• Fooloso4
    6.1k
    All after he became a political targetNOS4A2

    That is incorrect.

    Why do you repeat his lies? Is it ignorance or blind loyalty?
  • NOS4A2
    9.2k


    Look at the date of their accusations. October 2016. Why are you lying?
  • Fooloso4
    6.1k
    Look at the date of their accusations. October 2016.NOS4A2

    Yes, LOOK at the dates.

    ... his then-wife Ivana made a rape claim during their 1990 divorce litigation ...

    She backtracked in October of 2016. Just a big coincidence?

    Jill Harth
    filed a lawsuit in 1997 in which she accused Trump of non-consensual groping of her body, among them her "intimate private parts"

    As is typical, when others come forward those who thought they were alone speak out. You would do well to educate yourself on #MeToo. That 25 or more women accused Trump because he was a political target does not stand up to reason. Why Trump and not every political candidate? Your defense of Trump, trying to spin it as if he is the victim, is a callous disregard for the true victims of his abuse.
  • NOS4A2
    9.2k


    Harth dropped the lawsuit right after Trump settled an outstanding business lawsuit from her partner. Weird how that happens.

    https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2016/jul/20/donald-trump-sexual-assault-allegations-jill-harth-interview

    Ivana walked back the allegation back in 93:

    “During a deposition given by me in connection with my matrimonial case, I stated that my husband had raped me,” Ivana Trump said in a statement at the time, as the Daily Beast reported. "[O]n one occasion during 1989, Mr. Trump and I had marital relations in which he behaved very differently toward me than he had during our marriage. As a woman, I felt violated, as the love and tenderness, which he normally exhibited towards me, was absent. I referred to this as a 'rape,' but I do not want my words to be interpreted in a literal or criminal sense."

    https://abcnews.go.com/amp/Politics/donald-trumps-wife-ivana-disavows-rape-allegation/story?id=32732204

    Why aren’t you mentioning these things?
  • Fooloso4
    6.1k
    Harth dropped the lawsuit right after Trump settled an outstanding business lawsuit from her partner. Weird how that happens.NOS4A2

    She dropped the lawsuit but stands by her accusations. If you read the article you cited you would know that.

    Why aren’t you mentioning these things?NOS4A2

    As I said:

    She backtracked in October of 2016. Just a big coincidence?Fooloso4

    Once again Trump and his lawyers resorted to his default position: he is the victim. In damage control mode she denied it was rape "in a literal or criminal sense" but also said:
    As a woman, I felt violated ...

    An important element that she mentioned is the children she had with him. Children who hold important positions in his business/charitable/political organization. Since he demands unquestionable loyalty but is incapable of being loyal she was protecting her children.
  • Wayfarer
    22.4k
    So the CNN Trump town hall has come and gone. Most of the commentary in the 'liberal media' - that is everything other than Fox and its imitators - was that the event was a disaster, an opportunity for Trump to boost his profile and promote his lies.

    CNN's Anderson Cooper came out in defense of the network, saying that the CNN audience, who would normally never tune in to Trump, need to know what he's saying and doing, and that it's no use living in a silo. Which is all fair and good - EXCEPT that the format of the event was such that it clearly amounted to pandering. The 'carefully-selected' audience cheered every word, even cheering the gratuitous insults directed at the woman who had just successfully sued him for $5 million. The hapless interviewer tried to 'hold Trump to account', which was as laughable as holding off machine gun fire with an umbrella, and the only time she got close to really landing a point he brushed her off as 'nasty' (audience applauds). So the result was a success for Trump, and did nothing to really expose him to any kind of honest interrogation or a critical media.

    So I agree, it was badly judged, even if Cooper is right in saying that public awareness of Trump's malignant delusions is required.
  • ChrisH
    223
    even if Cooper is right in saying that public awareness of Trump's malignant delusions is required.Wayfarer

    I think Cooper is absolutely correct.

    Any (perceived) attempt to suppress Trump's idiotic ramblings would be counterproductive.
  • Wayfarer
    22.4k
    ‘Not having an audience applauding wildly’ would not amount to ‘suppression’. Could have been a one-on-one with some gruff senior male journalist. Although then Trump would decline to appear, he’ll only agree to situations he knows he can play.
  • Baden
    16.3k
    If you've already passed through the digestive system of capitalism, Trump's bowels are no great stretch. Networks will do whatever's profitable.
  • Benkei
    7.7k
    Streetlight had some choice things to say about this whining about platforms and deplatforming. "Should we give Trump a platform?": is the wrong question. "Why is a reactionary fuck like Trump so successful?", should be the question. Possible answer: because the material conditions for US citizens are conducive to him getting a platform. If the USA didn't have so many poor, didn't have so many people one healthcare invoice away from being poor, then nobody would take Trump seriously.
  • Michael
    15.5k
    Possible answer: because the material conditions for US citizens are conducive to him getting a platform. If the USA didn't have so many poor, didn't have so many people one healthcare invoice away from being poor, then nobody would take Trump seriously.Benkei

    If economic issues were the concern then they'd be voting for Democrats.

