Obama-Biden: Failing to Meet Expectations Once Again

Weatherman2020

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Mar 3, 2013
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Right coast, classified
Former Vice President Joe Biden’s campaign has frequently pointed to a 69-page “playbook” that the Obama-Biden administration created for dealing with pandemics, arguing that President Donald Trump had ignored it.

Of the 69 pages, only 27 are the actual “playbook.” The first 13 pages are the table of contents, executive summary, and various title pages. The last 29 pages are appendices. And within the 27 pages of the “playbook” section, only 17 deal with an international outbreak of an infectious disease.

And those 17 pages? A summary of documents that exist elsewhere.

More Obama-Biden word salad.
 
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Former Vice President Joe Biden’s campaign has frequently pointed to a 69-page “playbook” that the Obama-Biden administration created for dealing with pandemics, arguing that President Donald Trump had ignored it.

Of the 69 pages, only 27 are the actual “playbook.” The first 13 pages are the table of contents, executive summary, and various title pages. The last 29 pages are appendices. And within the 27 pages of the “playbook” section, only 17 deal with an international outbreak of an infectious disease.

And those 17 pages? A summary of documents that exist elsewhere.

More Obama-Biden word salad.
I wonder what page....
Donald, make sure the stockpile, depleted during my administration, is replenished
can be found

Leaving a pandemic playbook but not replenishing the stockpile is absurd
 
Former Vice President Joe Biden’s campaign has frequently pointed to a 69-page “playbook” that the Obama-Biden administration created for dealing with pandemics, arguing that President Donald Trump had ignored it.

Of the 69 pages, only 27 are the actual “playbook.” The first 13 pages are the table of contents, executive summary, and various title pages. The last 29 pages are appendices. And within the 27 pages of the “playbook” section, only 17 deal with an international outbreak of an infectious disease.

And those 17 pages? A summary of documents that exist elsewhere.

More Obama-Biden word salad.
How many pages on an international outbreak of an infectious disease “playbook” does Trump have?
Does he even have a playbook?
Does Trump read any details of real importance? Tweets don’t count!
 

The playbook — 40 pages plus appendices — contains step-by-step advice on questions to ask, decisions to make, and which federal agencies are responsible for what. It includes sample documents that officials could use for inter-agency meetings. And it explicitly lists novel coronaviruses as one of the kinds of pathogens that could require a major response.

The color-coded, checklist-style document addresses issues like testing, funding, personal protective equipment, emergency declarations, border control measures, diplomacy, the use of the military, public communication, even mortuary services.

It lays out dozens of key questions to ask at certain stages of the response (“Should there be arrangements for medevac or in-country clinical care advisory for U.S. Persons?” “What is the robustness of contact tracing?” “Is the incident likely to impact housing such that alternative housing needs may become necessary?”) and dozens of key decisions to make (“Determine whether to implement screening and monitoring measures, or other travel measures within the US or globally”; “Prioritization and allocation of resources subject to the Defense Production Act”; “Tailor waste management plans to incident specific conditions”).
 
I saw that. They don’t know how to edit nor do retakes.
/———/ This is bordering on Elder Abuse.
 
I saw that. They don’t know how to edit nor do retakes.
/———/ This is bordering on Elder Abuse.
yes it is,,,
 

The playbook — 40 pages plus appendices — contains step-by-step advice on questions to ask, decisions to make, and which federal agencies are responsible for what. It includes sample documents that officials could use for inter-agency meetings. And it explicitly lists novel coronaviruses as one of the kinds of pathogens that could require a major response.

The color-coded, checklist-style document addresses issues like testing, funding, personal protective equipment, emergency declarations, border control measures, diplomacy, the use of the military, public communication, even mortuary services.

It lays out dozens of key questions to ask at certain stages of the response (“Should there be arrangements for medevac or in-country clinical care advisory for U.S. Persons?” “What is the robustness of contact tracing?” “Is the incident likely to impact housing such that alternative housing needs may become necessary?”) and dozens of key decisions to make (“Determine whether to implement screening and monitoring measures, or other travel measures within the US or globally”; “Prioritization and allocation of resources subject to the Defense Production Act”; “Tailor waste management plans to incident specific conditions”).
It’s 17 pages of references to other documents to use. It offers nothing but to tell you to go elsewhere if you want to know what to do.
 

