Biden’s radicalism on immigration
One of Joe Biden’s first priorities as president will be to risk stoking a new migrant crisis.
One of Joe Biden’s first priorities as president will be to risk stoking a new migrant crisis.
Finally, Jan. 20 will be upon us — after months of sulking, Donald Trump will be skulking out of the White House, having exhausted every tacky legal artifice that he and his fellow nutcase Rudy Giuliani have thrown into the path of the reality that Trump was blown out in the election.
It already seems clear that the first major political and culture eruption of the Biden years will be a roiling populist backlash against the next round of COVID restrictions.
In my hometown of Little Rock, Arkansas, back in the late 1950s they closed the public schools down rather than desegregate. But since high-school sports were as big as in Texas, they kept the football season going. The saying around town that year was that the teams were “Undefeated, Untied and Uneducated.”
Black Lives Matter came up with the single most effective political slogan of the year.