07/19/2024 / By Ethan Huff
Desperation is setting in as Democrats both in government and media come to the stark realization that braindead Joe Biden has a zero percent chance of winning the presidency in a fair election unless they manipulate his words to spruce up his geriatric image.
The latest scheme from the left to cover for Biden and his broken brain involves contorting his speech transcripts to eliminate or change nonsensical words and fragmented thoughts. When Biden said the non-word “goodest” during a recent press briefing, for instance, some corporate media outlets changed the word to “good” to make Biden appear more cognitively able than he actually is.
Not everyone is on board with the scheme, though, including New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd who has had enough of all the deception. Dowd deserves credit for noticing that many mainstream media outlets along with the White House are altering Biden’s speeches in print to make him sound smart and well-versed in current events, especially since she disapproves of Donald Trump.
You may have noticed if you read such news that some corporate media outlets and reporters are quietly adding editors’ notes to articles quoting Biden that they later altered to make him sound sane. Dowd and a few others refuse to do this, even when pressed by the White House to make changes.
(Related: Biden is refusing to step down even though his own party, including its biggest donors, wants him gone.)
Dowd revealed publicly that she was contacted about a piece she wrote covering Biden’s “goodest” gaffe asking her to reword the quote to something other than what Biden actually said. Here is what she wrote about what happened:
“In my Saturday column, I quoted Biden’s line to ABC‘s George Stephanopoulos about how he would feel if Trump were sworn in as president because he refused to step aside: ‘I’ll feel as long as I gave it my all and I did the goodest job as I know I can do, that’s what this is about.'”
“Now, ‘goodest’ isn’t a word. But my researcher, Andrew Trunsky, and I listened to the video, our ears up against the computer, 10 times, and that’s what it sounded like. We also checked the ABC News transcript and that’s the word they used. Times news reporters and reporters for other news outlets took their cue from the ABC transcript.”
Dowd went on to explain that so much confusion was generated by all this that Axios published two different versions of the same story: one where Biden said “goodest” and the other where he said “I did as good a job as I know I can do.”
Biden campaign spokesman T.J. Ducklo reached out to Dowd to try to get her to do the same thing in order to remain “consistent with the corrected transcript,” even though that one makes no sense either, but she ultimately refused after presenting it to her editor.
Dowd was told by Ducklo that a “tape” was later reviewed by ABC News to confirm that Biden saying “goodest” was an “error” that media outlets need to correct.
“I was more confused than ever,” Dowd recalled. “What tape? From whom?? Why the runaround??? Given the White House’s egregious coverup about Biden’s sag from aging, the spokesman’s coyness seemed de trop.”
What Biden and his supporters and handlers fail to recognize is that the more they try to cover up his brain problems, the more the American public suspects a coverup. When will they learn that these kinds of antics only make their problem worse?
Will Biden even make it to November with a pulse? Find out more at Rigged.news.
Sources for this article include:
Tagged Under:
babblings, brain damaged, brain function, cancel Democrats, conspiracy, deception, deep state, dementia, disinfo, Donald Trump, election, fake news, fraud, Joe Biden, journalism, left cult, mainstream media, news cartels, resist, rigged, suppressed, Vote Republican, White House
This article may contain statements that reflect the opinion of the author
BrainFunction.News is a fact-based public education website published by Brain Function News Features, LLC.
All content copyright © 2018 by Brain Function News Features, LLC.
Contact Us with Tips or Corrections
All trademarks, registered trademarks and servicemarks mentioned on this site are the property of their respective owners.