As situations in the country don’t seem to take a turn for the better, the presidential candidate Joe Biden has highlighted what's most important to do. The country is so tightly held in the vicious claws of violence, financial uncertainty, and instability.

Amid the looming crisis, the worst part is that the President is being held responsible for the bulk of it. The events are being highlighted everywhere, but the election wave may possibly be giving it a wholly different meaning - different from what it really is.

Since the start of the election campaigns, the pandemic mismanagement in the country has been made a political agenda – the US is by far the worst-hit nation despite boasting the best healthcare system in the world.

This time, for a little time, Joe Biden kept the election stance away and talked in an empathetic manner. On Thursday, in Kenosha, the Democrat presidential nominee spoke mostly about the pressing need to fight police violence and racial injustice with no direct attack on Trump or any kind of urging to voters to vote for him.

Biden said, “We’re finally now getting to the point where we’re going to address the original sin in this country . . . slavery, and all the vestiges of it. I promise you, win or lose, I’m going to go down fighting, I’m going to go down fighting for racial equality, equity across the board, The country’s ready — and if they’re not, it doesn’t matter, because there are certain things I ain’t going to change."

In addition to that, Biden also added that there are a few things “worth losing over,” but the country, as a whole, won’t be defeated. With his words and emotions, Biden made it clear that mending the country and its future is way more important than getting into the thoughtless vibe of the election.

It’s a great challenge that the country is facing together and a powerful thrust is needed into the situations so that reformation may be made possible.

In his address, Biden highlighted the amount and kind of improvements he will make if he given the helm of America.

The election campaigns are in full swing and so are the parties. The phase that the US is passing through is proving to be Trump’s biggest challenge since he took the chair. Questions surround the President, but the views of citizens still remain mixed.  The oldest democracy in the world has to prove it one more time.