By Stephen Macaulay
‘Talking with an older person about their driving is often difficult. Most of us delay that talk until the person’s driving has become what we believe to be dangerous. At that point, conversations can be tense and awkward for everyone involved.” — National Highway Traffic Safety Administration
“Drivers aged 70+ have higher crash death rates per 1,000 crashes than middle-aged drivers (aged 35-54).” — Centers for Disease Control
Ask yourself this: Would you have gotten into a car being driven by Joe Biden last night?
Would you have entrusted your loved ones to him behind the wheel?
At some point you must tell mom or dad, grandma or grandpa that they just can’t be behind the wheel.
They may be sharp as a tack at Wordle or other mentally focused tasks.
We accept that they probably aren’t going to be so good at pickleball.
But when it comes to being president of the United States, things are happening at such a pace, with such an intensity, that there isn’t that ability to concentrate to figure out a five-letter word. And because there is the plethora of incidents, one needs to be robust and healthy.
“Oh, but he had a cold.”
It is unnerving to hear people like Mika Brzezinski holding forth on MSNBC about what a very bad man Donald Trump is and what a very good man Joe Biden is and how Biden has proven that he performs in the clutch.
To stick with the automotive metaphor, I don’t think Joe Biden could operate a clutch -- though he likely learned to drive in a car with a manual transmission -- both in terms of leg strength to engage it and the acuity to know how to move the shifter through the gears.
To the extent that there are the mewling apologists (“Oh, he just had a bad night”) we can expect another Trump presidency.
Sorry: Biden is no longer “the comeback kid.” And time won’t change that.
Is it thought that he is going to get better with age?
Do you think that Mario Andretti is a better driver at 84 than he was at 24?
This is analogous to the situation of when Trump was president and media outlets refused to use the word lie when Trump was, as he did last night, repeatedly lying.
Now there is a ridiculous reticence to simply say, “Biden is too old.”
Yes, he is good man, a moral man, a man who has proven that he was able to get things done during his presidency, whether it was enacting landmark legislation like the Inflation Reduction Act or helping defend democracy in Ukraine.
But like all of us, he does have his flaws, one of which may be the “I alone can fix it” mentality, though in his case it is “I alone can beat him.”
Without going all Sophoclean, we know the consequences of hubris. But in this case, the effect of hubris extends to all of us.
‘Talking with an older person about their driving is often difficult. Most of us delay that talk until the person’s driving has become what we believe to be dangerous.”
It’s dangerous, folks.