Joe Biden Is Not a “Genocidal Maniac”

Authored by plus.thebulwark.com and submitted by whatahap
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Pro-Palestinian demonstrators call for a ceasefire in Gaza during a protest as part of the "People's White House Ceasefire Now Iftar" outside the White House on April 2, 2024 in Washington, D.C. President Joe Biden downsized the traditional Ramadan event at the White House after invitations were declined by several Muslim-American community leaders over the Biden administration's support for Israel's offensive in Gaza. (Photo by Kent Nishimura/Getty Images)

One thing I discovered upon leaving the dark arts of public relations and opposition research for the green pastures of journalism commentary content creation is that even if something seems blazingly obvious to you, it is still important to write about it—because no matter how self-evident a #take may seem, out there among The People there are still those who will need to hear it. Maybe they just want to be reassured that they are correct about something. Or maybe they have been unreliably informed about the subject matter by Chinese social media spyware or a renegade Australian’s primetime cable lineup.

It is in that spirit that I offer today’s entry into our national dialogue, the latest in a series:

Joe Biden is not a genocidal maniac.

To be sure—my on-the-job journalism-career training has also taught me that the pros throw in sentences starting with “to be sure” to cover their bases—clearing Biden of the accusation of genocide will not absolve him of any mistakes of judgment in directing America’s response to a religious and territorial conflict between an actual genocidal terrorist group and an American ally currently led by a scandal-plagued right-wing hardliner.

People of goodwill will continue to have serious disagreements over how President Biden is navigating the Gaza conflict. But that policy debate presupposes some facts about him that are apparently in dispute. Specifically whether or not he is itching for a genocide.

Being non-genocidal and non-maniacal are not particularly high bars to clear for the presidency. But they are particularly important this year, seeing as at least with regards to the mania, it is a high enough bar to make Biden the far, far better of the two contenders for the presidency. As such, it is important that those who think he may have genocidal tendencies have access to a clear rebuttal.

By way of background, the charge that the president is a genocidal maniac has emanated from the progressive left, mostly the TikTok youth. That exact phrase—“genocidal maniac”—arose in the debate about a recent Atlantic article by Theo Baker, a high-achieving college sophomore who was reporting on his experience with antisemitism and anti-Bidenism on Stanford’s campus. Baker opens his piece with this:

One of the section leaders for my computer-science class, Hamza El Boudali, believes that President Joe Biden should be killed. “I’m not calling for a civilian to do it, but I think a military should,” the 23-year-old Stanford University student told a small group of protesters last month. “I’d be happy if Biden was dead.”

El Boudali took issue with the way Baker presented this anecdote—not because he felt that he was misquoted or misrepresented but because he did not concur that wishing death upon President Biden was the extreme position that Baker made it out to be. Here’s his argument:

I would say that comparing the mainstream Democrat currently leading the United States to Hitler and wishing death upon him does make one extreme, yes. But El Boudali is not alone in his view. Many others with big social media followings have echoed similar rhetoric, and the nickname “Genocide Joe” has proliferated on social media.

The use of the “Genocide Joe” nickname reveals a double misunderstanding: The people who use it get Joe Biden wrong and get genocide wrong.

The most obvious evidence that Joe Biden is not a genocidal maniac is the fact that so many people feel comfortable calling him one on social media.

This is a bit reductive of course. But fundamentally speaking, people who live in countries run by genocidal maniacs tend to be scared to express that feeling for fear that the leader’s rage will rain down upon them. That fear is not apparent in Joe Biden’s America because people have no reason to be concerned that he’s going to target them for speaking out, particularly critics on the left. The only folks who have deluded themselves into thinking that Biden might target them unfairly are the Great Patriots who stormed the Capitol on January 6th and mauled police officers in a ham-handed attempt to overthrow the government, as well as the allies who listen to their jailhouse concerts. The problem with that group’s claim of persecution is that the perpetrators are being found guilty not by some government or military tribunal but by juries of their peers.

