we address the fantasy of unsecure elections with some sort of placation the goal posts will be moved endlessly.
 
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