MSM Washington Post: Americans Should ‘Try to Lower Expectations,’ Accept Biden’s Supply Chain Crisis

Dennis Olson

Chief Curmudgeon
_______________
Washington Post: Americans Should ‘Try to Lower Expectations,’ Accept Biden’s Supply Chain Crisis
Supply Chain Backup
ABC 7
In what seems like an attempt to distance President Joe Biden from the supply chain crisis ravaging the country and the globe, the Washington Post — which is owned by Jeff Bezos, one of the richest men in the world — published an op-ed on Monday telling American consumers to “try to lower expectations” moving forward.

“Rather than living constantly on the verge of throwing a fit, and risking taking it out on overwhelmed servers, struggling shop owners or late-arriving delivery people, we’d do ourselves a favor by consciously lowering expectations,” Micheline Maynard wrote for the Post.

Maynard, who repeatedly used language comparing Americans to fussy toddlers, first asserted that Frederick Taylor’s The Principles of Scientific Management never took into account “the havoc a pandemic might do to supply chains.” Following the typically accepted diction of far-left media, Maynard notably credited the disembodied “pandemic” for supply chain woes, rather than properly assigning blame to world governments that shut down economies and caused mass unemployment and disruptions in a largely failed effort to “stop the spread.”

She then argued “Americans’ expectations for speedy service” should be replaced by more “realistic expectations,” before quoting an Atlantic article in which the writer asserts that American shoppers have been “trained to be nightmares.” Notably, The Atlantic is also owned by Steve Jobs’ widow, Laurene Powell Jobs, who funds shady leftist activism around the world.

“The pandemic has shown just how desperately the consumer class clings to the feeling of being served,” Maynard quoted the author, who wrote before the supply chain crisis came to fruition.

Maynard then seemingly mocked Americans for questioning the massive and devastating inflation and supply chain failures that they are witnessing — problems which can significantly damage the lives of average Americans living paycheck to paycheck. Unlike the leftist elites, who can breezily drive their Teslas to the nearest Whole Foods for their vegan, dairy-free, gluten-free, leather-free, cruelty-free goods, supply chain problems and resulting inflation are a tax on everyday Americans. These same Americans, not necessarily plagued by an inability to frivolously shop, are instead troubled by finding toilet paper, filling their cars with gas to get to work, and paying for increasingly costly staples like meat and eggs. Maynard wrote:

Customers’ persistent whine, “Why don’t they just hire more people?,” sounds feeble in this era of the Great Resignation, especially in industries, such as food service, with reputations for being tough places to work. … All I can do is hope for the best. Like everybody else. And keep those expectations reasonable. Eventually the supply chain will get straightened out.

Maynard concluded by arguing that it is the current generation’s turn to grapple with “shortages of some kind” — as if the sufferings of yesteryear can be considered “status quo” and somehow give the world’s current leaders a pass for severe mismanagement. She unwittingly proceeded to compare the supply chain crisis to other examples of failed government leadership as reasons why Americans should except Biden’s current crisis. She finished with this:

American consumers might have been spoiled, but generations of them have also dealt with shortages of some kind — gasoline in the 1970s, food rationing in the 1940s, housing in the 1920s when cities such as Detroit were booming. Now it’s our turn to make adjustments.

In the 1970s, it was the Democrat leadership of former President Jimmy Carter that throttled inflation rates and led to the infamous gas lines. Food rationing in the 1940s was a symptom of World War II — a war which led to the deaths of tens of millions of people worldwide. Detroit, which has endured Democrat leadership since the 1960s, has, according to experts, decreased in home ownership as a result of overtaxation.

Many readers did not react kindly to Maynard’s postulation that supply chain disruptions and the resulting chaos should be accepted as part of “the new normal” — far-left CNN notably wrote in-kind, saying Americans shouldn’t expect to shop like pre-pandemic “before-times.” Experts have warned that the fallout from the supply chain crisis may continue until as late as 2023.

‘“Try to lower your expectations” is becoming the theme of Joe Biden’s America,” former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows replied in a tweet.

“Strong “Afghanistan is Your Fault” vibes. Corporate media really outdoing themselves under the Biden Administration,” tweeted Christina Pushaw, who is press secretary for Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R.

“We live in the greatest country on earth and I will not lower my expectations. They want us to compare America to Venezuela and judge by those standards,” Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO) tweeted.

