Showing posts with label wife. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wife. Show all posts

Saturday, April 2, 2022

September 10, 2020: Trump: A Man with "No Moral Compass."

 

9/10/20: The president and his band of enablers spend a hectic day trying to explain away the damaging revelations included in Bob Woodward’s latest book. Several news agencies have advanced copies and begin quoting select passages from a work titled simply, Rage.

 

(This blogger is definitely buying one Tuesday, when the book goes on sale.)

 

If the quoted passages and stories are indicative of the full portrait Woodward paints, it may stand as the most damning work ever written about a U.S. president. It certainly should be enough to give even ardent Trump supporters pause on November 3.

 

(Okay, we know it won’t.)


 

____________________

 

Mattis would pray for the country every Sunday.

____________________


 

 

First, remember, President Trump agreed to go on record in talking to Woodward. So, we often get Trump unfiltered. That is: Trump at his manic, lying, bragging, ill-informed best. Or: his worst.

 

Woodward sums up the man in full, writing that Trump has “enshrined personal impulse as a governing principle of his presidency.”

 

At one point, Trump makes clear to the journalist (he called Woodward a “whack job” on Thursday, after hearing some of what he wrote) that one of his main goals as president has been to undo Obama’s accomplishments: “Ninety percent of the things he’s done, I’ve taken apart,” Trump boasts. Policy differences from one administration to another are to be expected. For Trump this is more than policy or the give-and-take of partisan politics. It’s personal. It’s an obsession. He hates his predecessor. He can’t help himself. And if that means he must stand on a pile of wreckage that will represent his presidential monument in the end, he gladly will. Smash Obamacare. Bulldoze DACA. Withdraw from the Iran deal, all of these with nothing to show for the effort. Quit the Paris Climate Accord.

 

Watch the world burn, like Nero writ large. Like Nero, take pride in your fiddle-playing expertise.


 

Woodward also has many who worked in Trump’s administration on record, including several who have not spoken out before. Secretary of Defense James Mattis would go to church every Sunday and pray for the country, Woodward writes, not just in the normal way, but knowing the danger his boss represented.

 

True to an unspoken code in this country, Mattis said when he resigned his cabinet post in 2018, that he owed his commander-in-chief a period of silence. It is tradition, in this country, that generals and admirals do not undermine civilian leadership, as in your typical banana republic.

 

Mattis had warned that his silence would not be permanent. Woodward puts him on record, describing Trump as both “dangerous” and “unfit.”


 

*

 

THESE AREN’T ANONYMOUS SOURCES, as Trump’s lackies said just days ago, in trying to blunt the damage done by stark revelations in The Atlantic (see: 9/5/20 and 9/6/20). These are men who worked for Trump, who were chosen by Trump.

 

These voices tell us what should be obvious to all by now. Trump is a liar. Even worse, he’s the kind of liar who falls for his own lies.

 

Woodward includes a telling anecdote involving Dan Coats’s wife. At a dinner one evening, Marsha Coats sits next to Vice President Mike Pence. Appalled by what she has seen of the president, and what she has heard about him behind the scenes, “I just looked at him, like, how are you stomaching this?” she tells Woodward. “I just looked at him like, this is horrible. I mean, we made eye contact. I think he understood. And he just whispered in my ear, ‘Stay the course.’”

 

Vice President Pence might have the capacity to hold his nose and back the president in the name of policy or personal gain.

 

It’s hard for others to ignore the stench wafting from the Offal Office.

 

 

“Truth is no longer governing the White House.”

 

A reporter for Business Insider picked out some of Mattis’s other comments from the Woodward book. It has long been known that Mattis and the president disagreed about policy. Normal in any administration. But Mattis came to see Trump as a danger to the nation. Like many of us, watching from the sidelines, watching up close, he found it impossible to understand why Trump kept picking fights with allies, while sucking up to some of the world’s worst dictators.

 

What we’re doing is we’re actually showing [emphasis added, unless otherwise noted] how to destroy America,” he says of his old boss. “That’s what we’re showing [our enemies]. How to isolate us from all of our allies. How to take us down.”

