Hunter Biden
My Dad’s Presidency Had Some Obvious ‘F***ing’ Failures!!!
Published
The Shawn Ryan Show
Hunter Biden might have issued a betrayal of Shakespearean proportions in an interview on “The Shawn Ryan Show” Monday … he slammed his dad Joe Biden‘s presidency, calling a part of it an “obvious f***ing failure.”
In the 5-and-a-half-hour sitdown, Hunter closely criticized his father’s job on immigration and the withdrawal of U.S. army forces from Afghanistan.
Hunter stated, “We need vibrant immigration … but we don’t want immigrants that are coming here illegally, draining us of resources, and being prioritized above people that are actual, literal heroes, that are still recovering from 21, 20 years of endless war — or anybody else in our society.”
And whereas he was on the subject of our armed forces … Hunter admitted the best way the U.S. pulled out of Afghanistan in 2021 “was an obvious f***ing failure.”
He stated, “I think that there was a better way to do it, and … I can blame it on his generals, I can blame it on [other] people [for] the way in which we did it, but — and my dad always knew this also, is that the buck stops with him.”
Hunter clarified, “I think leaving Afghanistan was the right thing to do” … earlier than reiterating how a lot he could not stand the way it occurred.
Elsewhere within the interview, Hunter gave his dad credit score for securing an settlement to again a brand new border invoice, which was finally thwarted by the incoming administration.
“Donald Trump stepped in six months earlier than the [2024] election, and advised [Republicans] that he was gonna major each single one in all them that voted for that, as a result of we’re hooked on the issue,” Hunter stated.
Hunter, after all, has had his personal checklist of failures. He’s had public battles with crack dependancy in addition to alcohol … however after Hunter’s 2024 gun trial conviction, Joe stood by him, saying, “I am the President, but I am also a Dad.”
Joe added, “Jill and I love our son, and we are so proud of the man he is today. So many families who have had loved ones battle addiction understand the feeling of pride seeing someone you love come out the other side and be so strong and resilient in recovery.”