Bill Maher blasts Biden's speechwriter for trying to blame ALL 254,000 COVID deaths on Trump - and says it's actually the fault of the US for being an 'incompetent' country
Bill Maher suggested the United States' staggering number of coronavirus deaths were because its an 'incompetent country' while pushing back against a guest's claim that President Donald Trump was to blame.
'It wasn't just Trump that led to those deaths,' Maher said amid a panel discussion on this year's final episode of HBO's Real Time With Bill Maher.
During the segment, Maher sparred with Jon Meacham, a speechwriter for President-elect Joe Biden, former MSNBC contributor and presidential historian.
While discussing the ill-fated Rudy Giuliani press conference this Thursday, which discussed unfounded claims of voter fraud launched by the Trump administration, Meacham compared it to 'if the Marx Brothers did a coup.'
'It's easy, because it seems so incompetent, to make fun of it, but this is an administration whose fundamental incompetence has led to the deaths of hundreds of thousands of people and the most significant weakening of institutions that, however flawed, have produced, by and large, a more perfect union.
'So it's easy to be amused by Rudy, but we're just lucky that our authoritarians are so incompetent.'

This year's final episode of HBO's Real Time with Bill Maher aired on Friday with Jon Meacham (left), a speechwriter for President-elect Joe Biden, as a panel guest


Jon Meacham (left) argued that the US's coronavirus death toll was attributed solely to the Trump adminisatation, but Bill Maher (right) declared fault also fell on citizens and others
Maher then interjected to argue that the United States' coronavirus-related deaths were a result of widespread blundering - not simply President Trump.
'Everybody's incompetent. It wasn't just Trump that led to those deaths,' said Maher. 'He certainly did his part, but we're an incompetent country.'
'That's true,' Meacham, 51, agreed.
'And an unhealthy one,' Maher said.
Maher later pushed back against a claim from a second panelist, Alex Wagner, who said that conservatives have turned a blind eye to the ongoing coronavirus pandemic because of Trump.
'We have a battle right now against an unseen enemy, and one side has no interest in fighting it for completely partisan reasons,' Wagner, a contributing writer for The Atlantic and co-host of Showtimes 'The Circus,' said.
'I mean that is a cravenness – the inability, the inaction, the dismissal of COVID-19 as a deadly virus tells you the ends to which the Republican Party and Donald Trump will go to preserve partisan worldview.
'I mean there’s blame to go around everywhere,' Maher countered. 'There’s blindness on some parts everywhere.'

Bill Maher: 'Everybody's incompetent. It wasn't just Trump that led to those deaths. He certainly did his part, but we're an incompetent country'

Pfizer Inc will apply for emergency use authorization of its COVID-19 vaccine with the Food and Drug Administration today - a major step toward providing protection against the coronavirus for pandemic-weary Americans

Healthcare workers prepare specimen collection tubes at a coronavirus disease (COVID-19) drive-thru testing location in Houston, Texas, on November 20
The United States has recorded more than 11.9 million cases and a growing death toll of 254,451.
Most recently, the president's oldest son, Don Jr., revealed he tested positive for coronavirus before taking a trip with his son.
The United States' struggle with the virus could begin to ease as soon as December.
On Friday, Pfizer Inc. announced it will apply for emergency use authorization of its COVID-19 vaccine with the Food and Drug Administration.
The application to the FDA comes just days after Pfizer and German partner BioNTech SE reported final trial results that showed the vaccine was 95 percent effective in preventing COVID-19 with no major safety concerns.
The companies expect the FDA to grant emergency use by mid-December and said they will begin shipping doses almost immediately.
Officials have said they hope to have about 20 million of Pfizer's vaccine doses, which is enough to vaccinate 10 million Americans, by the end of the year.
Also during Real Time With Bill Maher, the host and guests also discussed Georgia's embattled Senate runoff races scheduled for January 5.
GOP incumbents Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue will face off against challengers Raphael Warnock and Jon Ossoff, respectively.
Meacham argued that Democratic candidates Warnock and Ossof were 'one more shot' for state voters to 'get this right.'

Jon Meacham (pictured): 'The voters of Georgia have one more shot to get this right by sending these Democrats to the Senate'
'This is an existential moment in American democratic - lowercase 'd' - history,' he told Maher.
'And we have one more shot at this. The voters of Georgia have one more shot to get this right by sending these Democrats to the Senate.'
This month, it was revealed that Meacham was dismissed as a paid contributor on MSNBC after he did not disclose the extent of his ties to the Biden campaign.
The New York Times reported that Meacham was 'playing a larger role than was previously known' to MSNBC executives.
Meacham appeared on several networks during their coverage of the 2020 election. He commented on Biden's victory speech during appearances, but did not tell MSNBC that he had a hand in crafting the addresses.
While appearing on MSNBC's coverage, anchor Brian Williams asked him: 'I’m not the historian that you are, and I don’t have the Pulitzer that you do, but do you concur that is the way we are used to hearing from our presidents?'
'Absolutely,' Meacham answered at the time.

Prior to his ousting at MSNBC, Meacham won a Pulitzer Prize in 2009 for his book, 'American Lion: Andrew Jackson in the White House.'
In Biden's Wilmington, Delaware, address, he mentioned his mission 'to rebuild the soul of America, to rebuild the backbone of this nation, the middle class and to make America respected around the world again.'
It appeared to echo the name of Meacham's 2018 book, The Soul of America: The Battle for Our Better Angels, which has reportedly served as a reference for Biden.
Biden has reportedly reached out to Meacham in the past to discuss passages he liked.
The Times reports that Meacham has written draft speeches and offered edits on some of Biden's larger speeches, including his address at Gettysburg in October.
Meacham, who has voted both Democratic and GOP presidents, is not expected to join the Biden-Harris administration.
Before his ousting, Meacham is a New York Times Best-selling author and recipient of a Pulitzer Prize.
He won the Pulitzer Prize for Biography or Autobiography in 2009 for his book, 'American Lion: Andrew Jackson in the White House.'
Incompetent for letting the congress and various state officials ignore the Constitution and pass laws that infringe on our freedoms?
ReplyDeleteIs that what yo mean Bill?