Rep. Dan Crenshaw (R-TX) sarcastically compared the article’s assertions to something Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin would say.

‘“Don’t rant about bread lines and famine. Try to lower your expectations.” – Stalin, probably,” Crenshaw quipped.

Meanwhile, the Biden administration has struggled to deal with the crisis. Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg convened a meeting on the cargo issue in July, but took two months’ of paternity leave, unannounced, in mid-August and only recently returned, Breitbart News previously reported.

On Tuesday, the backlog of container ships at the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach reached record highs, with 100 ships waiting to enter and unload.

read://https_www.breitbart.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.breitbart.com%2Fpolitics%2F2021%2F10%2F19%2Fwashington-post-americans-should-try-to-lower-expectations-accept-bidens-supply-chain-crisis%2F
 

thompson

Certa Bonum Certamen
From American Exceptionalism to Lower your expectations in such a short time (to me).. :fgr:

t8brCtW.jpg
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
The Biden "administration" is making a terrible mistake here, that's because they are making jokes about treadmills when people are unable to get life-saving medications and school districts are unable to feed children on the school lunch program in some places!

People know this isn't all about the "must-have" toy or a new I-phone, it is also about not being able to get things people really need to live and the lower down the social-economic scale a family is, the worse that can be.

It is really hard to get to work in many rural areas if your car or truck is in the shop for weeks because one small part to repair it is sitting on a container ship off the Port of Long Beach for weeks. People in rural areas just can't "get on their bikes" in Winter or "ride the subway."
 

Catnip

Veteran Member
Washington Post: Americans Should ‘Try to Lower Expectations,’ Accept Biden’s Supply Chain Crisis
Supply Chain Backup
ABC 7
In what seems like an attempt to distance President Joe Biden from the supply chain crisis ravaging the country and the globe, the Washington Post — which is owned by Jeff Bezos, one of the richest men in the world — published an op-ed on Monday telling American consumers to “try to lower expectations” moving forward.

“Rather than living constantly on the verge of throwing a fit, and risking taking it out on overwhelmed servers, struggling shop owners or late-arriving delivery people, we’d do ourselves a favor by consciously lowering expectations,” Micheline Maynard wrote for the Post.

Maynard, who repeatedly used language comparing Americans to fussy toddlers, first asserted that Frederick Taylor’s The Principles of Scientific Management never took into account “the havoc a pandemic might do to supply chains.” Following the typically accepted diction of far-left media, Maynard notably credited the disembodied “pandemic” for supply chain woes, rather than properly assigning blame to world governments that shut down economies and caused mass unemployment and disruptions in a largely failed effort to “stop the spread.”

She then argued “Americans’ expectations for speedy service” should be replaced by more “realistic expectations,” before quoting an Atlantic article in which the writer asserts that American shoppers have been “trained to be nightmares.” Notably, The Atlantic is also owned by Steve Jobs’ widow, Laurene Powell Jobs, who funds shady leftist activism around the world.

“The pandemic has shown just how desperately the consumer class clings to the feeling of being served,” Maynard quoted the author, who wrote before the supply chain crisis came to fruition.

Maynard then seemingly mocked Americans for questioning the massive and devastating inflation and supply chain failures that they are witnessing — problems which can significantly damage the lives of average Americans living paycheck to paycheck. Unlike the leftist elites, who can breezily drive their Teslas to the nearest Whole Foods for their vegan, dairy-free, gluten-free, leather-free, cruelty-free goods, supply chain problems and resulting inflation are a tax on everyday Americans. These same Americans, not necessarily plagued by an inability to frivolously shop, are instead troubled by finding toilet paper, filling their cars with gas to get to work, and paying for increasingly costly staples like meat and eggs. Maynard wrote:

Customers’ persistent whine, “Why don’t they just hire more people?,” sounds feeble in this era of the Great Resignation, especially in industries, such as food service, with reputations for being tough places to work. … All I can do is hope for the best. Like everybody else. And keep those expectations reasonable. Eventually the supply chain will get straightened out.

