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Monthly Archives: August 2021
Reality Might Be a Simulation, Scientists Think Its Possible to Find out for Sure – Road to VR
Posted: August 28, 2021 at 11:48 am
If youre interested in VR, youve probably thought at least once or twice about the simulation hypothesisthe idea that we might actually already be living in a virtual reality world. Many people are passingly familiar with the idea, especially thanks to films likeThe Matrix, and its been a topic among philosophersin some form or anotherfor perhaps more than a millenium. But did you know that scientists actually think it may be possible to experimentally verify if were living in a simulation?
The simulation hypothesis was boiled down into a useful thought experiment by University of Oxford philosopher Nick Bostrom in a 2003 paper titledAre You Living in a Computer Simulation?which was published in the peer-reviewed Philosophical Quarterly journal.
In the paper, Bostrom explores the idea thatgiven existing trends in computing powera far future posthuman civilization will likely wieldimmense computing powerenough to be easily capable of running simulations of billions of universes just like ours. He raises the question: if we think humanity will one day be capable of simulating billions of universes isnt it likely that were already living in one of those billions of simulations rather than being real ourselves?
Its an intriguing formulation of the simulation hypothesis thats frankly quite difficult to argue against. Bostroms paper has spurred serious discussion about the topic; its been cited by more than 1,000 other academic papers since its publication.
Beyond philosophers, scientists have taken the simulation hypothesis seriously too, especially in the mysterious realm of quantum physics. Several papers have hypothesized ways of actually testing if our reality is a simulation.
In the 2012 paper Constraints on the Universe as a Numerical Simulation, published in the peer-reviewed European Physical Journal A, physicists Silas R. Beane,Zohreh Davoudi, andMartin J. Savage write that recent developments in simulating quantum interactions point toward a future where a full-fledged universe simulation is possible, which suggests that experimental searches for evidence that our universe is, in fact, a simulation are both interesting and logical.
According to the authors, quantum computing looks like a reasonable foundation for simulating an entire universe. But like any program, a simulated universe will have some fundamental limitations of precision. If our reality is based on a quantum computing simulation, the authors argue, we should be able to predict some of those fundamental limitations and then go searching for them in nature.
Specifically the authors say theyre looking at the possibility that the simulations [] employ an underlying cubic lattice structure, which is foundationally similar to small-scale quantum computing-based simulations that humanity is capable of running today. If we could observe limitations in our reality that are consistent with an underlying lattice structure for space-time, instead of a continuous space-time, the authors say it could be evidence that our universe is indeed a simulation.
The authors leave us with a tantalizing conclusionthat it may be impossible for a simulation to be fully hidden from its subjects.
[] assuming that the universe is finite and therefore the resources of potential simulators are finite, then a volume containing a simulation will be finite and a lattice spacing must be non-zero, and therefore in principle there always remains the possibility for the simulated to discover the simulators.
In the 2017 paperOn Testing the Simulation Theory, published in the peer-reviewed International Journal of Quantum Foundations, authorsTom Campbell, Houman Owhadi, Joe Sauvageau, and David Watkinson start with a similar premise to the above conclusionthat a simulated universe likely operates with finite resources. If thats the case, they argue, we should be looking for evidence that the behavior of our universe is consistent with a simulation optimized for computing performance.
The paper introduces a concept that will be familiar to game developersas a matter of optimization to run a game with finite computing power, games only render what the player can see at any given moment. Anything more would be a waste that would drastically slow down the game.
The authors point out that physicists are already aware of a feature of the universe that seems suspiciously similar to rendering a game only where the player is looking. That would be the so-called Wave Function Collapse, in which fundamental particles appear to act as wave functions up until the point that they are observed, at which point their wave characteristics collapse and into predictable particle interactions.
The paper lays out a number of specific variations of the perplexing Double-slit Experiment, that are designed to isolate the precise role of the observer in determining the experimental outcome. The ultimate goal of the experiments is to look for a situation in which the universe would change its behavior in order to avoid creating a paradox. If this was observed, the authors argue, it would be an indicator of a VR engine [simulated universe] reacting to the intent of the experiment.
Further the authors suggest that finding a conflict between likely requirements of any such simulation (logical consistency and avoidance of detection) could reveal observations consistent with a simulated universe.
Two strategies can be followed to test the simulation theory: (1) Test the moment of rendering; (2) Exploit conflicting requirement of logical consistency preservation and detection avoidance to force the VR rendering engine to create discontinuities in its rendering or produce a measurable signature event within our reality that indicates that our reality must be simulated, the authors write.
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Donald Trump booed at Alabama rally after encouraging his …
Posted: at 11:48 am
Former President Donald Trump addresses supporters during a "Save America" rally at York Family Farms on August 21, 2021 in Cullman, Alabama. Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images
Former President Donald Trump told the crowd at an Alabama rally to "take the vaccines."
This suggestion was met with boos from some of his supporters, a video shows.
Trump was vaccinated against COVID-19 in January 2021, but the US public didn't learn about it until March.
