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Bidens Health News Highlights have to face the age problem

Do you remember when the rent was too high?

Today America's politicians are too old.

President Joe Biden's largest (unintentional) legacy could be to get America's political system to face the problem.

When news on Sundays broke through news about bidens diagnosis of prostate cancer with metastasis to the bone, there were many sympathy expressions from both sides of the gang.

“Melania and I are sad about the latest medical diagnosis by Joe Biden.

The democratic governor of Pennsylvania, Josh Shapiro – a potential presidential candidate from 2028 – published support to support Twitter/X.

“Lori and I pray for President Biden, Dr. Jill Biden and their whole family. May they find strength and hope and are lifted by the thoughts and prayers of the Americans across the country who are thinking of them.”

While many Americans were sympathetic, none of them were surprised. An 82-year-old man with prostate cancer is about as shocking as a 21-year-old with a hangover after the frat party. It is an age -related result that we expected.

The constitution deals with the questions of excessive young people. The requirement that a candidate must be at least 35 years old to serve as president can be found in Article II, Section 1. The age requirements for the US house (25) and the Senate (30) have been found in Article I.

Our system recognizes that a candidate can be too young for a high public office. Why not be too old?

The embarrassing details about bidens that fail mental sharpness during the office provoked a flood of fingering. Some accuse reporters of defending the obvious frailty of bidges instead of reporting the hard facts. Jake Tapper by CNN accused Biden critics that he, for example, mocked bidies to avoid control, argue.

Others accuse the elected Democrats such as Senator Chuck Schumer, who also announced after Biden's catastrophic debate performance that the voters were informed that the President was doing well and earned for four years.

He wasn't the only one. Despite the undeniable decline in the debate, Shapiro also defended them publicly. Although it was untrue, Shapiro insisted that bidges were “the job” of another four years as managing director. And he asked his party to gather behind the most incapable incumbent.

Politico reports that Shapiro is trying to rewrite the story.

“I can tell you that during his campaign I was very open to the president about the defects,” he told politico last week. “I was very honest with him in a private environment.”

However, the news side reports that Shapiro – even after Biden broke off the presidential race – had no concerns about bidges intellectual sharpness.

“Not at all, and I was regularly in contact with the president.”

Still others say that Democrats like Schumer and Shapiro did what they had as a party loyalist.

Why waste time to blame? Wouldn't it be smarter to prevent it from happening again? And this is one of these rare political problems with a simple and obvious solution: don't let old people serve as president.

Change the constitution is never easy (this is a feature, no mistake), but it can be done. And in the current climate it is easy to see, as a change application reads: “Nobody can serve after her 80th birthday in the elected German office” by the congress and further to the states.

This change would be supported by some of the biggest names of American politics – Rep. Nancy Pelosi (85), Senator Mitch McConnell (83), Rep. Jim Clyburn (84) and maybe even Trump, who is a youth 78 – whether they like it or not – to like it or not.

(Don't worry, Trump voters, the change would only come into force after leaving the office.)

Democrats' decision to ignore bidges and strengthen it in 2024 looked risky at the time. In retrospect, it is loathsome and self -destructive. And don't forget that his brother Frank, the correspondent of the White House of CBS News, Nancy Cordes, finally broke out: “I will have him back to enjoy the time we still have.”

If it turns out how many believe that bids and his family knew that he had cancer and that he still decided, this would tighten the disaster of the Democrats. The case also adds that this decision should be removed from the hands of very older candidates.

There is an argument that the voters will solve this problem. In Illinois, 80-year-old Senator Dick Durbin, the second highest Democrat, announced that he will not seek re-election next year. A few weeks earlier, 78-year-old Senator Jeanne Shaheen from New Hampshire did the same democrat in the committee for armed forces.

Would you have made the same decisions if the bidding example did not exist in front of the voters in front and in the middle?

Another way for voters to fix this problem is to set the constitution. Joe Biden's example is every reason.

Michael Graham is the managing editor at Insidesources.com.

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