June 6, 2026
Jill Biden’s book is the last thing we need right now
Executive Summary
Jill Biden's new memoir, View from the East Wing, has sparked significant controversy, with critics, including CNN's Jake Tapper, accusing her of rewriting history and evading accountability for the Democratic Party's 2024 election loss. Key points of contention include her claims about President Biden's cognitive health and her minimal discussion of critical issues like the Gaza conflict, which many believe undermined her husband's campaign. As scrutiny intensifies, the Biden family faces mounting pressure to address these criticisms and engage more transparently with pressing political challenges. In light of this, leaders should consider the implications of public narratives and accountability in political communications.

Stoic Response
Stoic Field Manual Entry: Navigating Controversy and Accountability
What is Within Our Power
- Our Reactions: We can choose how we respond to criticism and controversy.
- Our Actions: We have the ability to engage in honest dialogue and take responsibility for our actions.
- Our Decisions: We can decide to focus on what is essential and prioritize transparency in communications.
What is Opinion
- Public Perception: The views of critics, like Jake Tapper, reflect subjective interpretations of Jill Biden's memoir.
- Media Narratives: The framing of events and actions can vary widely based on the source, impacting public opinion.
- Political Allegiances: Opinions about accountability and responsibility often align with partisan perspectives, affecting how narratives are constructed.
What Action Virtue Demands
- Embrace Accountability: Acknowledge the shortcomings in communication and take steps to address them.
- Engage Transparently: Foster open discussions about pressing issues, such as the Gaza conflict, rather than sidestepping them.
- Practice Humility: Recognize that no one is above scrutiny, and be willing to learn from criticism to improve future actions.
Conclusion
In the face of controversy, it is essential to focus on what we can control: our responses and actions. By embracing accountability and engaging transparently, we align with Stoic virtues, fostering a more constructive dialogue in public discourse.
Article Rewritten Through Stoic Lens
A Stoic Reflection on Jill Biden’s Memoir: A Test of Virtue
Overview
Jill Biden's memoir, View from the East Wing, has ignited a debate that serves as a crucible for virtue, accountability, and character development. Critics, including CNN's Jake Tapper, have raised concerns about her portrayal of events surrounding the Democratic Party's 2024 election loss. This situation presents an opportunity for reflection on the cardinal virtues: wisdom, courage, justice, and temperance.
Wisdom: The Importance of Truthful Narratives
In her memoir, Jill Biden asserts that if President Biden had shown cognitive impairment, she and her staff would have acted decisively: “But he was nowhere near that point in the summer of 2024.” Such claims invite scrutiny, as Tapper notes that they are “very difficult to believe, if not just downright false.”
This moment underscores the Stoic principle that wisdom involves not only the pursuit of truth but also the courage to confront uncomfortable realities. Acknowledging shortcomings, whether personal or political, is essential for growth. The Biden family's narrative must be rooted in honesty to foster trust and accountability.
Courage: Facing Criticism with Grace
Hunter Biden recently defended his mother against criticism, highlighting the perceived hypocrisy in media focus. He stated, “Jake Tapper is focused on attacking my Mom,” while pointing out various controversies surrounding other political figures. While Hunter's passion for defending his family is understandable, it is crucial to approach criticism with a spirit of humility rather than defensiveness.
Courage in the Stoic sense involves facing challenges without succumbing to anger or outrage. Jill Biden's memoir, while an expression of her perspective, also serves as a test of her ability to accept critique and learn from it. The true measure of courage lies in the willingness to engage with dissenting voices constructively.
Justice: Accountability in Public Life
The scrutiny surrounding Jill Biden's memoir reflects broader themes of accountability within the political arena. The Democratic National Committee's (DNC) autopsy report, which omitted critical issues like President Biden's age and the Gaza conflict, raises questions about the commitment to justice in political narratives. Norman Solomon's observation that the report failed to address significant topics highlights a lack of transparency that undermines public trust.
Justice, as a cardinal virtue, demands that leaders acknowledge their failures and engage with the complexities of their actions. The DNC's reluctance to confront these issues is a missed opportunity for growth and accountability. Acknowledging mistakes is not a sign of weakness but a pathway to rebuilding trust.