In addition to protecting freedom of expression at home, there is not any evidence of President Biden’s supposed genocidal mania abroad. Despite the claims of many on the far left and MAGA right, the president has not started any new wars. In fact, he got America out of the decades long-war that both of his immediate predecessors had failed to extricate us from despite a stated desire to do so. (I didn’t like how he extricated us from that war, but that’s beside the point.) In addition, Biden dramatically scaled back the number of drone strikes that those presidents had executed.

So clearly this is not a person with an unquenchable bloodlust or uncontrollable rage that manifests in dealing out death around the world.

As such the claim of his genocidal intent rests on America’s support of Israel’s action in Gaza. So let’s look at that.

For starters, I don’t believe there’s any meaningful sense in which what is happening in Gaza could be described as a genocide. The attacks targeting the Hamas leadership and their sponsors are clearly legitimate; the attacks on Hamas fighters are legitimate; and if Hamas were to surrender tomorrow and release all of Israel’s hostages, the attack on Gaza would stop. This is not how actual genocides work. If Biden, or Israel for that matter, wanted to perpetrate a deliberate genocidal “cleansing” of the people of Gaza they could’ve done so before the terrorist attack and the release of hostages would not have an impact on their actions, and they would not be taking any of the care that Israel has been taking to reduce civilian casualties. And to the extent that Israelis are taking actions against Palestinians outside of Gaza—in the West Bank settlements, where Israeli settlers have reportedly stepped up violence since October 7—Biden has been more explicitly critical than any other president.

None of this is to minimize the horrific deaths of many thousands of innocent Palestinians and the real suffering of hundreds of thousands of more, and none of this is to excuse or endorse the manner in which Benjamin Netanyahu has prosecuted the war. It is fair to question and criticize Israel’s actions, including the recent killing of seven World Central Kitchen workers.

But words have meaning and the word “genocide” is not apt in this situation.

Even if you drop the debate over the term “genocide” and just want to argue more narrowly that the president is to blame for the suffering in Gaza, here’s the thing: It’s not Joe Biden who is spearheading the attack in Gaza. He has repeatedly expressed reservations about the tactics deployed by Israel. Yesterday after what was reportedly a heated phone call with Netanyahu, Israel conceded to Biden’s demands that more humanitarian aid get into Gaza.

Again, ensuring that more aid trucks reach civilians doesn’t sound like the type of demand that would be made by a genocidal maniac.

Maybe Biden should have been doing more to try to curb Israel’s conduct. Again, that’s a fair criticism, and one we will have to grapple with for a long time to come.

But one thing that should not be up for debate is the reckless, irresponsible claim that Joe Biden is a genocidal maniac.

Because as long as some of those who should be in Biden’s camp are being convinced he might be, we are more likely to get an actual Muslim-banning maniac like Donald Trump in the White House next year.

I keep saying it: The key to winning over some of the reluctant anti-Trump Republican politicians this year is pressure from their families. I continue to fantasize about a Democratic National Convention featuring Republican spouses: Laura Bush, Lynne Cheney—and now maybe I can wishcast about Marty Kemp:

Iminurcomputer on April 5th, 2024 at 23:12 UTC »

This is the internet age in play.

There's no middle ground. Everything is the hyperbolized extreme instantly so long as I can connect 2 dots.

themengsk1761 on April 5th, 2024 at 19:10 UTC »

This false equivalency of Biden and Trump in the US media is at least partially a Russian psyops campaign to get Trump reelected and sow domestic division. They did this exact thing in 2016 with Hillary and they are doing it right now. It ignores how Trump literally calls for genocide in Gaza and making the horribly disingenuous impression that Biden wouldn't be any better.

If there are two options, and one is clearly better than the other, is it truly a choice? Sure, stay in November but know that Trump 2 is on you.

mountaintop111 on April 5th, 2024 at 18:27 UTC »

Joe Biden is trying to establish a port so aid can be sent to people in Gaza.

Trump is the actual person pushing for genocide in Palestine. Trump just called on Israel to "finish the problem" in Gaza.