Maynard concluded by arguing that it is the current generation’s turn to grapple with “shortages of some kind” — as if the sufferings of yesteryear can be considered “status quo” and somehow give the world’s current leaders a pass for severe mismanagement. She unwittingly proceeded to compare the supply chain crisis to other examples of failed government leadership as reasons why Americans should except Biden’s current crisis. She finished with this:

American consumers might have been spoiled, but generations of them have also dealt with shortages of some kind — gasoline in the 1970s, food rationing in the 1940s, housing in the 1920s when cities such as Detroit were booming. Now it’s our turn to make adjustments.

In the 1970s, it was the Democrat leadership of former President Jimmy Carter that throttled inflation rates and led to the infamous gas lines. Food rationing in the 1940s was a symptom of World War II — a war which led to the deaths of tens of millions of people worldwide. Detroit, which has endured Democrat leadership since the 1960s, has, according to experts, decreased in home ownership as a result of overtaxation.

Many readers did not react kindly to Maynard’s postulation that supply chain disruptions and the resulting chaos should be accepted as part of “the new normal” — far-left CNN notably wrote in-kind, saying Americans shouldn’t expect to shop like pre-pandemic “before-times.” Experts have warned that the fallout from the supply chain crisis may continue until as late as 2023.

‘“Try to lower your expectations” is becoming the theme of Joe Biden’s America,” former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows replied in a tweet.

“Strong “Afghanistan is Your Fault” vibes. Corporate media really outdoing themselves under the Biden Administration,” tweeted Christina Pushaw, who is press secretary for Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R.

“We live in the greatest country on earth and I will not lower my expectations. They want us to compare America to Venezuela and judge by those standards,” Rep. Lauren Boebert (R-CO) tweeted.

Rep. Dan Crenshaw (R-TX) sarcastically compared the article’s assertions to something Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin would say.

‘“Don’t rant about bread lines and famine. Try to lower your expectations.” – Stalin, probably,” Crenshaw quipped.

Meanwhile, the Biden administration has struggled to deal with the crisis. Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg convened a meeting on the cargo issue in July, but took two months’ of paternity leave, unannounced, in mid-August and only recently returned, Breitbart News previously reported.

On Tuesday, the backlog of container ships at the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach reached record highs, with 100 ships waiting to enter and unload.

read://https_www.breitbart.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.breitbart.com%2Fpolitics%2F2021%2F10%2F19%2Fwashington-post-americans-should-try-to-lower-expectations-accept-bidens-supply-chain-crisis%2F
Tucker Carlson did an excellent piece on "Lower Your Expectations" on his show last night. He knows how to get a point across with no fuss, no muss. Hits the bullseye every time.
 

dstraito

TB Fanatic
Get used to paying more and getting less
Get used to not being able to get at all
Get used to being told what to.do
Get read to hating who you are, the gender you were.born as, the country that used to be yours

Get read for Make America last


How about NO
 

Limner

Deceased
"Lower your expectations"


USSR: Moscow 1989 Grocery Store
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jWTGsUyv8IE

4:20 run time
Folks in Russia would buy or rent little patches of land with simple houses called "dachas" for the summer, growing big gardens and canning and preserving the produce for the long Russian winters. The extra was sold in unofficial markets, and for the most part the government turned a blind eye. They knew the state farms didn't raise enough to feed everyone. It was better that food came from somewhere, rather than face food riots.
 

223shootersc

Veteran Member
The Post, Bedum and all of the demoncraps can think again on me buying their agenda and propaganda. The Nazis would be the same choice.
 

meezy

I think I can...
Well, I do agree that we should stop blaming the servers, store management / workers, delivery people, etc. It's not *their* fault. So yes, in that way we should lower expectations. In fact, those people are praiseworthy because they're not sitting on the couch collecting government cash. Place the blame where it belongs. *Raise* your expectations for our evil, corrupt, swamp-creature-filled government. And the idiots who voted for them. Not that it'll do any good.
 

Limner

Deceased
IF they could manage to do so! Not everyone could.
Yup. My story came from a veteran mission couple who dove into Russia right after the fall of Communism. They were very frugal, and managed to scrape up the rent every summer. It was the only way o eat a healthy diet every winter.
 

Dennis Olson

Chief Curmudgeon
_______________
A dacha isn’t a little house. It is/was a “country house” for the elites in the USSR. There was nothing small or cheap about them, and it’s for certain that the “proletariat” could never afford one.
 

Sacajawea

Has No Life - Lives on TB
The availability of things isn't widespread, across the board. Not everyone is out of TP at the same time. Universally, however, the price is going up.

