Trump's p0rn-star (non)-scandal (Trump bought her off)

vostok

Well-Known Member

Call it the October surprise that didn't happen - and a presidential scandal that doesn't
seem to be catching fire. Yet.


According to the Wall Street Journal, Michael Cohen, Donald Trump's personal lawyer, set up a

private company that allegedly made a $130,000 (£94,000) payment to adult film actress

Stormy Daniels in exchange for her agreement not to discuss a year-long extramarital affair

she had with Mr Trump that began in 2006.

The payment reportedly took place on 17 October, 2016 - just weeks before Mr Trump's

shocking general election victory over Democrat Hillary Clinton.

To place that in the timeline of major presidential election events, that was just 10 days after the

infamous Access Hollywood tape in which Mr Trump boasted of making unwanted sexual advances

on women made headlines, and 11 days before James Comey's equally infamous letter

re-opening the investigation into Mrs Clinton's email server.

Trump lawyer Michael Cohen has said the president "vehemently denies any such occurrence,

as has Ms Daniels", while the White House called the WSJ story "old, recycled reports,

which were published and strongly denied prior to the election".

Would a Trump porn-star sex scandal have made a difference in the election? Counter-factuals

about the 2016 election are a fool's game. What's of more immediate interest is why

the Wall Street Journal report hasn't made a bigger splash in the US media and among

the public at large. And it's not just a stodgy financial newspaper's reporting, either.

If a good sex scandal needs salacious details, this one has the abundance, due to an extensive

2011 interview Daniels (her real name is Stephanie Clifford) gave to In Touch magazine,

which was published in full on Friday.

According to the report, Daniels discusses in detail how she allegedly met Mr Trump

(at a golf tournament), their various dalliances (a first date in his hotel room

where he met her in his pyjamas), his television-watching habits and his obsession with and

overwhelming fear of sharks (he allegedly said he wished the species would die).


Michael Cohen reportedly set up a Delaware corporation that made a $130,000 payment
to Stormy Daniels in October 2016


Back in 2016, multiple news outlets were apparently pursuing the story. On Tuesday Slate editor

Jacob Weisberg recounted his communications with Daniels,

who he said had alleged the romantic involvement with Mr Trump.

"Daniels said she had some corroborating evidence, including the phone numbers of Trump's

long-time personal assistant Rhona Graff and his bodyguard Keith Schiller, with whom she said

she would arrange rendezvous," Weisberg writes. "While she did not share those numbers with me,

I did speak to three of Daniels' friends, all of whom said they knew about the affair at the time,

and all of whom confirmed the outlines of her story."

Weisberg says Daniels cut off communications with him around the time the Wall Street Journal

reports she received payment from Cohen.

CNN has also reported that Fox News was investigating the alleged Trump-Daniels affair in October 2016,

including securing an on-the-record interview with Daniels' business manager repeating the claims,

but the network spiked the story.

Fast-forward a year and a few months, and the story - and the journalistic digging around it -

is finally seeing the light of day. And yet the reports have been buried beneath coverage of a possible

federal government shutdown, back-and-forths over the exact expletive the president used to describe

impoverished nations and the president's mental and physical health.


Donald Trump and his family in January 2007

Why? Perhaps it's scandal fatigue for a public figure who has been a tabloid fixture for decades.

"If you think the media haven't created a new set of rules for Trump, here's a thought experiment,"

writes Judd Legum of the liberal media watchdog group ThinkProgress.

"Imagine the coverage if it was reported in 2013 that Obama paid a porn star 130K

to keep quiet about an extramarital affair."

That prospect has conservative columnist Tim Carney, of the Washington Examiner,

somewhat despondent.

"It's a sign that our culture has been debased that people are shrugging off this latest story

about Trump's infidelity," he writes.

"Specifically: Trump has debased us. We're worse because of him."

There's also the possibility that the lack of breathless coverage is because the most concerning part

of this story - the alleged $130,000 payment to Daniels - has only been reported on by the

Wall Street Journal, without further corroboration from other news outlets.

Reports of the alleged affair itself, which other media organisations have repeated,

are more than a decade old.

Then again, this could be a story that simmers, only to rise again when (or if)

Mr Trump runs for re-election.

(http://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-42739556)
 

3GT

Well-Known Member

Call it the October surprise that didn't happen - and a presidential scandal that doesn't
seem to be catching fire. Yet.