 

Mattis is not the first survivor of this administration to describe the president as ill-informed. He is one of the most potent. Trump “doesn’t understand,” Mattis tells Woodward. The president “has no mental framework for these things. He hasn’t read.” In one brutal passage, Mattis vents to Dan Coats, Trump’s Director of National Intelligence. “The president,” he says, “has no moral compass.” Coats doesn’t disagree. He doesn’t try to calm his colleague.

 

“True,” he replies. “To him, a lie is not a lie. It’s just what he thinks. He doesn’t know the difference between the truth and a lie.”

 

Coats is as true a conservative as ever lived, a Republican, heart and soul. Yet during his entire tenure as Director of National Intelligence, he finds it impossible to shake the feeling that Vladimir Putin “had something” on Trump. There seemed no other way to explain the president’s reluctance to confront one of America’s most dangerous rivals. “He suspected the worst but found nothing that would show Trump was indeed in Putin’s pocket,” Woodward writes. “There was no proof, period. But Coats’s doubts continued, never fully dissipating.” 

Trump’s own words, in this regard, are deeply troubling. He may not be able to get along with Merkel of Germany, or Macron of France, two of our top allies. Yet he fits in well with the authoritarian crowd. “It’s funny, the relationships I have, the tougher and meaner they are, the better I get along with them,” the president tells Woodward. “You know? Explain that to me someday, okay?”

 

I would argue that Gen. Mattis already has. Trump is a man with no moral compass. He has no overarching goals or principles, except to do and say whatever he has to do and say to make himself look good.


 

In eighteen separate interviews – all on tape – the president reveals who he is. The picture is ugly. After the Saudis murder the Washington Post writer, Jamal Khashoggi, and cut his corpse up with a bone saw, Trump does not stand up for the free press in a contest with killers. He does not seem to know that Khashoggi’s children are U.S. citizens and deserve support. When U.S. intelligence agencies make clear there could be no murder without the approval of Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, Trump refuses to face the fact. He brags to Woodward, saying of the Prince, “I saved his ass.”

 

“I was able to get Congress to leave him alone,” Trump said. “I was able to get them to stop.” 

Trump stopped lawmakers from slapping Saudi Arabia with stiff sanctions, arguing in part that the Saudis bought billions of dollars’ worth of U.S. weapons. So what if they cut up a reporter? 

No moral compass. 

None. 

 

Quoting a mass murder to denigrate a former U.S. president? 

Even weirder, if possible, is Trump’s love affair with Kim Jong-un of North Korea. While Trump may rage about our relationship with South Korea, and insist we’re “suckers” for defending our allies, he tells Woodward that he and Kim, a bloody killer, have some kind of chemistry. “You meet a woman. In one second, you know whether or not it’s going to happen.” 

(Just be glad Trump didn’t try to grab Kim’s pussy.)

 

“I don’t think Obama’s smart,” Trump tells Woodward at one point. “I think he’s highly overrated. And I don’t think he’s a great speaker.” Trump adds, as if in validation, that Kim Jong-un thought Obama was “an asshole.” 

Quoting a mass murder to denigrate a former U.S. president? Something is fundamentally wrong, at his core, with Donald J. Trump. 

Trump tells Woodward that he was awestruck meeting the North Korean dictator for the first time in 2018, thinking to himself, “Holy shit,” and finding Kim to be “far beyond smart.” Trump bragged that Kim “tells me everything.” That included a graphic account of Kim having his uncle killed. 

CNN plucked another bizarre episode from the pages of Rage: 

A week later, on December 13, 2019, when Woodward returned to interview the President again, Trump was still fixated on the photos [he had of his meeting with Kim] and insisted on giving Woodward a poster-sized print of Trump and Kim.

 

“Do you have a round thing for this so he can take it? Or even a rubber band or something. Because you can’t fold it, you’ll ruin it. I don’t even know why I’m giving it to you. That’s my only one,” Trump said.

 

Some people teenage boys want posters of super models and sports icons to grace their walls. 

Trump? 

How would you like a poster of him and the guy who has starved millions of his people, and slaughtered critics with anti-aircraft guns?

  

“Like a minus number.” 

