Donald Trump Private Citizen

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
Pew suits Stinky
  • North Korea mocked Trump as a "dolt" and saying he "cannot deodorize the nasty smell from his dirty body woven with frauds, sexual abuses and all other crimes."



pretty sad when another Dictator tells you.
 

CatHedral

Well-Known Member

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Stinkys approval rating is at 12% according to a new Pew poll.
Yep and republicans make up probably less than 24% of the electorate, so that's half of them and some rightwing independents. Hopefully their delusion lasts until the next election or at least until Donald's trials. It's for the best that shit happens closer to the election, the public has short memories. Donald will run for the GOP nomination, just as a distraction and to try and muddy the waters as he usually does. I believe he will even run from his NY state prison cell, while claiming he is a "political prisoner", any body who tries to muscle in on Donald's turf will be destroyed. I can't see Donald going on too much longer without a NY state indictment, his company will go first and many of it's employees, if it is declared a criminal organization. When they nail Donald it will be with a ten ton hammer and no way to squirm out.

Garland is taking his time for political reasons alone, there is overwhelming evidence that Trump committed many federal crimes. He wants NY to put him away, muzzle him and break him financially, before piling on for the insurrection at the very least, if not he's nothing more than an accessory after the fact, a criminal himself. Donald was at the center of many conspiracies, the Ukraine, the post office and others, to get those players will require getting Donald too. He could even be the star witness against many, but his credibility would be destroyed by their defense teams, not the government!

Sleepy Joe was a good nickname, his plan is to put them to sleep, like a rabid dog and not get them too excited. Joe is trying to govern in a traditionally bipartisan way, to isolate the radicals from the more moderate conservatives, this is how it's done. Not as satisfactory as rubbing their noses in it, but you win in the end and dealing with the radical assholes effectively can come later, slowly over time. You just need to get the political arm of the terrorist organization out of power for a spell, then level the playing field, deal with the domestic disinformation for profit system and then crush the violent assholes with law, regulation and a domestic terrorist watch list. If the SCOTUS causes issues, then pack it, but you've got to have power to do that. One step at a time, they are crazy, hate driven, impulsive and have no plan, besides Donald is leading them. You want that for as long as you can, because he will run the Republican party into the ground, just like anything he's ever had control over. He has destroyed the republicans for a generation or two of young Americans and made them more politically active too.
 

printer

Well-Known Member
People close to Trump say he 'wants back' in national spotlight: report
Journalists Bob Woodward and Robert Costa say they have learned that former President Trump "wants back" into the national spotlight — and the presidency.

"And you start to hear a certain refrain from people who really know him, that he wants back, that he feels he has the political capital with his core supporters," Costa said Tuesday during an appearance on MSNBC's "Morning Joe." "He likes playing golf and he jokes; he's off Twitter and he has more time."

Trump believes the Republican Party is still very much in his grip, Costa said and that "people are going to war with him at the highest rank of the party."

"And this time, even though there are others out there with ambition like Vice President Pence, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, it's president Trump who really wants back, based on our own reporting," Costa added.

“I think [Trump running] feels like more of a possibility now than it did before,” an aide to one Republican eyeing a 2024 run told The Hill earlier this month. “That doesn’t mean you stop what you’re doing altogether. Until he says what he’s going to do, that’s not an option.”

Woodward, a veteran journalist who has interviewed and written about Trump extensively for several books, agreed with Costa's assessment that the former president is itching to get back on the national political stage in a meaningful way.

"And if you get into the question, which is important, to do what? And the answer is to be Donald Trump," Woodward said. "And that is not an agenda. That is not — does not connect to the needs of the people in the country. And his disconnection from that, I mean, the struggle that people are engaged in, he has no idea."

A recent poll found Trump as the clear favorite to win the GOP’s 2024 presidential nomination should he decide to run, with nearly 6 in 10 Republicans saying they would back him to be the party's nominee.

"And so there's this view of Trump as somebody who's this force in the Republican Party, which indeed he still is. This is not going away," Woodward said. "What's going to happen to the Democratic Party? Who's going to be president? And will Trump resurface? I think we've — in our reporting and talked about it, pretty clear Trump is going to run and some polls show he could beat Biden."

"They haven't charged me yet, by the time they do and I stall the trials I could be president again."

"Besides, I need a forum in order to keep up the grift. I am hemorrhaging money."

"So I can relate with the minions, my debt is killing me."
 

printer

Well-Known Member
Eric Trump lawyer in New York attorney general's fraud case quits
A lawyer for Eric Trump in New York Attorney General Letitia James’s (D) fraud investigation into the Trump Organization has withdrawn from representing the former president's son in the case, court records reveal.

In a court document dated last Tuesday, attorney Marc Mukasey withdrew his appearance as counsel for Trump. Trump will continue to be represented by attorney Alan Futerfas.

News of Mukasey’s withdrawal was first reported by Forbes. Mukasey declined to comment on the record to Forbes.


The Hill has reached out to Mukasey and representatives of the Trump Organization for comment.

James’s office said in August 2020 that it was investigating whether former President Trump illegally inflated assets in order to attract investors and earn loans. This came after Michael Cohen, the former president’s former attorney, testified to Congress that his then-client lied about the value of his assets in order to get loans, lower insurance rates and tax breaks.

The most recent court document in the case was filed in September, according to court records. Most recently, a judge ordered a document in the case to be sealed on Sept. 13.

Forbes noted that Mukasey has represented Eric Trump since the case was filed last year.

Mukasey, once a federal prosecutor and law partner of Rudy Giuliani, has represented Navy SEAL Eddie Gallagher, who was found not guilty of murder in the death of a 17-year-old ISIS captive. Mukasey was hired by Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) in April amid a Justice Department probe into allegations of having an inappropriate relationship with a minor.

