They’re just publishing literal fanfiction these days, no commentary, no analysis, no reporting, just straight up literal fanfic

By Maureen Dowd

Opinion Columnist, reporting from Washington.

I slipped away from this nightmarish election campaign into a delicious dream the other evening. I dreamed that, when Joe Biden gets up to reset his beleaguered presidency at the State of the Union address, he gives this astonishing speech:

Mr. Speaker. Man, Mike Johnson was a nobody just weeks ago — now he’s Neville Chamberlain. Madam Vice President. Oy.

Our first lady — you hottie! And our second gentleman. Members of Congress, leaders of our military, justices of the Supreme Court. And you, my fellow Americans.

My report is this: The state of my mental competency is strong. And the union’s OK, too.

You think I’m forgetful? Take a look at the other guy — he can’t even remember who Nancy Pelosi is, and that gal is the best speaker in United States history! You know what I remember? I remember how to lift people up, not tear them down and pit them against one another. I remember how to tell the truth when my lips move.

I may be 81, but it’s not about your chronological age. It’s about how old your ideas are. Donald Trump wants to yank us back on women’s rights, the environment, mail-in voting — actually, all voting. He’s undermining NATO, the strongest alliance ever. I’m trying to build a high-speed train from Vegas to L.A., baby!

I remember very well that, three years ago, our economy was reeling. Our administration has created nearly 15 million jobs and helped fund 46,000 infrastructure projects. Unemployment has been under 4 percent, and the inflation rate has gone down.

My boy Hunter made mincemeat out of the House Republicans. His Irish was up, and he told those clowns there was no corruption on my part. I see you down there, Matt Gaetz, you lying, dog-faced pony soldier! When you tried to quiz Hunter about his drug use, he made quick work of you. Pot calling kettle! How could you give Hunter a hard time when you’re under investigation by the House Ethics Committee for sexual misconduct and using illicit drugs? Lots of luck with that, man!

Hunter is my hero. He is trying to stay sober to help me — and keep our democracy from falling off the wagon. My family grifts a little, but what White House doesn’t? The Obamas, but other than that …. The Clintons left with a moving truck of government property. And look at the Trump syndicate, man!

I’m still on top of my game, folks. Here’s the deal: I’ve always had gaffes. That’s my thing. Like back in 2006 when I said, “You cannot go into a 7-Eleven or a Dunkin’ Donuts unless you have a slight Indian accent.”

I haven’t been perfect, Lord knows. I’m in a time warp in terms of how I see Israel, and I should have reined in Bibi sooner to stop the Gaza tragedy. I’ve been too slow to fix the border, but you Republicans don’t want it fixed anyway.

Still, I feel I deserve re-election, folks. I don’t think I get enough credit for my achievements. They said bipartisanship was such a 20th-century concept, but I worked across the aisle to help pass the largest infrastructure investment in history and the manufacturing bill bolstering chips and semiconductors.

We are faced with a moment of extraordinary challenge. If we can meet our crises at the border and in Ukraine and Gaza, if we can manage the out-of-control Bibi and the psychotic Putin, we will be a nation of limitless possibility.

I may not have a long future, but America does. Our children and grandchildren do. We do not want to let one man’s checkered past drag down our shining future. We cannot let our country be ripped apart by retribution and vengeance.

I’m proud of the 51 years I’ve spent in this town. I’m honored that millions of people across this country want me to continue to lead them. But I tell you tonight: I will not be a candidate for president this fall.

I don’t want a debate over my age to be an impediment to America’s progress. It’s eclipsing the things that we should be focused on.

After much prayer and deliberation, I have decided that I need to spend my final chapter devoting my full attention to our thorny challenges.

I was serious, folks, when I called myself a bridge to a new generation, a transitional figure. I’ll release my delegates this summer at the Chicago convention to vote for the candidate they feel can carry our banner into the future.

I know our country — and the world — has been through a difficult time. Divisive politics. A withering pandemic. A murderous Putin. But as I leave you tonight, I want you to know that America has faced and navigated every challenge for over 247 years.

Let us join hands. Now is the hour of responsibility. Our character is formed. Our purpose is found. Our future is forged.

It’s never, ever been good to bet against America. God bless you all — even you, Gaetz. And God save the queen, man!

  • ped_xing [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    4 months ago

    So is the flipside to “no investigation, no right to speak” that the price to not read a godawful Maureen Dowd column is just abstaining from commenting on the thread about it? Because I could live with that. I wanted to post this comment, though, so I’ll scroll up and read it before hitting post.

    Post-reading update: I wish I hadn’t.

  • Bay_of_Piggies [he/him, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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    4 months ago

    Hunter is my hero. He is trying to stay sober to help me — and keep our democracy from falling off the wagon. My family grifts a little, but what White House doesn’t? The Obamas, but other than that …. The Clintons left with a moving truck of government property. And look at the Trump syndicate, man!

    99% grifter vs 100% grifter

  • FourteenEyes [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    4 months ago

    “And next I would like you to introduce you all to my new wife, Maureen Dowd, who is even more beautiful and smart and amazing than my wife Jill. We are in a poly marriage now and we fuck daily.”

  • l33tstr33t [she/her, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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    4 months ago

    I didn’t believe you. I had to go to the homepage and check for myself. An AI had to write this. There’s no way any human being can have a Joe Biden Fantasy. I refuse to believe it!!!

    • buckykat [none/use name]@hexbear.net
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      4 months ago

      This is the same NYT writer who went to colorado when weed was first legalized there, specifically wrote that the dispensary told her not to eat the whole chocolate bar at once, then wrote that she ate the whole chocolate bar at once, and concluded that weed is very bad because she had a bad time when she did what she was specifically instructed not to do.

    • micnd90 [he/him,any]@hexbear.netOP
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      4 months ago

      It’s a lib-brain fanfic about what Joe Biden would’ve said in his state of the union, HBO-show style to own Drumpf. They’re so distraught that IRL Biden is losing his mental capacity and getting trounced in the polls.

    • micnd90 [he/him,any]@hexbear.netOP
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      4 months ago

      Yeah, for slut-shaming Monica Lewinsky and protecting Bill Clinton. Not for any amount of decent investigative journalism

      The New York Times’ columnists concentrated on her personality, behavior, motives, activities, background, and appearance. Frank Rich, Russell Baker, William Safire, Thomas L. Friedman, Bob Herbert, and Maureen Dowd all made Lewinsky a topic of their columns repeatedly, including at least 18 columns from Dowd. Safire and Dowd, in particular, mocked and disparaged her. Both wrote columns about public encounters with her. On March 9, Safire declared Lewinsky was “no object of pity” because he had met her in a Washington, D.C., bar, and she seemed “just fine” to him. “She was too carefully coiffured, but had a sort of natural, exuberant smile that anybody, even a President, would enjoy seeing around the office,” Safire wrote in his column (Safire, 1998, para. 13). On June 7, Dowd wrote a column that referred to “my cat fight with Monica” in which she described a confrontation with Lewinsky at a D.C. restaurant.

      https://doi.org/10.1177/0196859917707920