The playbook — 40 pages plus appendices — contains step-by-step advice on questions to ask, decisions to make, and which federal agencies are responsible for what. It includes sample documents that officials could use for inter-agency meetings. And it explicitly lists novel coronaviruses as one of the kinds of pathogens that could require a major response.

The color-coded, checklist-style document addresses issues like testing, funding, personal protective equipment, emergency declarations, border control measures, diplomacy, the use of the military, public communication, even mortuary services.

It lays out dozens of key questions to ask at certain stages of the response (“Should there be arrangements for medevac or in-country clinical care advisory for U.S. Persons?” “What is the robustness of contact tracing?” “Is the incident likely to impact housing such that alternative housing needs may become necessary?”) and dozens of key decisions to make (“Determine whether to implement screening and monitoring measures, or other travel measures within the US or globally”; “Prioritization and allocation of resources subject to the Defense Production Act”; “Tailor waste management plans to incident specific conditions”).
It’s 17 pages of references to other documents to use. It offers nothing but to tell you to go elsewhere if you want to know what to do.
Which is exactly what you need.
 
Former Vice President Joe Biden’s campaign has frequently pointed to a 69-page “playbook” that the Obama-Biden administration created for dealing with pandemics, arguing that President Donald Trump had ignored it.

Of the 69 pages, only 27 are the actual “playbook.” The first 13 pages are the table of contents, executive summary, and various title pages. The last 29 pages are appendices. And within the 27 pages of the “playbook” section, only 17 deal with an international outbreak of an infectious disease.

And those 17 pages? A summary of documents that exist elsewhere.

More Obama-Biden word salad.
How many pages on an international outbreak of an infectious disease “playbook” does Trump have?
Does he even have a playbook?
Does Trump read any details of real importance? Tweets don’t count!
You’re so bitter. We can understand your frustration. We drink your tears like a fine wine.
Biden’s book is a myth.
 

The playbook — 40 pages plus appendices — contains step-by-step advice on questions to ask, decisions to make, and which federal agencies are responsible for what. It includes sample documents that officials could use for inter-agency meetings. And it explicitly lists novel coronaviruses as one of the kinds of pathogens that could require a major response.

The color-coded, checklist-style document addresses issues like testing, funding, personal protective equipment, emergency declarations, border control measures, diplomacy, the use of the military, public communication, even mortuary services.

It lays out dozens of key questions to ask at certain stages of the response (“Should there be arrangements for medevac or in-country clinical care advisory for U.S. Persons?” “What is the robustness of contact tracing?” “Is the incident likely to impact housing such that alternative housing needs may become necessary?”) and dozens of key decisions to make (“Determine whether to implement screening and monitoring measures, or other travel measures within the US or globally”; “Prioritization and allocation of resources subject to the Defense Production Act”; “Tailor waste management plans to incident specific conditions”).
It’s 17 pages of references to other documents to use. It offers nothing but to tell you to go elsewhere if you want to know what to do.
Which is exactly what you need.
Yeah? What reference in the Book did Team Trump miss?
I’ll wait.
 

The playbook — 40 pages plus appendices — contains step-by-step advice on questions to ask, decisions to make, and which federal agencies are responsible for what. It includes sample documents that officials could use for inter-agency meetings. And it explicitly lists novel coronaviruses as one of the kinds of pathogens that could require a major response.

The color-coded, checklist-style document addresses issues like testing, funding, personal protective equipment, emergency declarations, border control measures, diplomacy, the use of the military, public communication, even mortuary services.