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Former President Donald Trump was booed by some of his supporters at a "Save America" rally in Cullman, Alabama, on Saturday night after he suggested that they get vaccinated against COVID-19.
"I believe totally in your freedoms, I do, you've got to do what you've got to do," Trump said to the crowd. "But I recommend that you take the vaccines."
The former president then told his supporters that the vaccines are "good" and once again encouraged them to get a shot.
This suggestion was met with boos, as can be heard in a video shared by Vox journalist Aaron Rupar.
"You've got your freedoms," Trump responded to the jeers. "But I happened to take the vaccine."
Watch: Chris Cuomo compares Biden to Trump for 'feigning' Afghan withdrawal 'could not have gone better'
Once the booing died down, the former president joked that the crowd would be the "first to know" if the COVID-19 vaccines didn't work.
Read more: Trump boasts that he 'single-handedly' selected Alabama as the new location for Space Command, frustrating Colorado politicians who previously criticized the relocation
Trump's speech follows the news that his allies were trying to get him to run a pro-vaccination campaign, the Daily Beast reported.
According to the media outlet, Trump was initially reluctant and worried that promoting vaccines would be unpopular with his supporters and help President Joe Biden.
Trump has previously praised the vaccines, saying that they were "saving the world," but has repeatedly said that people should be able to exercise their "freedoms," Forbes reported.
The former president got vaccinated at the White House in January 2021, though the American public didn't learn about it until March.
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Melania Trump to divorce former US president Donald Trump …
Posted: at 11:48 am
Former US president Donald Trump celebrated his 75th birthday on Monday and the event was a low-key affair. Trump marked his 75th birthday with a dinner at the Trump National Golf Club in Bedminster, New Jersey.
Donald Trump Jr, the son of former US president, took to his Instagram account to share some photos of the birthday party. The guests included Donald Jr.s girlfriend Kimberly Guilfoyle, former NFL star Herschel Walker, Indiana congressman Jim Banks and Colorado congresswoman Lauren Boebert.
The most notable absentee was Donald Trump's wife and former First Lady, Melania Trump.
Ex-wife Ivana Trump once said in an interview that "Donald hates his birthdays", and a source also told People magazine that Melania "keeps her own schedule and leads her own life" away from her husband.
The absence of Melania has once again sparked the divorce rumors between the couple but writer Kristyn Burtt said that it is wrong to say that Melania has decided to part ways with Donald Trump.
She said: "She did that at the start of his administration when she and son Barron remained in New York City so he could finish out the school year before they moved to Washington, D.C. The couple has very different hobbies and seems to prefer their independent activities, but no one should read too much into her absence. This shouldnt be seen as a sign that there is trouble in their marriage."
Notably, the only family members who were present during Donald Trump's 75th birthday celebration were Donald Jr. and his girlfriend. Daughter Ivanka Trump was also not present at the event.
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Trump’s niece says he will run for president in 2024, but there will be no Trump political dynasty because his children lack charisma – Yahoo News
Posted: at 11:48 am
Mary Trump said that Ivanka Trump, her first cousin, is more concerned with "reemerging into New York high society" than a political future. St Martin's Press, Getty Images
Former President Donald Trump will run for president in 2024 but his children lack the "charisma" necessary to launch political careers and create a political dynasty, according to estranged family member Mary Trump.
Speaking to Insider following the release of her new book, "The Reckoning: Our nation's trauma and finding a way to heal," Mary Trump said that all signs now point to her uncle running for office again.
"If you'd asked me if he'd run again in December, I would have said definitely not because he had just been humiliated and wouldn't put himself in that position again," she said. "But things have changed."
Read more: Where is Trump's White House staff now? We created a searchable database of 329 ex-top staffers to show where they all landed.
Mary Trump told Insider that her uncle's recent behavior is indicative of someone trying to rehabilitate their reputation in time for a presidential race. "He's still spreading his 'Big Lie,'" she said. This refers to a phrase used to describe Republican misinformation about the 2020 election.
"He's also now spreading the second big lie," she continued. "This is that the insurrection of January 6 wasn't a big deal."
The "most troubling" sign that her uncle intends to run for president, Mary Trump continued, is that there are "hundreds of voter suppression bills" winding their way through state legislatures.
According to the Brennan Center for Justice, as of June 21, 2021, 17 states have enacted 28 new laws that restrict access to the vote. At least 61 bills with restrictive voting provisions are now moving through 18 state legislatures, the public policy institute's research said.
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"If the Republicans in any given state can make it harder or impossible for certain kinds of people to vote, like people of color or college students, then Donald might realize that if he ran again, he couldn't lose because the system would have been rigged to favor him," Mary Trump said.
She added that her uncle is unlikely to participate in a race he doesn't think he'd be able to win. "He's a coward and he'll never engage in a fair fight," she said. "He'll only engage if he's convinced that through cheating, lying, and stealing that he can win."
The now-ostracized family member told Insider that "legal jeopardy," specifically the New York criminal investigation into the Trump organization, could both incentivize and hamper his ability to run.