Woodward manages to get the normally discreet Dr. Anthony Fauci on record, though until I see the book, I suspect he has been quoted second hand. In one meeting with top health officials, including people like Dr. Robert Redfield, head of the CDC, Dr. Fauci says that in dealing with the coronavirus, the president’s attention span “is like a minus number.” He warns the others that Trump “is on a separate channel.” The president, he says, is “rudderless.” According to Woodward, Dr. Fauci came to believe that Trump’s “sole purpose was to get reelected.”

 

Perhaps most telling, and most damaging, are Trump’s own words on his handling (or mishandling) of the coronavirus crisis. In a recorded conversation on February 7, Trump makes it clear he knows the virus is deadly. “You just breathe the air and that’s how it’s passed,” he says. “And so that’s a very tricky one. That’s a very delicate one. It’s also more deadly than even your strenuous flus.” 

“This is deadly stuff,” the president repeats for emphasis.

 

Trump’s defenders will try to blame Dr. Fauci and others for giving the president bad advice in those early days of crisis. Here we have Trump explaining that the disease is easily spread through the air. It’s far more dangerous than flu. Yet when Trump speaks in public, he will discount wearing masks for months. He will tell the nation that COVID-19 is in fact no worse than flu. His supporters will hear his words – will repeat them and spread them like a second kind of virus. Rush Limbaugh and the fools who pose as pundits at Fox News will pick up the story and spread it as surely as a sick patient spreads disease by coughing on a nurse. Hundreds of healthcare workers will be infected and die. Millions of Americans will be infected. Nearly 200,000 will die. Other nations will face the threat with clear eyes and honest leadership and handle it with greater success. 

In fact, Trump admits in a March 19 call to Woodward that he has deliberately minimized the danger. “I wanted to always play it down,” he tells the reporter. “I still like playing it down, because I don’t want to create a panic.”

 

The danger Americans face is acute. In April, at the same time he is calling on states to reopen, he warns Woodward about the virus. “It’s so easily transmissible, you wouldn’t even believe it.” 

Thursday, with all these damaging revelations dominating the news, Trump picks that one word, “panic” from his conversations with the author. He claims that even though he knew how the disease spread, how easily, how dangerous it was, he was discounting the danger because he wanted the American people to remain calm. 

By the way, let’s show up for big rallies and celebrations, and wear our red MAGA hats, but not masks. 

As Mattis and Coats and many others who have seen Trump up close, could tell us, the president was going to lie. 

And, once again, he had. 

It didn’t matter to Trump if tens of thousands of Americans died. His only purpose was to win a second term.

 

* 

FINALLY, a minor matter to discuss, but a telling one, nevertheless. Woodward himself learned how ill-informed Trump could be, or perhaps how happy he was to lie. “I’m number one on Twitter,” he boasted during one conversation. “When you’re number one and when you have hundreds of millions of people, whether they’re against you or not they still read what you say,” Trump continued. On Twitter, actually, he has 88.5 million “followers” and that includes people like me, who only go to his threads to find out how insane he sounds. 

It would no doubt pain the president to know that his nemesis, Barack Obama, has 122.4 million followers on Twitter. 

(Trump also trails a number of celebrities, including Justin Bieber, Katy Perry, Rihanna, and Taylor Swift.)

 

Often, in their conversations, Trump is suspicious about what Woodward will do with what he says. “You’re probably going to screw me,” the president predicts. “You know, because that’s the way it goes.” 

On the contrary, from what we know of the book so far, the president screws himself. He reveals himself. 

“When his performance as president is taken in its entirety,” Woodward finally writes, “I can only reach one conclusion: Trump is the wrong man for the job.” 

 

POSTSCRIPT: Even the Taliban have the brains to wear masks in a time of COVID-19, and their only profession is murder.



 

 

Above, a Trump crowd, from a September 10 tweet by the bombastic liar, President Donald J. Trump. 

 

A reporter for The New York Times tweets another picture of this rally, noting that not one in ten in the audience is wearing a mask. Security tracks her down, using her picture, and has her thrown out.

 

Putin and Kim and their ilk would understand the president’s impulse to stifle the free press.