According to the Wall Street Journal, Michael Cohen, Donald Trump's personal lawyer, set up a

private company that allegedly made a $130,000 (£94,000) payment to adult film actress

Stormy Daniels in exchange for her agreement not to discuss a year-long extramarital affair

she had with Mr Trump that began in 2006.

The payment reportedly took place on 17 October, 2016 - just weeks before Mr Trump's

shocking general election victory over Democrat Hillary Clinton.

To place that in the timeline of major presidential election events, that was just 10 days after the

infamous Access Hollywood tape in which Mr Trump boasted of making unwanted sexual advances

on women made headlines, and 11 days before James Comey's equally infamous letter

re-opening the investigation into Mrs Clinton's email server.

Trump lawyer Michael Cohen has said the president "vehemently denies any such occurrence,

as has Ms Daniels", while the White House called the WSJ story "old, recycled reports,

which were published and strongly denied prior to the election".

Would a Trump porn-star sex scandal have made a difference in the election? Counter-factuals

about the 2016 election are a fool's game. What's of more immediate interest is why

the Wall Street Journal report hasn't made a bigger splash in the US media and among

the public at large. And it's not just a stodgy financial newspaper's reporting, either.

If a good sex scandal needs salacious details, this one has the abundance, due to an extensive

2011 interview Daniels (her real name is Stephanie Clifford) gave to In Touch magazine,

which was published in full on Friday.

According to the report, Daniels discusses in detail how she allegedly met Mr Trump

(at a golf tournament), their various dalliances (a first date in his hotel room

where he met her in his pyjamas), his television-watching habits and his obsession with and

overwhelming fear of sharks (he allegedly said he wished the species would die).


Michael Cohen reportedly set up a Delaware corporation that made a $130,000 payment
to Stormy Daniels in October 2016


Back in 2016, multiple news outlets were apparently pursuing the story. On Tuesday Slate editor

Jacob Weisberg recounted his communications with Daniels,

who he said had alleged the romantic involvement with Mr Trump.

"Daniels said she had some corroborating evidence, including the phone numbers of Trump's

long-time personal assistant Rhona Graff and his bodyguard Keith Schiller, with whom she said

she would arrange rendezvous," Weisberg writes. "While she did not share those numbers with me,

I did speak to three of Daniels' friends, all of whom said they knew about the affair at the time,

and all of whom confirmed the outlines of her story."

Weisberg says Daniels cut off communications with him around the time the Wall Street Journal

reports she received payment from Cohen.

CNN has also reported that Fox News was investigating the alleged Trump-Daniels affair in October 2016,

including securing an on-the-record interview with Daniels' business manager repeating the claims,

but the network spiked the story.

Fast-forward a year and a few months, and the story - and the journalistic digging around it -

is finally seeing the light of day. And yet the reports have been buried beneath coverage of a possible

federal government shutdown, back-and-forths over the exact expletive the president used to describe

impoverished nations and the president's mental and physical health.


Donald Trump and his family in January 2007

Why? Perhaps it's scandal fatigue for a public figure who has been a tabloid fixture for decades.

"If you think the media haven't created a new set of rules for Trump, here's a thought experiment,"

writes Judd Legum of the liberal media watchdog group ThinkProgress.

"Imagine the coverage if it was reported in 2013 that Obama paid a porn star 130K

to keep quiet about an extramarital affair."

That prospect has conservative columnist Tim Carney, of the Washington Examiner,

somewhat despondent.

"It's a sign that our culture has been debased that people are shrugging off this latest story

about Trump's infidelity," he writes.

"Specifically: Trump has debased us. We're worse because of him."

There's also the possibility that the lack of breathless coverage is because the most concerning part

of this story - the alleged $130,000 payment to Daniels - has only been reported on by the

Wall Street Journal, without further corroboration from other news outlets.

Reports of the alleged affair itself, which other media organisations have repeated,

are more than a decade old.

Then again, this could be a story that simmers, only to rise again when (or if)

Mr Trump runs for re-election.

(http://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-42739556)
Fake tits spewing fake news for a new nose the slut.. Are you people even real? Shill
 

3GT

Well-Known Member
So he paid a slut some hush money. Who cares?
Even then the slut wishes she touched the Dons D but only in her dreams would that ever happen so she sells out to shills and signs up to this bullshit for cash instead of taking cock to keep the cucks flaming over fake news screaming impeachment hahaha...
 

dagwood45431

Well-Known Member

Call it the October surprise that didn't happen - and a presidential scandal that doesn't
seem to be catching fire. Yet.