Knowing how the gov likes to meddle with things, I'm suspecting this has been engineered to further demoralize as much of the public - while bending them to the idiotic idea that as the Deputy Treasury Sec said - "when everyone is vaxxed, then the supply chain will be fixed". That's magical thinking of a very "special" quality, IMO.

More like, to me, that the "supply chain" issues are a blend of propaganda, truth, and deliberate monkey-wrenching to cover up the fact that the whole global economy is contracting... at the exact same time, the number of people expecting gov to "take care of them" is increasing.
 

Quiet Man

Nothing unreal exists
We've seen video from people on the ground in the LA Port showing plenty of waiting truck drivers and no cranes offloading any ships. Port operators have been told to shut-down the flow. Why? To coerce Americans to comply? To prevent some nefarious plot from unfolding (i.e. bad things in the cargo)? More? D -- All the above?
 

mistaken1

Has No Life - Lives on TB
The Biden "administration" is making a terrible mistake here, that's because they are making jokes about treadmills when people are unable to get life-saving medications and school districts are unable to feed children on the school lunch program in some places!

People know this isn't all about the "must-have" toy or a new I-phone, it is also about not being able to get things people really need to live and the lower down the social-economic scale a family is, the worse that can be.

It is really hard to get to work in many rural areas if your car or truck is in the shop for weeks because one small part to repair it is sitting on a container ship off the Port of Long Beach for weeks. People in rural areas just can't "get on their bikes" in Winter or "ride the subway."

That should teach the rural people not to live rural, they have it coming and deserve all that happens to them .... says the left.
 

Limner

Deceased
A dacha isn’t a little house. It is/was a “country house” for the elites in the USSR. There was nothing small or cheap about them, and it’s for certain that the “proletariat” could never afford one.

Ah!! It WAS a country house. And I suspect the term was a bit of a tounge-in-cheek , used by those less affluent. But it WAS a house in the country.

Like the ultra rich here in the US built lavish "lake cottages" or huge "mountain cabins" out west. The terms were rather loosely applied.
 

Sid Vicious

Veteran Member
A dacha isn’t a little house. It is/was a “country house” for the elites in the USSR. There was nothing small or cheap about them, and it’s for certain that the “proletariat” could never afford one.

Plenty of dachas we're and are owned by the peasants. Even today there are millions of dachas that have been passed down through the families across Russia and eastern Europe.
 

Melodi

Disaster Cat
Plenty of dachas we're and are owned by the peasants. Even today there are millions of dachas that have been passed down through the families across Russia and eastern Europe.
In Sweden, they are called Sommor (Summer) Houses and severed the same purpose though today, preppers and yuppies both, tend to buy up the really nice ones and weatherize them to live in year-round.

Originally (like the Russian Dacus) they could be anything from a palatial mansion of the elites to the tiny cabin-like hut that a family could barely fit into. Most were somewhat in the middle with the land and/or water (fishing) area considered more important than the house, at least in the past.

Until the 1970s, most of the women and children would live in these all Summer, and the men would join them for the traditional five weeks vacation during the worst heat of the Summer when businesses just closed down.

Food was grown and put up for Winter (also hunted and fished), basically the same system used in Russia.
 

jward

passin' thru
Don't forget Cuba's example of growing food for themselves, either. They did an amazing job- though they had the gov't behind them, it still says a lot about the people themselves imo.

Anyway- I'm so old I remember one of the main complaints after DJT speeches was how "dark" and "uninspiring" they were, how they "didn't lift us up" and speak to our better hopeful natures blah-puke-blah. Isn't the leaders' job to inspire us, encourage us, paint pictures of how we're going to overcome adversity because we're the best of the best and the Good Lord himself blesses us in our efforts?
 

Dozdoats

On TB every waking moment
If I could get the content of the OP by the sackfull, I could use it for fertilizer.

The only expectations that need lowering are those of the self-appointed "elite." And their carefully created and coddled useless eaters. Listening to Clif High talk about population reduction last night, I couldn't help thinking we might do better with the 20% left if they are the ones who actually make things work.

Before you ask - (4) Prophecy - Welcome to the Wujo or The Thread for All Things Web Bots and Cliff High | Page 30 | Timebomb 2000
 
Last edited:
Top