What if it was Jill Biden who ordered the withdrawal?
Oct 1, 2021 21:55:54 GMT -5
Post by bloodbought on Oct 1, 2021 21:55:54 GMT -5
October 1, 2021
What if it was Jill Biden who ordered the calamitous withdrawal from Afghanistan?
By Patricia McCarthy
Many Biden watchers have long observed Jill Biden’s grasping obsession with becoming the First Lady. Throughout the campaign as Joe Biden’s failing mental abilities became more and more obvious, did she love him enough to end it? Oh no, not Jill. She continued on with her elder abuse.
One explanation may be her long fascination with Edith Wilson. She admired and apparently coveted the role that Mrs. Wilson filled after President Woodrow had a stroke in October 1919. Edith Wilson hid the seriousness of her husband’s condition and took over the job of running the country until the end of his term in March 1921. While Edith claimed only to be a “steward” of her husband’s presidency and that she took over with the full approval of his doctors, in truth she was quite a bit more controlling than she said. Consider this passage from the Edith Wilson Wikipedia page:
“Edith took her role very seriously, even successfully pushing for the removal of Secretary of State Robert Lansing after he conducted a series of Cabinet meetings without the President (or Edith herself) present. She also refused to allow the British ambassador, Edward Grey, an opportunity to present his credentials to the president unless Grey dismissed an aide who was known to have made demeaning comments about her. She assisted President Wilson in filling out paperwork, and would often add new notes or suggestions. She was made privy to classified information, and was entrusted with the responsibility of encoding and decoding encrypted messages.”
Woodrow Wilson had his first stroke at age 39 in 1895 which left him with weakness in his right arm and hand. He had several more minor strokes but recovered, though it took a year before he was able to use his hand to write. In 1912 he suffered from several more Transient Ischemic Attacks (TIAs). A month after his inauguration he experienced yet another neurological episode which left his left arm and hand weakened. His brain was being damaged by cerebral vascular disease. He continued to suffer from painful headaches and high blood pressure. This was all hidden from the public who elected him to a second term in 1916.
Perhaps this medical history explains Wilson’s overt racism, a form of mental illness. Edward Weinstein, a professor of neurology wrote a book about Wilson: Woodrow Wilson: A Medical and Psychological Biography. He noted Wilson’s increased paranoid and suspicious nature; after the strokes, he became more secretive, more egocentric. Sound familiar?
Continued at link
What if it was Jill Biden who ordered the calamitous withdrawal from Afghanistan?
By Patricia McCarthy
Many Biden watchers have long observed Jill Biden’s grasping obsession with becoming the First Lady. Throughout the campaign as Joe Biden’s failing mental abilities became more and more obvious, did she love him enough to end it? Oh no, not Jill. She continued on with her elder abuse.
One explanation may be her long fascination with Edith Wilson. She admired and apparently coveted the role that Mrs. Wilson filled after President Woodrow had a stroke in October 1919. Edith Wilson hid the seriousness of her husband’s condition and took over the job of running the country until the end of his term in March 1921. While Edith claimed only to be a “steward” of her husband’s presidency and that she took over with the full approval of his doctors, in truth she was quite a bit more controlling than she said. Consider this passage from the Edith Wilson Wikipedia page:
“Edith took her role very seriously, even successfully pushing for the removal of Secretary of State Robert Lansing after he conducted a series of Cabinet meetings without the President (or Edith herself) present. She also refused to allow the British ambassador, Edward Grey, an opportunity to present his credentials to the president unless Grey dismissed an aide who was known to have made demeaning comments about her. She assisted President Wilson in filling out paperwork, and would often add new notes or suggestions. She was made privy to classified information, and was entrusted with the responsibility of encoding and decoding encrypted messages.”
Woodrow Wilson had his first stroke at age 39 in 1895 which left him with weakness in his right arm and hand. He had several more minor strokes but recovered, though it took a year before he was able to use his hand to write. In 1912 he suffered from several more Transient Ischemic Attacks (TIAs). A month after his inauguration he experienced yet another neurological episode which left his left arm and hand weakened. His brain was being damaged by cerebral vascular disease. He continued to suffer from painful headaches and high blood pressure. This was all hidden from the public who elected him to a second term in 1916.
Perhaps this medical history explains Wilson’s overt racism, a form of mental illness. Edward Weinstein, a professor of neurology wrote a book about Wilson: Woodrow Wilson: A Medical and Psychological Biography. He noted Wilson’s increased paranoid and suspicious nature; after the strokes, he became more secretive, more egocentric. Sound familiar?
Continued at link