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Friday, November 22, 2024

Biden Vows to Retroactively ‘Blunt Climate Impact,’ Gets Dragged Across Stage

'I’ve committed to—by 2020—we will have conserved 30% of all the lands and waters the United States has jurisdiction over...'

(Jacob Bruns, Headline USA) At an event in Santa Clara, California, President Joe Biden announced that he was committing $600 million for climate projects, the Gateway Pundit reported.

Unfortunately for Biden, he announced that the commitment would take place in 2020—apparently the year that Biden believes it is right now.

“I’ve committed to—by 2020—we will have conserved 30% of all the lands and waters the United States has jurisdiction over” Biden stammered, adding that his administration would leap into the past to “blunt climate impact.”

According to the president, 2020 looks like a bright year for federal programs “combating” climate change.

“We’re on our way! The conservation of land and water—we put forward the conservation of land and water more than any president in the history of the United States since John Kennedy,” he concluded confusedly.

After his speech, the president was pulled across the stage by a Democrat state representative in an embarrassing display, wherein it appeared that he was being directed by a nursing home attendant.

It was the latest in what appears to be an increasingly frequent series of mental lapses—including one in which Biden recently claimed that he planned to build a railroad across the Indian Ocean.

Nonetheless, at 80 years old and with decreasing competence, the president remains firmly committed to running again in 2024.

While in California, Biden and his administration made several other stops, including the Los Gatos, California home of Microsoft’s Chief Technology Officer, Kevin Scott, where Biden affirmed his desire to rule once more in 2024 at a bigwig fundraiser.

“I am confident about this election because of the people I’m standing for,” Biden said at the event, which was co-hosted by Reid Hoffman, the co-founder of LinkedIn and board member at Microsoft.

“I’m confident because I think there is a sense of wanting to finish the job,” he added.

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