According to the Wall Street Journal, Michael Cohen, Donald Trump's personal lawyer, set up a

private company that allegedly made a $130,000 (£94,000) payment to adult film actress

Stormy Daniels in exchange for her agreement not to discuss a year-long extramarital affair

she had with Mr Trump that began in 2006.

The payment reportedly took place on 17 October, 2016 - just weeks before Mr Trump's

shocking general election victory over Democrat Hillary Clinton.

To place that in the timeline of major presidential election events, that was just 10 days after the

infamous Access Hollywood tape in which Mr Trump boasted of making unwanted sexual advances

on women made headlines, and 11 days before James Comey's equally infamous letter

re-opening the investigation into Mrs Clinton's email server.

Trump lawyer Michael Cohen has said the president "vehemently denies any such occurrence,

as has Ms Daniels", while the White House called the WSJ story "old, recycled reports,

which were published and strongly denied prior to the election".

Would a Trump porn-star sex scandal have made a difference in the election? Counter-factuals

about the 2016 election are a fool's game. What's of more immediate interest is why

the Wall Street Journal report hasn't made a bigger splash in the US media and among

the public at large. And it's not just a stodgy financial newspaper's reporting, either.

If a good sex scandal needs salacious details, this one has the abundance, due to an extensive

2011 interview Daniels (her real name is Stephanie Clifford) gave to In Touch magazine,

which was published in full on Friday.

According to the report, Daniels discusses in detail how she allegedly met Mr Trump

(at a golf tournament), their various dalliances (a first date in his hotel room

where he met her in his pyjamas), his television-watching habits and his obsession with and

overwhelming fear of sharks (he allegedly said he wished the species would die).


Michael Cohen reportedly set up a Delaware corporation that made a $130,000 payment
to Stormy Daniels in October 2016


Back in 2016, multiple news outlets were apparently pursuing the story. On Tuesday Slate editor

Jacob Weisberg recounted his communications with Daniels,

who he said had alleged the romantic involvement with Mr Trump.

"Daniels said she had some corroborating evidence, including the phone numbers of Trump's

long-time personal assistant Rhona Graff and his bodyguard Keith Schiller, with whom she said

she would arrange rendezvous," Weisberg writes. "While she did not share those numbers with me,

I did speak to three of Daniels' friends, all of whom said they knew about the affair at the time,

and all of whom confirmed the outlines of her story."

Weisberg says Daniels cut off communications with him around the time the Wall Street Journal

reports she received payment from Cohen.

CNN has also reported that Fox News was investigating the alleged Trump-Daniels affair in October 2016,

including securing an on-the-record interview with Daniels' business manager repeating the claims,

but the network spiked the story.

Fast-forward a year and a few months, and the story - and the journalistic digging around it -

is finally seeing the light of day. And yet the reports have been buried beneath coverage of a possible

federal government shutdown, back-and-forths over the exact expletive the president used to describe

impoverished nations and the president's mental and physical health.


Donald Trump and his family in January 2007

Why? Perhaps it's scandal fatigue for a public figure who has been a tabloid fixture for decades.

"If you think the media haven't created a new set of rules for Trump, here's a thought experiment,"

writes Judd Legum of the liberal media watchdog group ThinkProgress.

"Imagine the coverage if it was reported in 2013 that Obama paid a porn star 130K

to keep quiet about an extramarital affair."

That prospect has conservative columnist Tim Carney, of the Washington Examiner,

somewhat despondent.

"It's a sign that our culture has been debased that people are shrugging off this latest story

about Trump's infidelity," he writes.

"Specifically: Trump has debased us. We're worse because of him."

There's also the possibility that the lack of breathless coverage is because the most concerning part

of this story - the alleged $130,000 payment to Daniels - has only been reported on by the

Wall Street Journal, without further corroboration from other news outlets.

Reports of the alleged affair itself, which other media organisations have repeated,

are more than a decade old.

Then again, this could be a story that simmers, only to rise again when (or if)

Mr Trump runs for re-election.

