Opinion | The Waning Beatification of President Biden | Common Dreams

After the presidential elections and as his presidency unceremoniously fades, 
serious talk about Joe’s legacy has fallen sloppy dead (channeling Grace Slick) 
and been replaced by disorganized clamor over Vice President Kamala Harris’ 
decisive defeat.

Still, it remains odd that Biden’s decision to pass the electoral torch to his 
vice president was ever cast as a salvific moment in modern American politics. 
Long before the election results, the legacy pillow talk showed an embarrassing 
blind spot in the internal discourse of the country.

In this moment of horrific violence, veils have been lifted, and, as a result, 
what America and Americans think about the Middle East has lost its luster 
internationally.

As the Biden redemption arc threaded through the media logic of the mainstream 
public sphere, global discourses about Biden’s legacy had pursued a different 
path. The Biden-Harris-Blinken team, for the most part, has been viewed in much 
of the world for presiding over what scholars, jurists, courts, members of 
Congress, and respected human rights groups have called or made adjacent 
references to being genocide or genocidal violence in Gaza—an “Industrial scale 
slaughterhouse.”

Despite the populist narratology justifying the American diplomatic shield for 
Israeli bellicosity and an unending supply of war kits, the legacy curation of 
the Biden administration in the greater elsewhere of our world will focus on a 
succession of war crimes and strategic privations in Gaza sponsored by the 
United States, executed by the Israelis, and underwritten by the epistemic 
violence of dehumanizing a resolute people who have been killed, displaced, 
occupied, and politically and economically hamstrung for more than 75 years, if 
not a century, as historian Rashid Khalidi argues.

The “October 7” signifier, in other words, received little purchase beyond 
Western milieus.

As for real legacy stakes, they exist and are high. The unchecked violence in 
Gaza has been described as the “graveyard of liberal values” and “Western 
ideals.” And “many of the most important principles of humanitarian law,” have 
also been laid to rest without the dignity of any exequies.

As a consequence, the hegemonic influence of American media narratives on a 
global scale has unraveled, with the credibility of major Western news 
organizations tanking and “irreparably damaged.” Even from within, major 
Western outlets face allegations of journalistic malpractice, by staff from CNN 
andBBC, for example, protesting editorial impositions on reporters to take an 
Israel-biased slant in their Gaza coverage.

Such failings have managed to quicken concepts typically locked in academia. 
For example, New York University professor Miranda Fricker’s theoretical works 
on “epistemic injustice” hold more active meaning now. The structures of 
mediation spotlight one perspective, while entire groups are denied credibility 
as knowers of their own contexts and denied meaningful space in the media 
ecology.

Likewise, Northwestern’s José Medina’s “epistemic responsibility” is now heard 
as a call for the dismantling of media structures that amplify one-sided 
narratives while deliberately silencing others. This unchecked dynamic aligns 
with what I term the “epistemology of repetition,” where context-stripped 
narratives gain the veneer of truth for no higher reason than sheer repetition, 
with any attempt at rigor and fact-checking labeled as antisemitic.

At stake is the fundamental right of Palestinians to be recognized as 
legitimate sources of their own lived experiences and claims. Denying these 
rights or covering them with performative both-side-ism silences their 
histories, aspirations, and love for their land—a love expressed through 
resistance to occupation and a firm commitment to family, education, and 
spirituality. Such epistemic violence not only mirrors physical destruction but 
enables it by erasing the cultural and historical claims of those affected and 
makes up the narrative scaffolding that typecast Palestinians as forever 
aggressors and Israelis as perpetual victims, as anthropologist Julie Peteet 
writes.

>From my perch as a media and religious studies academic and a Chicago native 
>teaching in the Middle East for nearly 17 years, I have little hope that 
>American journalism will embrace greater epistemic responsibility toward 
>Palestine. Answering this call would require radical transformations of 
>journalistic premises and praxis. This epistemic responsibility would be 
>considered nothing less than storytelling apostasy.

In this moment of horrific violence, veils have been lifted, and, as a result, 
what America and Americans think about the Middle East has lost its luster 
internationally. The distributive imbalances of reportage and the suppression 
of meaningful counter-narratives have never been so stark. The corporate media 
giants took a huge gamble with their coverage of Gaza (especially in the early 
months of the violence), but they lost the bet and injured their credibility 
abroad, leaving a damning evidentiary trail of blatant bias in news coverage 
that is “rife with deadly double standards.”

As a result, the American brand has been tarnished, which ultimately is Joe’s 
legacy.



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