Temperance: Finding Balance Amidst Controversy
Jill Biden's memoir also touches on her response to the Gaza conflict, where she spends limited time discussing the issue. Her reflections on leaving a note for her husband, urging him to act, may seem self-congratulatory in light of the gravity of the situation. As Scaachi Koul notes, the brevity of her discussion on Palestine raises questions about her commitment to addressing pressing global issues.
Temperance encourages us to seek balance and moderation in our responses. In political discourse, it is vital to engage with complex issues thoughtfully rather than reducing them to sound bites or superficial gestures. The ability to navigate these challenges with grace and depth is a reflection of character.
Conclusion: Opportunities for Growth
As the Biden family faces increasing scrutiny, this moment serves as a test of virtue for all involved. The controversies surrounding Jill Biden's memoir and the broader political landscape offer opportunities for reflection, growth, and gratitude.
In the Stoic tradition, success should be met with gratitude, not attachment to outcomes. The Bidens can choose to view this moment as a chance to engage more transparently with the public, fostering a narrative rooted in accountability and virtue. In doing so, they may inspire others to embrace the Stoic virtues of wisdom, courage, justice, and temperance in their own lives.
Source Body Text
Forget the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC) fight being held on the White House lawn, if you want to tune in to a far more amusing brawl, may I suggest Hunter Biden v Jake Tapper? The CNN anchor is categorically unimpressed with Jill Biden’s new memoir, View from the East Wing, and has joined a chorus of voices accusing the former first lady of rewriting history and dodging accountability for the 2024 loss. In response, Hunter has accused Tapper of having the wrong priorities. “So let me get this straight,” Hunter wrote on Twitter/X on Wednesday. “Jake Tapper is focused on attacking my Mom. Jared and Ivanka are building a private island paradise on Albanian protected land. Don Jr married the daughter of Epstein’s banker, and a startup his fund backs just got a record $620M Pentagon loan. Eric is taking an Israeli drone company public for $1.5B in the middle of a war with Iran that nobody wanted. And I know: ‘But what about your paintings, Hunter?’ Please.” Hunter is absolutely right about the Trump-Kushners and their laundry list of shady dealings. However, that doesn’t mean that his family should be immune from criticism. Jill Biden decided that now was a great time to write a book and go on a book tour. Of course people are going to scrutinize it! What did you think was going to happen? It doesn’t help that Jill Biden has made some very dubious claims in her memoir. She writes, for example, that if Joe Biden had exhibited cognitive impairment, neither she nor her staff would have hesitated to do something about it: “But he was nowhere near that point in the summer of 2024.” As Tapper writes in response: “All of that is very difficult to believe, if not just downright false.” And then there’s the disastrous debate with Donald Trump, which ended Joe Biden’s re-election campaign. Jill has said that she thought Joe was having a stroke during the debate, and was “scared to death”. Trump, ever the opportunist, has seized on this, asking on Fox News why the pair then went to a Waffle House after the debate. He quipped that, even in good times, his wife wouldn’t let him near a Waffle House. Jill Biden isn’t the only person who can’t seem to be honest with themselves about 2024 or take accountability for what went wrong. Kamala Harris’s memoir, 107 Days, was an exercise in self-delusion. And look at the disastrous Democratic National Committee (DNC) 2024 autopsy report, which was shelved for a while then, after a backlash, released along with a statement by the DNC chair, Ken Martin, about how he was “not proud” of the report but put it out there because people need “to trust the Democratic party”. Which is rather hard to do considering there were two glaring omissions from that report. The first was Biden’s age. The second was Gaza. “In an autopsy of close to 50,000 words, not one of them is ‘Gaza’, or ‘Palestinians’ or ‘Israel’ or ‘genocide’,” Norman Solomon wrote in the Guardian last month. “Yet credible accounts tell of meetings where the autopsy’s author, the Democratic consultant Paul Rivera, privately acknowledged that Harris’s stance on Gaza hurt her election chances.” The Democrats seem convinced that growing anger about unconditional US support to Israel across the political spectrum is a messaging problem for them, not a policy problem. Jill Biden’s memoir also largely sidesteps Gaza. Writing in