Wisconsin senior citizen, who in the last year has retreated to a world of conspiracy theories and quack medical cures, has some thoughts about cognitive decline among the elderly.
Biden, who has a history of making gaffes, spent the last year winning in a crowded Dem field, handling Trump in two debates, running a gaffe-free campaign and transition, passing a massive anti-poverty legislation and ramping up COVID response.
But they are still pushing this.
Trump regularly misspoke, stumbled over words, made massive misstatements and misjudgments, and all of the "Biden has cognitive decline" guys treated him like he was playing 12 dimensional chess while wrestling a bear. Come on!
The sad truth is that cognitive decline starts much earlier in life than in your 70s. But if that is who are are choosing for President, my basic cognitive test is whether someone a) can do the job, b) without lying or c) engaging in conspiracies to subvert our democracy.

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More from @donmoyn

13 Mar
One of these tweets is real and which one is not, but it’s hard to say which one is more embarrassing ImageImage
This is the first gif that comes up if you type in mommy milky
Your honor, my client has suffered grievous harm to his sterling reputation and demands appropriate reparations.
Read 4 tweets
12 Mar
Having shot down one Biden nominee using the entirely novel "mean tweets" criterion, GOP Senators are now going after others. The problem is, the mean tweets in question are pretty accurate. washingtonpost.com/outlook/2021/0…
Biden's nominee for Associate Attorney General, Vanita Gupta, had some harsh words for the GOP convention. But also accurate! She should be blocked for this? Image
Even more of a stretch, Tom Cotton and Marco Rubio objected to a nominee because he tweeted a quote of an opinion columnist. Doesn't even have to be their own words to be disqualifying! Image
Read 7 tweets
11 Mar
So while DC policy wonks have been arguing about the children allowance, the public seems largely unaware of it. If it is going to survive beyond the COVID bill funding, that requires a massive public awareness and branding campaign.
The popularity of the children allowance also depends on *actually getting it to people in need.* Relying on IRS to distribute the aid is not of much help when the most in need don't file taxes.
Social Security was controversial when it was created but succeeded by relentless branding and making access to benefits easy (they used the post office before social security offices existed). That is why SSA would be a better agency than IRS to distribute the child benefit IMO
Read 4 tweets
11 Mar
What did Trumpism as an administrative doctrine mean for the management of public services? In this short piece in @PAReview, @AlasdairRoberts and I try to make sense of it all. Some big takeaways. 1/ onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/pu…
Given the chaos of the Trump administration it might seem foolish to try to detect a coherent administrative agenda. But all Presidents have some sort of de facto style of managing. There were the key aspects of the Trump regime: 2/
We wrote this piece just after the election, and what we thought was a bold prediction then feels like a conventional wisdom now. Some version of Trumpism will remain a potent force that shapes how we govern in America. 3/
Read 7 tweets
10 Mar
It is worth celebrating every Biden roll-back of Trump-era administrative burdens.

The Trump administration public charge rule is dead, which would have disproportionately targeted immigrants of color, is dead. 1/
Back in 2019, I wrote about the public charge rule. It's current incarnation was the brainchild of white nationalist Stephen Miller, who wanted to expand it as a de facto wealth tax on immigrants. (Via @ArcDigi) arcdigital.media/trump-is-remak…
The public charge arose and has always been motivated by bias towards ethnic groups, such as the Irish and Chinese in the 1880s.
arcdigital.media/trump-is-remak…
motherjones.com/politics/2021/…
Read 6 tweets
9 Mar
Sometimes the best way to understand a system is through someone's personal account of how it worked for them. This from @realLandsEnd is going to help you understand administrative burdens in SSDI better than any aggregate statistics.
One incredibly thoughtful part of this piece is the degree to which the construction of the individual in the eyes of the US state - and the burdens imposed upon them - are based on connections to work (we are seeing this play out now with the debate over a children's allowance).
The state imposes the greatest burdens upon those who are experiencing conditions - such as scarcity or ill health - that makes it harder for them to deal with such burdens at a time when they most need help: a human capital Catch 22. onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.11…
Read 5 tweets

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