Commentary
Hardly anyone paid attention to President Joe Biden’s Jan. 5, 2024, speech in Valley Forge, Pennsylvania. That’s fine. But if the contents indicate how the campaign is going to go between now and November, we're in for an ominous period of U.S. history.
The speech rattled me with strong Chernenko vibes.
Konstantin Chernenko was installed as Soviet leader following a succession of apparatchiks that took power following the death of Stalin, thus succeeding Khrushchev, Brezhnev, and Andropov, and before Gorbachev took over and presiding over the end times. Chernenko was a puppet, but good at promoting the line of the moment, which was mostly bound up with finding scapegoats for the failing empire. No one in the Politburo really liked or respected him, and he was in ill health, but he was useful for parroting the thinking of the Soviet ruling class. His tenure served that purpose alone.
The system was everywhere failing, and the scapegoat was always the same: enemies of the state, the resistors to communism, the evil U.S. sympathizers within, the doubters, and dissidents. Were it not for those bad guys, everything would be going swimmingly. Peace, prosperity, and strength would bloom. It’s the rebels and refuseniks keeping that at bay. This is why the party must continue to rule and even intensify its control. It must protect the people and the ideal from the unenlightened rabble.
So it is for President Biden. His speech touched not at all on whatever “achievements” the U.S. apparatchiks believe they have to their name. Instead, it was an exclusive focus on the evil of the competition for power. All problems are because of rebels and dissidents and enemies of the party. In this way, the whole speech had a fin d’une époque feel to it, as if these people are holding on for dear life, draining the system of what it has left before the lights go out.
It was an almost surreal experience. Who are these people in the audience? Who brought them there? There was simply no way that normal people were there. The only normal people who could be cajoled into attending something like that would be protesters. To make sure that there were none of those, the place was vetted down to every last hair on each person’s head. Only trusted people can sit there.
That opening cheer of “four more years” was overly scripted and canned—too uniform and simultaneous, like a basement rally by Sir Oswald Mosley in the interwar years. The whole thing was weird theater to create the impression of some mythical and authentic support out there somewhere. The only real moment came at the very, very end when his wife tried to get him off stage—he never knows which way to exit—and he leaned into the mic with some grandpa joke about the real power in the room.
As for the text itself, it was as if real life as you and I understand it doesn’t exist. It was 100 percent about the grave threat of Donald Trump/Hitler and, mostly, the evil of anyone who would support him and not support President Biden as the savior of the nation keeping at bay the terrible pestilence of MAGA.
You would get the impression that nothing else matters. Home prices, inflation, crime, the migrant crisis, ill health, homelessness, insane debt, mass collapse of education and learning, the middle class crushed, unaffordable everything—none of it exists.
Never mind the decaying cities, the loss of trust, the massive disapproval of everything, the population-wide terror of the Great Reset, the barely suppressed fury at the COVID-19 response, the befuddlement as to why the United States is backing some kind of Ukraine thing in a border dispute with Russia, the disgust at institutionalized gender dysphoria, the corruption in media and tech, the censorship, and all the rest.
There's plenty about which to be depressed, alarmed, and angry, not the least of which is that courts are harassing a former president within an inch of his life and even rigging the election to keep him—and other competitors to President Biden—off the ballot. This is egregious, and everyone knows it. And it's all for one reason only: to keep him and that cause he represents (entrenched administrative state hegemony) on top.