Dave Rubin recently circulated a direct-message clip of a roundtable he joined with Clay Travis and Buck Sexton, highlighting a jaw-dropping moment from a CNN panel where Republican commentator Scott Jennings was left speechless while Antjuan Seawright insisted there was “no medical evidence” that Joe Biden experienced cognitive decline. The DM clip has been shared widely among conservative audiences because it captures, in real time, the stubborn disconnect between what everyday Americans saw and what some on the left continue to insist is not happening.
The exchange itself was brutal in its simplicity: Seawright repeatedly doubled down that there was no medical proof Biden was impaired, while Jennings countered with the obvious — autopen use, the White House’s evasions, and the fact the president’s own physician invoked the Fifth before a committee. Jennings’ “do you have eyes and ears?” line was not just a zinger, it was a plea for common sense in a room that had traded observation for political loyalty.
This isn’t some partisan fever dream; conservatives have been documenting a systematic cover-up for months, and Jennings has been one of the few to call it out on the record. The question is simple: when presidential powers appear to be exercised without a clear chain of presidential decision-making, Americans deserve answers — not excuses and not the tired “but Trump” pivot that functions as a shield for incompetence.
Rubin doing what the mainstream press won’t — sharing the clip and forcing people to watch the awkward contortions — is the kind of blunt honesty this country needs. The media’s protective reflex for Democrats has become a corrosive force; when a co-panelist can mouth the line “no medical evidence” while everyone watching knows otherwise, that’s not analysis, it’s malpractice.
Conservatives should take moments like this as fuel, not fodder for complacency: demand transparency, insist on accountability, and refuse to let the narrative be managed by political operatives. The country is owed a full accounting of who made which decisions and whether the man occupying the Oval Office at the time had the capacity to do so — anything less is a betrayal of the American people.