    It's clearly social issues (the "culture war") that elicit support for Trump and the Republicans.
  • ChrisH
    223
    The mere appearance of 'suppression' (insistence on preconditions that Trump would never accept) would reinforce Trump's supporters' sense that he's (again) being treated unfairly.
  • Baden
    16.3k
    "Should we give Trump a platform?": is the wrong question. "Why is a reactionary fuck like Trump so successful?", should be the question.Benkei


    Yes, I think that's more or less the way we ought to look at things. The first question is just to take on the establishment's voice and they don't really need (or deserve) any help.

    Possible answer: because the material conditions for US citizens are conducive to him getting a platform.Benkei

    Yeah, I would say that the problem is the dynamic whereby neither side has anything real to offer, where the debate is over whoever has the better table manners while throwing scraps to the plebs barking underneath.
  • javi2541997
    5.8k
    "Why is a reactionary fuck like Trump so successful?", should be the question.Benkei

    Rather than the life conditions of each U.S. citizen, I think the success of Donald Trump is due to the mass media. Yes, I am aware that there are journalists out there who put criticism on him, but they are not notorious. FOX news holds a lot of power and monopolizes information. On the other hand, I remember some "famous" instagrammers or "influencers" cleaning up his image. (Kanye West, for example).
    Trump is the creation of other people's businesses.
  • Mikie
    6.7k
    Possible answer: because the material conditions for US citizens are conducive to him getting a platform. If the USA didn't have so many poor, didn't have so many people one healthcare invoice away from being poor, then nobody would take Trump seriously.Benkei

    If economic issues were the concern then they'd be voting for Democrats.

    It's clearly social issues (the "culture war") that elicit support for Trump and the Republicans.
    Michael

    Whether it’s more one than the other has been an interesting debate. I think it’s mostly material conditions. That makes people much more vulnerable to media bombardment, false answers, scapegoating, demonization, and wedge issues that exist. We see it on the left as well, to a different degree.

    Remember that Trump always claim he’s in favor of working people. It’s not always about Mexicans and China and anti-wokeness. There is an economic message. Which is why he tried to imitate Bernie in 2016 to a certain degree. Anti-NAFTA, anti-TPP, “rigged system,” etc.
  • Baden
    16.3k
    If you repress Trump, he'll go deeper because people will associate him even more with their own socially repressed selves. If you do the opposite and give him air, he'll go wider. If you confusedly oscillate between the two, he'll go deeper and wider, which seems to be what's been happening and what's got him where he is. The only way to ever have combated Trump would probably have been to deal with him perfectly neutrally, like reporters presenting the news, but because this is the last thing you would ever consider doing in a commercial media format, you constantly inflate the balloon so that it becomes bigger than any fact that you can throw at it and its existence as much testament to your lie (pretending to be a news organisation) as any of his. In a way Trump is just the escaped reality of the lie that is news media, presenting to it its own face. Ditto for social reality. It's natural to hate the guy and want him to go away but what he represents isn't going away.
  • NOS4A2
    9.2k
    The 300-page Durham report is finally out. Better late than never, I suppose.

    No probable cause, systematic failures, personal bias, two-tiered justice—the works. It's difficult and maddening to believe people were led so easily to such false and dangerous conclusions by what amounts to lies, corruption, and stupidity.

    Durham Report
  • creativesoul
    11.9k
    Somebody link the Mueller Report please...
  • Wayfarer
    22.4k
    Herewith Mueller Report

    It should also be recalled that despite Trump trumpeting that Durham would unearth a massive scandal, in fact he scored one minor conviction and two acquittals. The rest is just harumphing. Any law enforcement worth their salt would have been suspicious of Trump 'Russia - are you listening?' - and his continual brown-nosing of Putin (whom he continues to defend to this day.)

    Bring on the indictments, for God's sake.
  • NOS4A2
    9.2k
    No one is absolved from the fact they trumpeted nonsense for years and were complicit in injustice, undermining everything from the justice system to the intelligence community to diplomacy, and leading directly to the sordid states of affairs we see today. History won’t forget these crimes.
  • Mikie
    6.7k
    Summary: a two-bit criminal and lifetime con man rightfully getting some consequences.

