The New York Times, what do they have, about 50 columnists, would you say?
It's a very, very remarkably large number.
And of them, there are no, not one is a supporter of Trump.
So, in other words, half the country votes for someone not reflected in a single columnist of the New York Times.
I'm not even complaining about that.
I'm just noting it.
And so they're all, they all, with two or three exceptions, they all compete for who is the most radical.
Jamel Bowie might be, he would be in the top five of the most radical, and he's a columnist.
So this is his column.
Don't think of it as a contest between Biden and Trump.
Did you happen to see that?
You sent it to me?
I can assume you saw it.
Let's start with the worst.
It's priceless.
We already know that Donald Trump's main targets for his second term are American democracy and the American constitutional order.
So notice...
My dear listener, that we know.
This is not my view.
In my view, we already know.
And he believes he knows this because his world is composed of people who think like Jamel Bowie.
So if everybody around you says the earth is flat, you know the earth is flat.
We're all...
not all.
The vast majority of people are profoundly influenced by those they are surrounded by.
So we already know that Donald Trump's main targets for his second term, so I'd like to ask Jamel Bowie, he had a term as president.
Were American democracy and the American constitutional order the main targets in the first term?
Has he changed?
What did you say for four years then?
I don't know if he was a columnist then.
For Trump, the basics of American government, separation of powers and independent civil service, and the popular selection of elected officials are a direct obstacle to his desire to protect himself, enrich himself, enrich himself.
Wow.
Has any president enriched himself in office during his lifetime as president and senator as much as Joe Biden?