Mukasey was going through the books to fight the case and he added up the numbers. "Shit. I'm probably not going to get paid for this."
 

captainmorgan

Well-Known Member

printer

Well-Known Member
Must piss him off.

General says Trump's red, white and blue Air Force One design not locked in
A top Air Force general said on Tuesday that former President Trump’s preferred red, white and blue Air Force One design has not been locked in as the iconic aircraft readies for an upgrade.

Lt. Gen. Duke Richardson said during a press conference at the Air Force Association’s annual Air, Space, and Cyber conference that the new Air Force One designs will be decided closer to when the planes are ready, Defense One reported.

“At some point, when the build proceeds to where it needs to be, Boeing will come to the government and ask for a final decision on the paint,” Richarson said. “Then when that happens, we'll work that.”

The red, white and blue designs have been in the Air Force’s official budget request, including in Biden’s 2022 budget report, but Richardson said those designs are not set in stone, according to Defense One.

“It's a cartoon — it's not a real airplane,” Richardson said. “It's just something that's on a paper.”

The final paint plans were presented by the Pentagon in February of 2020 but were still said to be up in the air as the design wouldn’t be fully approved until 2021.
 

printer

Well-Known Member
Trump Sues Niece, NY Times Over Pulitzer-Winning Tax Story
Former President Donald Trump filed a $100 million lawsuit against his estranged niece Mary Trump and The New York Times, alleging they engaged in "an insidious plot" to obtain his tax returns for the paper's Pulitzer Prize-winning investigation of his finances.

The lawsuit, filed Tuesday in Dutchess County, New York, says that New York Times reporters Susanne Craig, David Barstow, and Russ Buettner conducted "an extensive crusade to obtain Donald J. Trump's confidential tax records."

"The defendants engaged in an insidious plot to obtain confidential and highly-sensitive records which they exploited for their own benefit and utilized as a means of falsely legitimizing their publicized works," the lawsuit says, alleging they were "motivated by a personal vendetta."

The New York Times and the three journalists won the Pulitzer in 2019 for their investigation of the Trump family's finances, which the Pulitzer Prize Board said "debunked his claims of self-made wealth and revealed a business empire riddled with tax dodges."

The newspaper's story alleged that Trump had received more than $400 million in today's terms from his father's real estate empire, much of it through fraudulent tax schemes.

In her no-holds-barred 2020 memoir, "Too Much and Never Enough: How My Family Created the World's Most Dangerous Man," she revealed that she was the primary source for the New York Times investigation.

Trump's 27-page lawsuit asserts that the New York Times reporters "relentlessly sought out his niece, Mary L. Trump, and convinced her to smuggle the records out of her attorney's office and turn them over to The Times."

The lawsuit alleges that, by providing information, Mary Trump was in violation of a nondisclosure agreement signed in 2001 after a settlement over the estate of Donald Trump's father, Fred Trump Sr.

In a statement quoted by NBC, Mary Trump called her uncle "a loser." "It's desperation. The walls are closing in and he is throwing anything against the wall that he thinks will stick," she said.
"As is always the case with Donald, he'll try and change the subject."

"The Times's coverage of Donald Trump's taxes helped inform citizens through meticulous reporting on a subject of overriding public interest," Danielle Rhoades Ha, a spokeswoman for the paper, said in a statement quoted by U.S. media.

"This lawsuit is an attempt to silence independent news organizations and we plan to vigorously defend against it."
 

captainmorgan

Well-Known Member
Just like his 4 years in office was a car wreck.


 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
Just like his 4 years in office was a car wreck.


There is a joke in there somewhere about how the 3 car pileup is less of a wreck than the people driving that travesty.
 

printer

Well-Known Member
Trump lawyers argue Twitter service agreement does not apply to him
Lawyers for former President Trump argued in a court filing submitted Wednesday that Twitter's service agreement does not apply to him as part of an attempt to get the former president back on the platform.

The filing, which was submitted on behalf of Trump and several others against Twitter and its CEO, argues that the terms of service agreement did not apply to Trump “as the 45th President of the United States.”

The lawsuit claims that Trump “repeatedly used his account to report to the Citizens of the United States on virtually every aspect of Presidential activity” and was used as “a key channel for official communication.” The filing demonstrated that Twitter made clear in its terms of service agreement that it did not apply to government entities if they are unable to control law, jurisdiction or venue clauses.

“One thing is undeniably clear in this case: Plaintiff’s account was a government account, and not a private one when he was censored,” Trump’s lawyers said in the filing.

The filing was submitted by Trump’s lawyers in an effort to stop the case from being moved from Florida to California. According to Twitter’s current terms of service agreement, “All disputes related to these Terms or the Services will be brought solely in the federal or state courts located in San Francisco County, California, United States, and you consent to personal jurisdiction and waive any objection as to inconvenient forum.”

The filing states that the “plaintiffs respectfully submit that as California has no particular interest in how Florida regulates businesses within its borders, California courts should not be burdened with enforcing Florida’s laws, and matters concerning Florida consumers should not be vested in the care of Californian jurors.”

The lawyers also say in the filing that “Plaintiffs’ access to resources to conduct extensive litigation in Northern California are limited.”
John Coale, the lead counsel for Trump and the additional plaintiffs, told The Hill that because Tump was banned while a sitting president and not as a private citizen, the terms of agreement do not apply to Trump.
 

captainmorgan

Well-Known Member
BREAKING: Biden announces that he will give the January 6 Committee the records showing EXACTLY what Trump and his aides did the day of the insurrection, despite Trump's shameless attempts to cover it all up by claiming “executive privilege."
 
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