After reading a report yesterday of evidence that an autopen had been used on all the official documents collected so far that President Biden had supposedly read, approved and signed during his term as president (except for the one stating he wouldn't be running again which bore his real signature) another piece of the internal puzzle I hold regarding Biden's behavior, cognition and presidency, fell into place. I also found it curious that Obama was the first president to have had his autopen signature put on a bill, with it done while he was vacationing in Hawaii, 4,800 miles away from the Oval Office. What came in handy for him then, also appears to a have come in handy for whomever was handling the responsibility of managing Biden's presidency when Biden was no longer capable of doing so himself. All of which makes the big, bold, confident and unmistakably distinctive signature our current President has been openly placing on his official documents all the more personal, intentional and impressive.
"Harry Truman was the first President to use one in office and Kennedy allegedly made substantial use of the device. However, the White House autopen was a closely guarded secret until Gerald Ford’s administration publicly acknowledged its use. Traditionally, the autopen has been reserved for personal correspondence and documents. More recently though, it has taken on a higher profile role in the White House. Barack Obama was the first American President to use the autopen to sign a bill into law, which he first did on May 26, 2011 when he authorized an extension of the Patriot Act from France. And now he’s used it again to approve the fiscal cliff deal from more than 4,800 miles away and, in so doing, has returned the autopen to the national spotlight." From The Smithsonian
Looks like it's back in the spotlight again. As is President Trump with this visual, repeated over and over again in front of the media.
1 comment:
The issue has now become, how much did Brandon (or, more accurately, his puppet masters) use it, or did he use it exclusively - leading to speculation that the bills he signed into law were signed by someone else and thus null and void.
Enquiring minds want to know.
PS Good catch, Mama. I was about ready to do something on this issue, but things have been a little hectic.
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