(http://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-42739556)
She says he went in raw. Fucking a porn star raw makes a lot of sense. The man is a dunce in every way.
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
Fake tits spewing fake news for a new nose the slut.. Are you people even real? Shill
LOL

You voted for Trump. Do you really have to resort to slut shaming to defend the Donald? I mean, it took two and Donald was one of them. He's in the Guinness book of world records for the number of species and variety of strains of STDs he houses in his tiny pee-wee. I think one of them are named after him: Chlamydia trachomatis var densedonaldus
 

vostok

Well-Known Member

Alleged affair with Donald Trump[edit].....wiki

According to reporting in The Wall Street Journal, Donald Trump's personal lawyer, Michael Cohen paid Stormy Daniels $130,000 in hush money in October 2016,

shortly before the presidential election, to deny having had an affair with Trump in 2006.[27][28] The Wall Street Journal elaborated that the payment was done via a private company

established in Delaware by Cohen that month to a representative of Daniels.[29] At the time, Clifford was reportedly in talks to share her account with

Good Morning America and Slate.[30] Cohen has denied the existence of an affair on behalf of Trump; he also produced a letter allegedly signed by Daniels

denying the affair and the payment of hush money.[31]

The Daily Beast was also in talks with Daniels "after three sources—including fellow porn star Alana Evans—told The Daily Beast that Daniels and Trump were involved.

Daniels ultimately backed out on Nov. 3, just five days before the 2016 election."[31][32]

CNN reported that Fox News reporter Diana Falzone had in October 2016 written an article about Daniels and Trump that Fox News

never published. It included Daniels' then-manager Gina Rodriguez alleging on-the-record about a sexual relationship between the duo. CNN

also reported that "Falzone had even seen emails about a settlement" between Daniels and Trump.[33]

On January 17, 2018, In Touch Weekly published excerpts of a 2011 interview of Daniels alleging a 2006 extramarital affair with Trump.

The magazine describes her account as being supported by a polygraph and corroborated with both her friend and her ex-husband.[34] Trump's lawyer Michael Cohen

claimed that this interview was untrue and already published in October 24, 2011 in Life & Style magazine.

However, The Daily Beast described the interviews as "hardly identical", noting that Daniels had declined to comment to Life & Style,

while the In Touch Weekly interview had direct quotes from Daniels.[35]

The next day, Mother Jones reported that in 2009, as Daniels was considering running to become the Senator for Louisiana,

she had identified Trump as a potential campaign donor to a political consultant, and also described details of a sexual relationship with Trump.

That consultant discussed Daniels' revelations to another consultant in emails Mother Jones obtained and published.[36]

(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stormy_Daniels)
 

abandonconflict

Well-Known Member
I love sharks. For 400 million years, almost all species of fish have evolved under the influence of these majestic animals. Without apex predators, it has been proven that no ecosystem can long continue. If they go extinct, all life on earth would be profoundly affected.

I wish the Trump family would all die.
 

Huckster79

Well-Known Member
Im sure Fox and all the right wing loudmouths would have no issue with Obama paying a whore hush money, none at all... Especially right in the weeks leading up to the election. They opposed him only on the issues! lmfao.

he's conditioning us for nothing to surprise us nor really get the majority of the masses worked up, that way he will have licence to do anything he wants with little criticism at some point, just what every autocrat desires.
 

TacoMac

Well-Known Member
Im sure Fox and all the right wing loudmouths would have no issue with Obama paying a whore hush money, none at all... Especially right in the weeks leading up to the election. They opposed him only on the issues! lmfao.

he's conditioning us for nothing to surprise us nor really get the majority of the masses worked up, that way he will have licence to do anything he wants with little criticism at some point, just what every autocrat desires.
It wouldn't have changed anything.

Trump supporters would simply have said, "Hell yeah! At least he ain't gay! If I had his money, I'd be screwing high end porn stars too!" and vote for him anyway.
 

dagwood45431

Well-Known Member
Im sure Fox and all the right wing loudmouths would have no issue with Obama paying a whore hush money, none at all... Especially right in the weeks leading up to the election. They opposed him only on the issues! lmfao.

he's conditioning us for nothing to surprise us nor really get the majority of the masses worked up, that way he will have licence to do anything he wants with little criticism at some point, just what every autocrat desires.
Oh, no, they never would have made any comments about Obama paying off a whore and none of it would have been racist at all.
 

greg nr

Well-Known Member
Being a porn star has always been a risky profession, but it seems like they are suddenly coming down with the russian flu.

5 actresses have died in the past 3 months. 2 in the past 2 weeks.

Almost seems like a fix-it squad is in play.
 
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