Biden Announces That He’ll Have the Most Diverse Government Ever in History

Diversity is our greatest strength: people who have nothing in common get along much better than people who have things in common.

As everyone knows, when you mix together a bunch of people with vastly different histories, genetics, identities, religions, beliefs and behaviors, they work much better together than a group of people who are similar.

For example, if you have a council of male orthodox Jews, they’re going to have a problem getting anything done. However, if you insert into that council a handful of Moslems, a splattering of transsexuals, and several large, fat black women, all of a sudden productivity shoots up like a rocket.

It’s even known that when you put two people in a room that don’t speak the same language, they actually communicate better than people who speak the same language, because of language diversity.

That’s why they say: diversity is our greatest strength.

Joe Biden’s government is going to be so absolutely efficient that you won’t even be able to believe it.

Axios:

If Joe Biden wins the presidency, his advisers plan to assemble the most diverse Cabinet in U.S. history as he works to fulfill a pledge to build the Democratic Party on a new generation of leaders.

The big picture: Many of Biden’s longtime aides, most of whom are white and male, are expected to follow him to the West Wing. That means the pressure will be on to recruit a Cabinet that’s both younger and more diverse.

Biden confidants tell Axios that several women and people of color are under consideration for top posts at State, Defense, Treasury and Justice.

What we’re hearing: Though Biden’s team is talking about infusing the Democratic Party with fresh faces, many of these potential picks also served under Barack Obama or are well known figures in the party.

Michele Flournoy, who served as an under secretary for Defense in the Obama administration, is widely regarded as the front runner for the Pentagon.

Jeh Johnson, who served as Obama’s second secretary at the Department of Homeland Security, could get the top job at Defense, where he also was general counsel in Obama’s first term.

Sen. Tammy Duckworth, who was considered for Biden’s VP, is also a possibility to head the Pentagon, or the Department of Veterans Affairs.

Former national security adviser Susan Rice, who was also a VP finalist, could be in the mix for State, the Department of Homeland Security and the Pentagon.

Former acting Attorney General Sally Yates, former Georgia House minority leader Stacey Abrams and Sen. Elizabeth Warren are among those who may be considered to head the Justice Department.

While there has been a lot of speculation around Warren leading Treasury, we have heard that’s not the most likely scenario.

But at least three other women’s names are on our radar: Janet Yellen, who under Obama became the first female Fed chair; Lael Brainard, a current Fed Governor who served in the Clinton and Obama administrations; and Sarah Bloom Raskin, who served on the Fed and as deputy Treasury secretary under Obama.

Two Black economists are also in the Treasury mix: TIAA president and CEO Roger Ferguson, and Raphael Bostic, president of the Atlanta Fed. Either also could be in the mix to replace Jerome Powell as Fed Chair when his term is up in the summer of 2021.

Rep. Cedric Richmond, a former leader of the Congressional Black Caucus who signed on as Biden’s campaign co-chairman in May 2019, is another potential cabinet pick.

New Mexico Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham, another VP candidate, could also find herself in the cabinet.

Lisa Cook, an African American economist at Michigan State University, could be the first African American female to head the Council of Economic Advisers.

What they are saying: “Joe Biden is running a campaign that mirrors our diversity as a nation,” said Andrew Bates, a Biden campaign spokesman.

Between the lines: In Biden’s world, friendships are measured in decades, not years. Breaking into Biden’s inner circle has always been a challenge — and that’s been made even more difficult by the pandemic.

I’m shocked that there isn’t even one tranny mentioned here.

I’m not exactly sure how you can claim to be “diverse” without any trannies.

If I were Joe Biden, I would put a tranny, a black gang member and an Islamic terrorist in the same office, and watch the productiveness go absolutely orbital.