 

Give Trump a second term. Maybe we’ll have anti-aircraft guns and bone saws in the next four years.

Monday, March 28, 2022

December 1, 2020: Trump Lawyer Jenna Ellis once Told the Truth

 

December 1, 2020: Lame Duck Don has fifty days left to squander in office. Making the most of his time, the White House calendar for today reads: “The President has no public events scheduled.” 

A quick check shows that’s the sixteenth day since the election, where Trump has remained (essentially) in hiding.

 

* 

THE TRUMP CAMPAIGN continues to wage a losing battle on multiple legal fronts in an effort to overturn election results.

 

____________________ 

“I’m fearful for the republic right now.” 

Jordan Harbinger, conservative podcast host, talking about Trump

____________________

  

Given the current situation, Trump campaign lawyer Joe diGenova tells a radio host that sprinkling the tree of liberty with a little gore might be a excellent idea. That situation being: Trump losing the vote in six critical swing states. 

Since Christopher Krebs, the former head of the Department of Homeland Security’s cybersecurity unit, keeps insisting the election was one of the most secure in U.S. history, diGenova has a novel idea. “That guy is a Class-A moron,” he tells his host. “He should be drawn and quartered. Taken out at dawn and shot.” 

Krebs was appointed by Donald Trump – and then fired by Donald Trump when he insisted, based on all the evidence his cybersecurity unit could find, that the November election was not, in fact, rigged.



Drawn and quartered.


 

We already knew that Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, who the president called an “enemy of the people” for upholding Georgia vote returns, had faced death threats, as had his wife. 

So diGenova’s suggestion probably didn’t help.

 

* 

SINCE THIS BLOGGER IS RETIRED, and also recovering from COVID-19, which precludes getting most yard work done, he has plenty of time to study the story of the Trump campaign and its efforts to overturn the vote. One of Trump’s key lawyers in this fight is Jenna Ellis. 

A tip from a friend told me it would be fun to turn back time to 2016, when Trump was just a lame-assed candidate running for president, and find out what Ellis thought about her current boss back then. 

Once again, CNN did what any news network could have done and this blogger did to get the story straight. They went to Ellis’s old social media posts and they (and I) replayed old radio appearances from February 2016. Even People magazine did due diligence in this regard.  

 

In one old Twitter post, from March 2016, it was discovered that Ms. Ellis had referred to Candidate Trump as an unethical, corrupt, lying, criminal, dirtbag.” 

In another post she wrote, “I could spend a full-time job just responding to the ridiculously illogical, inconsistent, and blatantly stupid arguments supporting Trump. But here’s the thing: his supporters DON’T CARE about facts or logic. They aren’t seeking truth.” 

In a radio interview from that period, Ellis talked about the candidate and warned, “his crazy is coming out.” Her host, Jordan Harbinger, agreed. “I’m fearful for the republic right now,” he said. Ellis wondered, if Trump won the Republican nomination, how “we’re going to preserve the republic.”

 

It’s a conservative talk show. So, Harbinger mentions two dictator wannabes. Obama, of course, is one. 

Trump is the other. 

“This guy can’t take criticism,” the host says of Candidate Donald. Ellis agrees. She calls Trump a “typical bully” (go to around the 19:30 mark on the tape to hear). The host plays a recording of the candidate at one of his rallies, threatening to make it easier to sue newspapers for libel if elected. “That is about one of the scariest things, and you know what’s even scarier than what he said?” Harbinger asks. 

“Is there something that’s scarier than that?” Ellis interjects. 

Yes, he says, “The crowd’s reaction.” 

Ellis agrees. 

“That’s the sound of liberty dying,” Harbinger posits. “It is,” Ellis agrees. 

“That’s the sound of a dictator taking over,” he says.

 

Ellis warns that people don’t understand that “this is going against the First Amendment right to free speech, right to freedom of the press, that the government doesn’t give us that right, it’s an unalienable right.” 

Harbinger asks Ellis, in a joking reference to Trump, “Why do you hate the Supreme Leader?” 

“I still value my First Amendment rights,” she replies. 

 

“He wants to go against the Constitution.” 

Just before the 28:00 minute mark, Harbinger wonders if Trump should he be elected can “work within the confines of the Constitution?” 

