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Friday, September 13, 2024

The Debate at the Kitchen Table

 ABC staged a debate this week.  A presidential debate.  Ostensibly between former president Donald J. Trump and former senator Kamala Harris, but in actuality between Trump and the partnership of Harris and ABC.

There is always media bias.  To some extent, unconscious media bias is unavoidable.  But we don’t expect it to be blatant; the viewer doesn’t expect antics like we saw this week, when the ABC moderators repeatedly declared Mr. Trump’s statements lies, and never called out Ms. Harris’s blatant lies. 

We call it “fact-checking” today, a term coined in social media for when our high-tech overlords punish a writer for stating something with which the gurus disagree.  But it’s not really fact-checking, is it?  It’s an invasion of a conversation, a denial of free speech, a thumb on the scale.  In the case of a presidential debate, it’s electioneering.

And it virtually invalidates the value of our constitutionally protected free press in this process.  ABC’s refusal even to try to act as an impartial host rendered this debate useless.

So let’s look instead at the other debates — millions of them — going on in America, both that day and every day in 2024.

Across the country, there are millions of families shopping in their local grocery store.  More of them must choose the discount grocery compared to five years ago; more must use coupons, or activate their store’s discount app on their cell phones today.

As they walk the aisles, their internal debate ought to be between the chicken and the beef.  Or between the pasta and the rice, or between serving green beans or broccoli as the evening’s vegetable side.  Instead, more working families than ever are having to choose the cheapest meals, having to forgo their preference for a complete, balanced food plan in favor of the least expensive option, because the food inflation of the Biden-Harris years has been devastating to the American consumer.

That’s not a debate anybody wants to have, but it’s all around us.

Then there’s the debate about extracurricular activities for our children.  There are families all over the country — probably even more in the blue states than in the red, but still, it’s happening everywhere — who used to let the kids choose their activity — theatre or baseball, band or Boy Scouts.  And now the debate is over which such programs they can afford — oh, not just the registration fee, mind you, but the materials and equipment have all gone up, too.

All over the country, there are working families who could afford — five years ago — to put their kids in programs that they just can’t afford today.  All too often, their kids don’t understand why this particular debate should be necessary at all.  “We could afford it five years ago.  Why not now?”

Then there’s the debate over repairing or replacing the big-ticket items in the household.  These things have always happened — nothing ever lasted forever — but the urgency today is different from what it used to be.

If the dryer or oven breaks, and costs a couple hundred to fix, versus two or three times that to replace, that was always a difficult debate, but we knew how to have it, how to weigh the pros and cons of getting a few more years out of it versus just getting a new one.  

But today, with the tyrannical climate hoax–based restrictions that the federal government has placed on household appliances, whole new issues, and incredibly higher costs, must be factored in. 

If your gas furnace or central air unit breaks today, there’s the one price to just repair it, which is higher every year, of course.  But now there’s something new: new refrigerant mandates, and the double phase furnace mandate about to kick in, mean that if you replace it today, it will cost a lot, but if you wait a couple years, the replacement will cost twice as much as that — because the Biden-Harris regime has banned the perfectly functional, affordable technologies that have worked well for decades, and mandated high-end versions instead, for both manufacture and sale. 

That’s another debate that the kids won’t understand at all.  Why would the government ban the manufacture of a furnace that works perfectly well, and mandate one that’s twice as expensive?

Why, indeed.

Shall we talk about the debates over where to go on vacation?  Five years ago, most American families didn’t have to factor in the cost of gasoline if they wanted to go on a long trip.  For a Chicagoan to take the family to the East Coast for a week means between 2,000 and 4,000 miles round trip.  In a minivan getting about 20 mpg, the difference between $2.00/gallon and $4.00 per gallon means another $200 to $400 of additional fuel cost alone, versus what that drive would have cost the family five years ago.  And this debate isn’t just about the fun of the vacation; it’s about whether this family can ever give their kids the kind of fun and educational childhood vacations — to historical sites and museums and natural wonders — that the parents and grandparents remember from when they were growing up.  These aren’t happy debates; these are tragic ones.

But we don’t just spend money on gasoline when we travel, do we?  It’s part of our daily lives — our commutes to work and school, to visit family and friends, to participate in activities.  To the talking heads of ABC and the bureaucrats of the Biden-Harris regime, these numbers may be pocket change, but it matters to the average American.  If you put 12,000 miles per year on your car, the difference in gasoline prices has likely cost you over a thousand dollars per year during the Biden-Harris mismanagement of the economy.  That’s at least $4,000 per car, all told, and a lot of families have more than one car.  (Some cars get better mileage, some get worse; some people’s commutes are longer, some are shorter.  We have to deal in rough averages here.)

There are many more such debates taking place across America, in the family car, over the kitchen table, or in the bedroom after the kids are asleep, as hardworking everyday American couples try to compromise on some way to get through these hellish years of Bidenflation.

It’s not one mistake, one policy choice, one single culprit.  It’s the entire Biden-Harris regime — their executive orders, their agency regulations, their foreign policy, and their general incredibly thoughtless wastefulness, in everything they touch and everything they do. 

Every American knows that the election of Kamala Harris would mean four more years of all this.

These are the debates that matter to the American public this week.

These personal, private, tragic debates — as the cost of living has gone up by three, four, five times as much as salaries have — are the debates on the minds of American working families, and small business owners, and retirees, and young adults desperately trying to look ahead to a future that can’t possibly seem promising.

Forget the debate that ABC ruined on Tuesday.

These other conversations, these other tough choices and compromises — these are the debates to which we should be paying attention.