    So funny to watch his cult followers (naturally) throwing a tantrum. :rofl: Always brightens my day.
  • creativesoul
    11.9k
    Bring on the indictments, for God's sake.Wayfarer

    They're not done... There's more than the public at large will ever be able to know. Trump was and is compromised.
  • Wayfarer
    22.4k
    Yes but his acolytes in Congress may yet succeed in crashing the global economy and wrecking the Republic.
  • Wayfarer
    22.4k
    Special counsel John Durham had everything he needed. Time, money, resources and a clear if not-quite-stated charge from then-Attorney General William P. Barr: Go after the investigation into Russia’s attempts to manipulate the 2016 election. Turn over every rock. Make the whole thing look like the “hoax” Donald Trump said it was.

    Durham has released his report, and not only is it a dud, but in many ways it’s also the direct opposite of the investigation by the other special counsel in this case, Robert S. Mueller III.

    Mueller amassed a mountain of evidence making clear the shocking sweep of Russia’s campaign to put Trump in the White House. He also showed how eager Trump, his family and his aides were to receive Vladimir Putin’s help. Yet Mueller bent over backward to avoid saying that Trump was guilty of a crime or that the whole affair met the legal definition of a criminal conspiracy.

    In contrast, Durham assembled a molehill, which Trump and his supporters are desperately trying to claim is a mountain.

    Beginning in 2019, Durham spent years and millions of dollars investigating Crossfire Hurricane, the FBI’s investigation of the Russian interference effort. While his 300-page report excoriated the FBI, just about all the facts he discusses were detailed more than three years ago in an inspector general’s report that revealed serious problems with the way the bureau handled Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) warrant requests, among other things.

    But if you look at the way conservatives are spinning the report by Durham, you’d think he claimed that the FBI never should have investigated Russia’s efforts in the first place. That’s bonkers.

    “Yes, the FBI could be second-guessed for some of its decisions, and it got sloppy” at times, says Barbara McQuade, a University of Michigan law professor and former U.S. attorney. But given the suggestion that a hostile foreign power was trying to manipulate a presidential election, “it would have been a dereliction of duty not to investigate.” ...

    During the campaign, Trump, members of his family and his campaign aides had dozens of contacts with Russian nationals and officials. His campaign chairman, Paul Manafort, and Manafort’s deputy, Rick Gates, who both worked for pro-Russian oligarchs and politicians in Ukraine, passed confidential internal polling data to a Russian intelligence operative.

    Russia hacked Democratic National Committee servers, then passed embarrassing information to WikiLeaks so it could be released publicly at moments advantageous to Trump. WikiLeaks was in communication about the information with Trump adviser Roger Stone, whom Trump later pardoned for lying to Congress about the scandal, witness tampering and obstruction. Russia also mounted a comprehensive trolling campaign through social media to boost Trump’s presidential bid. Plus, the infamous Trump Tower meeting with Russian nationals.

    Trump successfully convinced people that all of that (and more) could be reduced to the question of whether he “colluded” with the Kremlin, a word with no fixed meaning. Mueller unwittingly helped in this effort by contending in his report that he was prevented by Justice Department policies from saying Trump committed crimes, even though he offered copious evidence that Trump did, especially in his efforts to obstruct the investigation.

    Mueller “practically stood on his head to avoid besmirching Donald Trump out of an exercise of caution,” McQuade told me. “I don’t see Durham doing the same thing here.” In fact, Durham did just the opposite. His report ignores that it would have been insane for the FBI not to investigate what turned out to be perhaps the most dangerous effort ever of a hostile foreign power attempting to manipulate American politics.

    You’ll search his report in vain for any mention of, for instance, the fact that Trump’s campaign chairman passed information to a Russian intelligence operative. Nearly every mention of Manafort is about his relationship with former Trump campaign adviser Carter Page, who turned out to be an inconsequential figure in the scandal yet takes up much of the space in Durham’s report because of the FBI’s shoddy means of obtaining FISA warrants to surveil him.

    In the end, Durham’s investigation achieved little to nothing of consequence. He indicted three people, one of whom pleaded guilty to illegally modifying an email and was sentenced to probation; the other two were acquitted. His report tries to turn what is already known about FBI sloppiness into something new and shocking.

    But if his goal was to give Trump and his dishonest minions an excuse to repeat their bogus claims about his innocence in the Russia scandal? Mission accomplished.
    Washington Post
  • 180 Proof
    15.3k
    Tommorrow. :cool:
  • RogueAI
    2.8k
    Trump indicted again. I love seeing the "lock her up!" crowd get sent to the pokey.
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