Slate, Scaachi Koul notes Jill Biden “spends just two and a half pages talking about Palestine and the conflict that helped torpedo her husband’s reelection efforts”. These pages are largely self-congratulatory. Jill recounts how, after World Central Kitchen workers were killed by the Israeli military in April 2024, she left a Post-It note on her husband’s mirror saying: “Net has to stop.” Not exactly Martin Luther King, is she? I’ve put more effort and passion into trying to stop my neighbours from putting their trash out early. Still, you’d think that scribbled note made her courage personified. News of her telling Biden the killing had to stop leaked, prompting White House officials to issue a statement clarifying: “The first lady was not calling for Israel to end its efforts against Hamas.” “What a lesson in the price of speaking up!” Jill Biden writes in her memoir. “Ten words on a Post-it urging peace and I was in trouble?” It’s a breathtakingly out-of-touch statement considering that a record number of journalists in Gaza are being killed for speaking up. While Jill Biden’s new book isn’t going down particularly well, there is some good news for the Bidens. Everyone suddenly loves Hunter, who has started a Substack and has been doing a lot of writing and opining of his own. Along with his jabs at Tapper, the former president’s 56-year-old son has been joking on X about his former crack cocaine habit and railing against “the Epstein class” on far-right personality Candace Owens’s podcast. Now some people are musing that Hunter Biden might run for president in 2028. Reacting to a question about that on Thursday, Donald Trump said: ““Hey, if the guy from Maine [scandal-riddled Graham Platner] can do well, I guess Hunter could do well, too.” Hunter, meanwhile, has been enjoying his viral fame. “WTF timeline are we on,” he wrote on X. “Someone called me the MAGA whisperer and I’ll gladly take the title. Left, right, D or R we all want the same things. We’re being divided on purpose by the Epstein Elite Oligarch class…The second we figure out we agree on more than we disagree, they’re done.” I don’t know WTF timeline we’re on either, but I can certainly get behind that. The EU has invited Taliban office to Brussels This news “is a slap in the face to every Afghan woman and girl who has fought, suffered and resisted Taliban oppression”, writes Fawzia Koofi in the Guardian. “Engagement without accountability risks legitimising oppression. It sends a dangerous message: that the international community’s promises to Afghan women can be abandoned for political convenience.” Renowned Iranian-French artist and Persepolis author Marjane Satrapi dies at 56 “It is no exaggeration to say that Satrapi’s books brought me (and many women like me) out of hiding and taught us to stop apologising for ourselves (for our trauma, our loudness, our rage, grief, desire,)” writes Dina Nayeri in the Guardian, following Satrapi’s death. In a statement relatives said she “died of sadness” after her husband passed away. A great loss for us all. ‘This sort of match needs a man,’ says tennis player Adolfo Daniel Vallejo has been given a $65,000 fine by the French Open after throwing a tantrum and saying he shouldn’t have a woman umpiring his match against a French opponent. “This sort of match needs to be umpired by a man, it’s very difficult for a woman to do it,” the Paraguayan player said after losing to the French teenager Moïse Kouamé. “[I]t’s a very demanding crowd, and you need a lot of strength to go against the crowd.” You also need a lot of strength to lose gracefully. Acceptance for same-sex marriage and trans people in the US has flattened Happy Pride month! For the past two decades, support for same-sex relationships in the US has steadily risen. Now, support has stalled among Democrats and independents and is dropping among Republicans, according to Gallup. The poll also found about four in 10 Americans think it’s morally acceptable to change gender, which is a drop from nearly half in 2021. New drug for chemotherapy-resistant ovarian cancer to be approved in England NHS England said the approval of the drug mirvetuximab soravtansine “represents the most significant breakthrough in NHS treatment for these hard-to-treat ovarian cancers in over two decades”. The week in pawtriarchy As Shakespeare sort of said: hell (quarantine at a theme park) is empty, and a Tasmanian devil is here (wandering around Queensland’s Gold Coast). A search is currently under way in Australia for a missing Tasmanian devil called Mary who, possibly through “an abnormally large leap”, escaped her secure enclosure on Tuesday. She’s been spotted on CCTV but is still on the run. Authorities may need to re-examine that CCTV: the devil is often in the details. Arwa Mahdawi is a Guardian columnist