“I don’t think he wants to,” Ellis replies. She doesn’t think Trump is stupid. She admits he has run a strong campaign. But “he wants to go against the Constitution.” 

Ellis  explains that as a lawyer, her value is that she can explain to clients, predict, what will happen if they go to court. She says if she went before a judge “that was as insane as Trump” it would be impossible to know what the outcome would be. Around the 37:00 minute mark, she warns that Ted Cruz and Marco Rubio, the only GOP candidates left who still had a viable chance to stop Trump, really needed to focus on “how unpredictable and insane this guy is.” 

Four years later, here we are. 

Ellis is fighting to win the insane guy and the guy she called a threat to the First Amendment and the Constitution a second term. 

Truly insane. 


* 

“Hung for treason.” 

DOWN IN GEORGIA, Gabriel Sterling, a top election official under Republican Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, pleads for Trump to chill his fiery rhetoric. “Someone’s going to get hurt, someone’s going to get shot, someone’s going to get killed,” Sterling warns. “It’s not right.”

 

He cites a Twitter thread that accused a young technician working on the Georgia recount of altering votes. This led to his identity being released online and calls for him to be “hung for treason.”

 

Sterling explains that the young tech was “transferring a report on batches of votes from an EMS to a county computer so he could read it.” 

“His family is getting harassed now. There’s a noose out there with his name on it. And it's not right,” he continues. “I’ve got police protection outside my house. Fine. You know, I took a higher-profile job. I get it, the secretary [Georgia Sec. of State Brad Raffensperger] ran for office; his wife knew that, too. This kid took a job. He just took a job, and it’s just wrong.”

 

“It has to stop,” Sterling adds. “Mr. President, you have not condemned these actions or this language. Senators [Loeffler and Perdue], you have not condemned this language or these actions. This has to stop. We need you to step up. And if you take a position of leadership, show some.”

 

Tuesday afternoon, NPR reports,

 

police were called to a Gwinnett County location where a man who was live-streaming video followed workers he believed were secretly transporting voting machines in violation of a court order. In the video, an officer explained that boxes were full of office phones and told the man he was trespassing.

 

(If a young technician got killed, Trump wouldn’t care a bit.)

 

Meanwhile, unproven allegations that Dominion Voting Systems machines were rigged against the Orange God, lead to crazy right-wing types putting a $1,000,000 bounty on the head of Dr. Eric Coomer, security director for the company. 

(Trump, the “law and order” president, wouldn’t care if he got murdered, too.) 

 

POSTSCRIPT: We know Ellis has been having a hard time telling the difference between rivers and trees (see: 11/29/20), and deducing the difference between Teddy Roosevelt and any other president, including Donald J. Trump. 

Recently she posted this: 

 

It wasn’t long before numerous experts informed her that no one had ever heard this Teddy quote before. 

Ms. Ellis defended her use of the fake quote, insisting, “I posted it because the ifea [sic] is true, whether or not he said it!” 

So, allow me to post my own fake quote. It’s from Abraham Lincoln. “Four score and some other bunch of years ago, we brought forth a megalomaniac as our president. And his name was Trump. With malice for everyone except his base, he proved to be a really terrible president.” 

The “ifea” is true, whether or not Mr. Lincoln ever said it. 

 

FAKE FUN FACT: Just when you can’t imagine that President Trump can sink any lower, he manages again. This time, he claims that an emergency hospital ward, set up in Reno, Nevada, to treat an overflow of COVID-19 patients, is “fake” and only meant to make him look bad. 

“Fake election results in Nevada, also!” Trump tweets, along with a ward filled with beds, but no patients. 

(The next day, the doctor in the picture Trump shared, to “prove” the overflow ward was fake explains that it would have been a violation of HIPAA and patient privacy laws to show patients. Which you might think some White House aide, or even Dr. Scott Atlas (see: 12/2/200, could have told him. 

Dr. Jacob Keeperman, the doctor in question, doesn’t exactly say it, but you know he’s thinking it: Trump is a soulless douche bag. CDC reports that 2,465 Americans die from the coronavirus on December 1.