Bali: A detailed schedule explaining how and what to do at the G20 summit for erratic US President Joe Biden. The media got footage of Biden checking his schedule to attend the summit in Bali. The instructions in the schedule are clear in the photos.
At the summit, where to sit, when to pose for photos, with whom to take photos, when to speak, and for how long are explained.
The photo was released by the Republican National Committee Twitter account.
You can sit in the middle at the front table with President Widodok and President von der Leyen nearby. You can give a five-minute opening speech. The chart contains instructions such as that you can pose for a photo with (Indonesia) President Widodo and (Japan) Prime Minister Kishida before the program begins, and reminds you that you will end the program with your co-hosts.
In the chart with the instructions, you are written in big red letters everywhere, not called Biden.
In all such big events, there will be specific instructions for what the guests should do, but netizens are raising doubts as to whether specific instructions will be prepared for each of them. By addressing Biden as you throughout the instructions, it is clear that this schedule was prepared just for Biden. Some have also raised suspicions that Biden’s health is not in satisfactory condition. Many people doubt that he even forgot his own name.
In June, the directive regarding how Biden should conduct himself on stage at a public event came out like this. The instruction was to ‘enter the Roosevelt Room and say hello to the participants.’
One argument is that the G20 summit is using a sheet of instructions, perhaps in the context of several mistakes made by Biden in the recent past. Speaking at the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) summit, the president thanked Colombia instead of Cambodia for hosting the ASEAN summit.
Last week, he referred to the Iraqi city of Fallujah instead of Kherson in southeastern Ukraine. Speaking at the press conference, he said that the Russian troops are withdrawing from ‘Falujah’.