It lays out dozens of key questions to ask at certain stages of the response (“Should there be arrangements for medevac or in-country clinical care advisory for U.S. Persons?” “What is the robustness of contact tracing?” “Is the incident likely to impact housing such that alternative housing needs may become necessary?”) and dozens of key decisions to make (“Determine whether to implement screening and monitoring measures, or other travel measures within the US or globally”; “Prioritization and allocation of resources subject to the Defense Production Act”; “Tailor waste management plans to incident specific conditions”).
It’s 17 pages of references to other documents to use. It offers nothing but to tell you to go elsewhere if you want to know what to do.
Which is exactly what you need.
Yeah? What reference in the Book did Team Trump miss?
I’ll wait.

No idea. What does that have to do with what I said?
 
How about that stupid fucking ventilator scare invented by asshole Cuomo in March.

Not one fucking American died from not having a ventilator, and liberals hate it.

Liberals want a million deaths and the country closed down for 2 years because they are sick fucks.
 
Former Vice President Joe Biden’s campaign has frequently pointed to a 69-page “playbook” that the Obama-Biden administration created for dealing with pandemics, arguing that President Donald Trump had ignored it.

Of the 69 pages, only 27 are the actual “playbook.” The first 13 pages are the table of contents, executive summary, and various title pages. The last 29 pages are appendices. And within the 27 pages of the “playbook” section, only 17 deal with an international outbreak of an infectious disease.

And those 17 pages? A summary of documents that exist elsewhere.

More Obama-Biden word salad.
How many pages on an international outbreak of an infectious disease “playbook” does Trump have?
Does he even have a playbook?
Does Trump read any details of real importance? Tweets don’t count!
You’re so bitter. We can understand your frustration. We drink your tears like a fine wine.
Biden’s book is a myth.
I’m not bitter; just curious if Trump has any curiousity or strategy for health issues.
His business strategies have sucked lately.
Based on your response, you agree that Trump has ZERO pages in his “playbook”?
 

The playbook — 40 pages plus appendices — contains step-by-step advice on questions to ask, decisions to make, and which federal agencies are responsible for what. It includes sample documents that officials could use for inter-agency meetings. And it explicitly lists novel coronaviruses as one of the kinds of pathogens that could require a major response.

The color-coded, checklist-style document addresses issues like testing, funding, personal protective equipment, emergency declarations, border control measures, diplomacy, the use of the military, public communication, even mortuary services.

It lays out dozens of key questions to ask at certain stages of the response (“Should there be arrangements for medevac or in-country clinical care advisory for U.S. Persons?” “What is the robustness of contact tracing?” “Is the incident likely to impact housing such that alternative housing needs may become necessary?”) and dozens of key decisions to make (“Determine whether to implement screening and monitoring measures, or other travel measures within the US or globally”; “Prioritization and allocation of resources subject to the Defense Production Act”; “Tailor waste management plans to incident specific conditions”).
It’s 17 pages of references to other documents to use. It offers nothing but to tell you to go elsewhere if you want to know what to do.
Which is exactly what you need.
Yeah? What reference in the Book did Team Trump miss?
I’ll wait.

No idea. What does that have to do with what I said?
So you failed to address the OP and Biden’s lie then. Got it.
 
Former Vice President Joe Biden’s campaign has frequently pointed to a 69-page “playbook” that the Obama-Biden administration created for dealing with pandemics, arguing that President Donald Trump had ignored it.

Of the 69 pages, only 27 are the actual “playbook.” The first 13 pages are the table of contents, executive summary, and various title pages. The last 29 pages are appendices. And within the 27 pages of the “playbook” section, only 17 deal with an international outbreak of an infectious disease.

And those 17 pages? A summary of documents that exist elsewhere.

More Obama-Biden word salad.
How many pages on an international outbreak of an infectious disease “playbook” does Trump have?
Does he even have a playbook?
Does Trump read any details of real importance? Tweets don’t count!
You’re so bitter. We can understand your frustration. We drink your tears like a fine wine.
Biden’s book is a myth.
I’m not bitter; just curious if Trump has any curiousity or strategy for health issues.
His business strategies have sucked lately.
Based on your response, you agree that Trump has ZERO pages in his “playbook”?
None. He just looks at tea leaves every morning.
 

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