Bill Fawell's 3 rules for a revolution:
1. Revolution is a bankruptcy of government.
2. Everyone is invited to the revolution and attendance is mandatory.
3. Fear.
Should we start with the rules or start with the stages?
Stage I began May/June 2015 when Trump and Bernie Sanders decided to run. This opened the door for all of the discontent, whether it was focused and established, but it's more of a feeling with the people. Economies are still good but the people start going to the new faces that offer a new way because deep down inside people feel that there is systemic failure. There's something wrong So they start looking for something wrong. So when Trump and Bernie came out, that started Stage I.
Stage II started when Stage I ended, and that's when Trump was elected. Interesting to note that that leader from Stage II is generally someone from outside of government. And they never dee it through. They always get mooed [moved?] out. And between Trump was elected and when he was sworn in, I watched on C-SPAN with a bunch of economists out east and he said, "It's not the government; it's the people in the government. I'm going to bring in the right people, and we're going to make this government work." And there's no way in hell because the government is in systemic failure, it is bankrupt, and he needed to come in and clean house totally, talking about the swamp. He didn't do that. He left a lot of things going. He left the bankruptcy running, and he paid for it. I said right then . . . my head was in my hands and I said he's going to last one term, and that, in fact, is what happened. Hook or crook, right or wrong, they're going to get rid of that guy.
Stage III, the system still hasn't been resolved but now you've pushed aside the wrong group of revolutionaries and Stage III you have a group of organizations that just want to get rid of the other guy because they have their own idea of what they see as the way out during the revolution out of the bankruptcy. They get together and they support one guy: in this case, it was Joe Biden. And their first order of business was to get rid of him because he's going to fail because he's dealing with the same systemic failure that the Stage II leader, in our case, was Donald Trump, President Trump, he's just gotta go. And when you start looking at the world and events knowing that, okay, Trump is not going to last, he's got 4 years at best. And you look at Joe Biden and you say, hey, Joe's done.
He was done before he even began to be honest with you.
Joe will be gone between the [midterm] election and Christmas [2022].
I agree.
They absolutely have to get rid of him because once Kamala takes over, she has to have a VP, and she has to get that VP confirmed by the House and the Senate before the Republicans takeover in January, so that's not a real big window.