John F. Di Leo is a Chicagoland-based international transportation manager, trade compliance trainer, and speaker.  Read his book on the surprisingly numerous varieties of vote fraud (The Tales of Little Pavel), his political satires on the Biden-Harris years (Evening Soup with Basement JoeVolumes IIIand III), and his brand-new nonfiction book on the 2024 election, Current Events and the Issues of Our Age, all available in eBook or paperback, only on Amazon

https://www.americanthinker.com/articles/2024/09/the_debate_at_the_kitchen_table.html

In 1st interview with newspaper after years of snubs Biden talks son Beau’s link to trans candidate

  President Biden has given what appears to be his first on-record interview to a newspaper reporter since taking office — focusing prominently on his late son Beau’s links to a transgender congressional candidate.

Biden, 81, spoke Thursday to reporter Chris Kane of the Washington Blade, a DC-based LGBTQ-focused newspaper, which published a preview of Biden’s remarks Friday pertaining to Delaware state Sen. Sarah McBride, who won the Tuesday Democratic primary for an open House seat.

McBride, 34, would be the nation’s first openly transgender member of Congress and worked on Beau Biden’s re-election campaign for state attorney general in 2010 while a student at American University.

“I called her and I said, ‘Sarah,’ I said, ‘Beau’s looking down from heaven, congratulating you,’” the retiring president said

resident Joe Biden pauses as he concludes his address to the nation about his decision to not seek reelection, in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington, DC, on July 24, 2024.
President Biden pauses as he concludes his address to the nation about his decision to not seek reelection, in the Oval Office at the White House in Washington DC on July 24, 2024.POOL/AFP via Getty Images
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“[Beau] was getting the hell kicked out” of him because “he hired her,” Biden told the outlet of McBride, who came out as transgender in 2012, two years after her employment on his campaign.

When McBride announced she was transgender, Biden said, his son called her to say “I’m so proud of you. I love you, and you’re still a part of the Biden family.”

Biden spoke on Beau's links to a transgender congressional candidate.
Biden spoke on Beau’s links to a transgender congressional candidate.AP

“Now she’s going to be the next congresswoman, the next congresswoman from Delaware,” the president told the Blade, whose print edition is available for free at corner stores and bars around Washington.

Biden told the paper McBride “started to fill up” with emotion during their call this week and replied to him that the “‘only reason I’m here is because of Beau. He had confidence in me.”

The president has not given known on-record interviews to reporters from any other newspaper since taking office in January 2021 — though he has done a smattering of magazine interviews and spoke in 2022 to a journalist from the Associated Press wire service.

https://nypost.com/2024/09/13/us-news/biden-uses-first-interview-with-newspaper-after-years-of-snubs-to-discuss-son-beaus-link-to-trans-candidate/

Pa. town up in arms over plan to house hundreds of migrants in abandoned school

 A small Pennsylvania town is up in arms over a proposal to turn an abandoned Civil War-era school into a shelter for hundreds of migrant families — with residents and lawmakers vowing to put a stop to the “foreign invasion.”

News of the plan to turn the former Scotland School for Veterans Children building in Franklin County into a migrant shelter surfaced publicly this week after the owners of the sprawling property recently started making inquiries about its potential usage, local officials said.

The Greene Township Board of Supervisors said a representative from USA Up Star, an Indiana-based disaster response company that currently owns the 185-acre property, had reached out to them last month to ask if local zoning laws allowed for the campus to be converted into a shelter.

News of the plan to turn the former Scotland School for Veterans Children building in Franklin County into a migrant shelter sparked outrage this week.AP
Outraged residents and lawmakers vowing to put a stop to the “foreign invasion.”WGAL 8

The company said the location, which was most recently a summer camp, would be used as a “shelter for families seeking refuge” in the US and that they’d be “working closely” with the federal government on the potential project.

The board quickly denied the request, saying current zoning requirements and land use regulations prohibited such a use for the campus.

USA Up Star, however, can still lodge an appeal on the board’s decision, according to local officials.

It wasn’t immediately clear, though, if the company intends to fight the ruling.

Still, the developments sparked immediate outrage with furious locals packing the township’s board meeting on Tuesday to voice their objections over the apparent push to shelter migrants in their community.

“Our concern is that we have no idea who these people are. They’re unvetted,” one local, Sue McPhail, said during the meeting, according to WGAL.

“We don’t know where they came from. We don’t know if they’re involved in gangs. We don’t know if they’re drug traffickers, sex traffickers.”

Sen. Doug Mastriano vowed to do everything they could to prevent potential plans from gaining tractionWGAL 8

Meanwhile, Rep. Rob Kauffman and Sen. Doug Mastriano — two Republican state lawmakers who represent the area — vowed to do everything they could to prevent potential plans from gaining traction.

“We are united in our opposition to illegal immigrants being housed by federal government contractors in Franklin County,” the pair said in a joint statement.

“While admittedly none of this is under the jurisdiction of the Commonwealth, we became engaged as soon as we heard rumblings of this potential reuse.”

“We join with our neighbors, friends and constituents committed to defending Franklin County from the foreign invasion coming from our southern border,” they continued.

The abandoned Civil War-era school is set to become a shelter for hundreds of migrant families.Scotland School For Veterans /Facebook

“This facility usage, as envisioned by some outside groups, would irreparably change Greene Township.”

The building, built in 1895, was initially used as an orphanage for the children of Pennsylvania soldiers before being turned into a school for military veterans and active-duty personnel.

The school shuttered due to state budget cuts in 2009 and was sold off.

The Post reached out to USA Up Star about its plans to convert the site.

Franklin County sits on the Mason-Dixon Line — the southern border of Pennsylvania and the northern border of Maryland — halfway between Philadelphia and Pittsburgh.

https://nypost.com/2024/09/13/us-news/small-pennsylvania-town-up-in-arms-over-plan-to-house-hundreds-of-migrants-in-abandoned-school/