President Biden Gives Forgetful Farewell Speech to the Nation

President Biden attempted to rewrite history in an address to the nation with just days left in office.

NEWS

1/16/20253 min read

President Biden addressed the nation last night to bid farewell and reshape history. He never mentioned skyrocketing inflation or immigration—two key factors that contributed to his and Kamala Harris's loss in the 2024 election.

Instead, Biden claimed to have created 17 million new jobs. However, economists point out that fewer native-born Americans are working today than in 2019. Over 12 million of those "new jobs" are simply people returning to work after the pandemic lockdowns and vaccine mandates. More troubling still, Bureau of Labor statistics show that nearly all of the jobs created under Bidenomics went to foreign-born workers, including illegal migrants (Beware fact-checkers who do not provide the context to include the massive drop in labor force participation among native born workers).

Biden also wished the "incoming administration success" while calling on Congress to amend the Constitution to ensure that "no president is immune from crimes that he or she commits while in office." This was a direct rhetorical jab at President Trump, who successfully resisted the legal battles orchestrated by Biden's DOJ—launching four major cases against Trump shortly after he announced his 2024 re-election bid.

The Only Memorable Takeaway: 'Beware the Tech-Industrial Oligarchs'

Biden warned the nation about the growing influence of a "tech-industrial complex" that he believes is attempting to seize control of the country.

"In my farewell address tonight, I want to warn the country about a dangerous concentration of power in the hands of a very few ultra-wealthy people and the dangerous consequences if their abuse of power is left unchecked," Biden said. "Today, an oligarchy is taking shape in America, a concentration of extreme wealth, power, and influence that literally threatens our entire democracy, our basic rights and freedoms, and a fair shot for everyone to get ahead."

The problem for President Biden is that he recently awarded the Medal of Freedom to Alex Soros, the son of one of the wealthiest and most politically active oligarchs in the world. Biden's 2020 campaign was funded with hundreds of millions of dollars from tech giants like Mark Zuckerberg, Jeff Bezos, Reid Hoffman, and others—exactly the same oligarchs he now casts as a threat to American democracy.

What makes Biden's alarmism particularly ironic is that the main tech oligarch he was subtly referring to—Elon Musk—voted for Biden in 2020. As Musk himself stated, "I didn’t vote for Trump. I actually voted for Biden. I’m not saying I’m a huge fan of Biden, since that would be inaccurate."

In summary, President Biden’s farewell address was an attempt to rewrite the narrative of his administration’s failures. His ominous warning about tech oligarchs and dark money comes across as little more than a sense of betrayal. The very people he now urges us to fear were the ones who funded and supported his 2020 campaign. After four years of his policies, most Americans—from the working class to tech oligarchs—want nothing to do with Biden’s agenda.

As Karl Rove of Fox News put it recently: Most Americans view President Biden in the rearview mirror and plan to keep it that way.

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