Sunday, 01 June 2025

JACK POSOBIEC: It’s time for an autopsy of the Biden presidency


“Joe Biden, the former president of the United States, performed many many actions in his last days, weeks, and last few months of his administration.”

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Human Events Daily host Jack Posobiec spoke about former President Joe Biden’s late-stage prostate cancer diagnosis on Monday’s episode of the show. Posobiec laid out a timeline on the episode of Biden's final months in office in what he called an "autopsy," asking about who was truly making presidential decisions during that time.

"The biggest news of the day is all about Joe Biden,” Posobiec began. “Joe Biden, the former president of the United States, performed many many actions in his last days, weeks, and last few months of his administration.” He pointed out that revelations about Biden’s health, coupled with the delayed release of the Robert Hur special counsel tapes, should prompt a broader review of 2024.

“While we know now… that Robert Hirsch special counsel tapes came out for Joe Biden, that was October not of 2024, that was October of 2023. That was a full year before the election. That was before the nomination process for the DNC, it was well before they had him drop out,” Posobiec said. He added, “Even though Trump won, even though we got to that point, we do have to actually perform this autopsy on what happened that year.”



News of Biden’s diagnosis broke on Sunday. According to a statement from his personal office, “Last week, President Joe Biden was seen for a new finding of a prostate nodule after experiencing increasing urinary symptoms. On Friday, he was diagnosed with prostate cancer, characterized by a Gleason score of 9 (Grade Group 5) with metastasis to the bone.”

Posobiec continued “He also has terminal prostate cancer. Advanced stages. How did the president of the United States have prostate cancer? Seriously, aggressive cancer, and I pray for him and I urge everyone to pray for his soul,” he said, before noting that author Scott Adams had also recently announced a terminal diagnosis.

“This guy was the president of the United States,” Posobiec continued, “He wasn’t a live streamer or podcast host or something like that, and now this calls into question, who was it that actually put forward all those pardons? I’m not just talking about the autopen, who was it that was making the decisions? Who made the decision to nominate Ketanji Brown Jackson to the Supreme Court? Only a president can sign a pardon, only a president can nominate a Supreme Court justice.”

Medical professionals have raised serious concerns about how Biden's condition could have gone unnoticed until now. Dr. Howard Forman wrote, “It is inconceivable that this was not being followed before he left the Presidency.” He explained, “Gleason grade 9 would have had an elevated PSA level for some time before this diagnosis. And he must have had a PSA test numerous times before. This is odd. I wish him well and hope he has an opportunity for maximizing his quality of life.”

Dr. Steven Quay echoed the concern, posting on X, “Prostate cancer is the easiest cancer to diagnose when it first starts and to watch it progress to bone metastases. The PSA blood test shows the rate of cancer cell growth. For even with the most aggressive form, it is a 5–7 year journey without treatment before it becomes metastatic.”



Quay added, “Meaning, it would be malpractice for this patient to show up and be first diagnosed with metastatic disease in May 2025. It is highly likely he was carrying a diagnosis of prostate cancer throughout his White House tenure and the American people were uninformed.”

Dr. Zeke Emanuel, speaking to MSNBC, said, “He did not develop it in the last 100, 200 days. He had it while he was President. He probably had it at the start of his presidency in 2021.”

Ed Martin, now serving as the DOJ’s hardened attorney, is expected to examine the actions taken by the Biden administration in light of the diagnosis. “Ed Martin… says that he is going to be looking into the entire thing,” Posobiec noted.

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