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New Book Reveals Barack Was Frequently Frustrated by Joe Biden – ‘Shoot. Me. Now.’

The Daily Mail published excerpts Tuesday from an upcoming book which claims that former President Barack Obama was frequently frustrated with Joe Biden, first as a Democrat senate colleague and then as his vice president.

“Shoot. Me. Now,” Obama reportedly wrote in a note to one of his aides as Biden delivered long, rambling remarks during a 2005 senate confirmation hearing for then-President George W. Bush’s choice for Secretary of State, Condoleezza Rice.

Details of the Obama/Biden relationship are featured in the book The Long Alliance: The Imperfect Union of Joe Biden and Barack Obama by New York magazine journalist Gabriel Debenedetti. The book reveals the complex layers between the aging Democrat dinosaur, who viewed Obama as aloof and condescending, while the latter viewed Biden as a rambling windbag.

“Joe Biden is a decent guy but man, that guy can just talk and talk. It’s an incredible thing to see,” Obama reportedly told his advisor David Axelrod.

One story featured in the book recounts a time Biden offered to get Obama dinner when he first joined the Senate, saying they could go to a place he knew that was “nothing fancy.”

“We can go to a nice place, I can afford it,” Obama replied, prompting Biden to view the young senator as arrogant and presumptuous.

As Obama’s VP, Biden was suspicious and defensive, repeatedly standing up for his views when they differed from the president’s. “I’m not going to grovel to this guy. My manhood is not negotiable,” he said, according to the book.

The book also reports that Obama was worried by Biden’s 2020 run for president, believing he was “tired” and that it would be “unthinkably painful” for the aging, gaffe-prone, rambling candidate to campaign. He wasn’t wrong.

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Barack Hussein Obama

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Obama on America’s “Fever of Racism”

In a November 2020 interview, National Public Radio host Michel Martin asked Obama to speak about the “fever of racism” that allegedly plagued the United States. “That fever, as you said, that’s been a defining feature of a lot of our life,” Obama replied, adding that many American racists had resented his presidency simply because he was the first black man to hold that office:

“I think that what did happen during my presidency was yes, a backlash among some people who felt that somehow, I symbolized the possibility that they or their group were losing status not because of anything I did, but just by virtue of the fact that I didn’t look like all the other presidents previously…. It would surprise me if you didn’t have a big cross-section of the country that was still carrying around a bunch of baggage and still a little disturbed by the advances that African Americans had made. It would surprise me if changing demographics and the growing Latino population didn’t scare a certain segment of this population, just because I know enough about American history to know that that’s always been a fault line in American history.”


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