Yeah, I do understand how Cindy McCain could support anybody but Trump, but, somehow, this supposed Republican chooses a hardcore leftist. Also, something is missing
Cindy McCain: A Republican’s reasons for voting Biden
Joe will unite a deeply divided country and bring together all Americans to address and overcome the great challenges we face.
As a proud, lifelong Republican I have done my share of campaigning for our party’s candidates. My decision to endorse Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden was not taken lightly, and I owe it to my fellow Republicans to explain why I’m convinced he is the best choice on this year’s ballot to lead the nation as president of the United States.
One, Joe understands the importance of national defense and has a long and strong record of support for the military. As commander in chief, he will keep the nation strong and ready to meet the array of threats facing America. Moreover, he knows the value of our security alliances in keeping the country safe and prosperous in a dangerous and unpredictable world. As president, he will strengthen America’s vital partnerships to advance U.S. interests and values.
This would be the same Joe who, as Vice President, saw the rise of ISIS under Obama and did pretty much nothing? The one who rewarded an enemy, Iran, who took our naval members hostage (and then the Obama admin punished the Navy members) and talks about death to America, billions and easy access to sell their oil to fund their terrorist activities? The VP who sat by while the Obama admin did nothing as Americans were attacked in Benghazi? And more?
Three, a President Biden will provide the leadership the country demands to beat the COVID-19 pandemic. No one will work harder in bringing the nation together to achieve the mission. Guided by a genuine spirit of bipartisanship, Joe won’t be looking for Democratic ideas or Republican ideas but the country’s best ideas to ensure that our families, businesses, communities and country recover swiftly.
Point out when Joe has worked in a bipartisan manner. Sure didn’t happen while VP.
As a mother, I have watched with alarm at the ballooning debt and deficits, even before COVID-19 demanded drastic fiscal action. As president, Joe will be a leader stimulating strong private sector-led economic growth and job creation to recover from COVID’s ravages and tame titanic debt that imperils the quality of life for our children and future generations.
Obama, with Biden as VP, doubled the debt. Not saying Trump is doing well on this, but, Joe has no leg to stand on.
My husband believed in straight talk and country first. So do I. Joe Biden is the right choice to be president at this pivotal time in the country’s history. He is a patriot who believes passionately in America and the principles and values that make it great. He will be a leader whom all Americans can count on to put country above party, patriotism above partisanship, and national interest ahead of his own. Most important, Joe will unite a deeply divided country and bring together all Americans to address and overcome the great challenges we face.
Have you ever noticed that no one can actually say how Biden will bring the country together, other than some soundbites? What happens when Republican voters object to the Democrats hardcore Modern Socialist agenda? Will he listen to them, or just do like Obama did, and say “I won”? How do you bring a country together when the Party he represents has moved so far “to the left” (it’s actually more to the far right, into the Authoritarian model) that JFK, Truman, and even FDR might not be considered anything by squishy Democrats?
But, hey, if Biden wins, I hope the anti-Trump voters get everything they’ve wished for.
Read: Cindy McCain: Handsy Joe Biden Will Unite The Country Or Something »
As a proud, lifelong Republican I have done my share of campaigning for our party’s candidates. My decision to endorse Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden was not taken lightly, and I owe it to my fellow Republicans to explain why I’m convinced he is the best choice on this year’s ballot to lead the nation as president of the United States.
Greta Thunberg has become so firmly entrenched as an icon — perhaps the icon — of ecological activism that it’s hard to believe it has been only two years since she first went on school strike to draw attention to the climate crisis. In that short time, Thunberg, a 17-year-old Swede, has become a figure of international standing, able to meet with sympathetic world leaders and rattle the unsympathetic. Her compelling clarity about the scale of the crisis and moral indignation at the inadequate political response have been hugely influential in shifting public opinion. An estimated four million people participated in the September 2019 global climate strikes that she helped inspire. “There’s this false image that I’m an angry, depressed teenager,†says Thunberg, whose rapid rise is the subject of “I Am Greta,†a new documentary on Hulu. “But why would I be depressed when I’m trying to do my best to change things?†(snip) (bold is interviewer, not bold is St. Greta, directly from article
What happens on election day will to some degree determine how much more hot and nasty the world’s climate will likely get, experts say.
If Joe Biden wins the election — and I sincerely hope he does — he will face the arduous task of trying to unite our country after four years of divisiveness. A 