"Remember, he's 75, not in good health, and there are the criminal investigations into him," she said. "Hopefully, something will interfere with his ability to run but, if all things are equal, he will."
Read more: Trump's cleared to live in Mar-a-Lago permanently and his son just bought a new mansion nearby. Here's a peek inside the family's Florida bubble.
As for the rumors that some of the former president's children - Ivanka, Eric, and Donald Jr. - could one day launch their own political careers, Mary Trump said that she thinks this is unlikely.
"The only thing you can really say about Donald is that he does have a kind of charisma that appeals, apparently, to ... people in this country," she said. "There's nobody else on the right who has that charisma, and certainly none of his children."
Mary Trump said that she believes Ivanka Trump, her first cousin, is focused on other pursuits. "I think she and her husband are more interested in staying away long enough in the hopes that people forget what horrible human beings they are, and then they have this fantasy that they're going to be able to reemerge into New York high society or something," she remarked.
Mary Trump's latest book, "The Reckoning: Our Nation's Trauma and Finding a Way To Heal," was published in August by St. Martin's Press.
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Trump claims Kabul explosion wouldn’t have happened if he were president – The Jerusalem Post
Posted: at 11:48 am
The explosion at the Kabul airport - which killed at least 72 Afghans and 13 US service members - would never have occurred if he were president, Former US President Donald Trump said in a statement that was sent to Fox News and later posted Friday on social media.
In his speech, he started by giving his condolences to the families and friends of the terror attack victims.
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"These noble American warriors laid down their lives in the line of duty. They sacrificed themselves for the country they loved. Racing against time to rescue their fellow citizens from harm's way."
Shortly after these remarks, the former president made the political statement claiming that the terror attack would not have happened had he won the 2020 presidential election against Joe Biden.
"This tragedy should never have taken place, it should never have happened, and it would not have happened if I was your president," Trump remarked.
The ISIS jihadist terror group claimed responsibility for the attack.
Simcha Pasko, Anna Ahronheim and Reuters contributed to this report.
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Donald Trump and His Allies Trapped by Doctrine of Conformity They Created – Newsweek
Posted: at 11:48 am
Donald Trump's rallies are raucous occasions, his speeches accentuated by the sound of supportive cheers and loving chants.
With such adoration typically aimed at the former president by his devoted base, the sound of boos at a recent Alabama rally was an unfamiliar one.
Both he and Rep. Mo Brooks (R-AL) were the targets of such jeersTrump after encouraging people to get the COVID vaccine and the congressman for suggesting people should move on from the 2020 election.
The latter has since backtracked on his comments and said he continues to support audits of the last election following the instantaneous backlash.
Trump, who wants credit for the development of vaccines, cannot so easily renege on his comments. But he might be advised to temper his remarks in the future.
This back and forth could continue into other hot-button topics as Trump tries to maintain the intense relationship with his supporters. While Trump wants his base to remain devoted to himthey've made it clear they demand uncritical loyalty back.
"Trump and the Republicans who blindly supported him have created a monster they can no longer control," Brian Klaas, an associate professor in global politics at University College London, told Newsweek.
Klaas suggested that Trump's base of support is veering to be more extremeand those who follow that "stand out as breakout stars," while the minority who try to temper it "risk seeing their careers in the party die."
"And while Trump still has a powerful hold over his base, he got a glimpse of the fact that they will demand unwavering extremism on key issues, even from him," Klaas said.
Throughout his political career, Trump has demanded loyalty from people close to himturning on those in his orbit unwilling to toe his line, with Vice President Mike Pence a high-profile example of his wrath against those who refused.
That demand for steadfast support might now have spread, and be something expected back from Trump to his followers.
"The irony is clear: Trump has been so wildly successful in stitching a cultish straightjacket of political conformitywhere no deviation is toleratedthat it's now even constricting his own movement," Thomas Gift, lecturer in political science and founding director of the Centre on U.S. Politics at University College London, told Newsweek.
"At the same time, part of Trump's uncanny ability to resonate with the GOP base lies in his lack of strong ideological convictions. Unlike other politicians, who might continue to make a point they believe even if it's unpopular with voters, Trump has no qualms about turning on a dime.
"It's very possible that, after months of equivocating about the merits of the vaccine, his endorsement at his latest rally was simply a trial balloon to see how it would fly. But clearly Trump can take a hint. If the pro-vaccine messageeven one couched in the language of personal choicefalls flat, he will ditch it in a hurry.
"Going forward, Trump may indeed find thatlike other Republican politicianseven he himself is subordinate to 'Trumpism.' If that's true, it's yet more undeniable evidence of the profound and enduring impact he's had on reinventing the modern Republican Party."
The requirement for sensitivity towards Trump's base is not necessarily new.
Jon Herbert, senior lecturer in the school of social, political and global studies at Keele University and a co-author of The Ordinary Presidency of Donald J. Trump, suggests the former president might never have really been entirely in control of his base.
Herbert told Newsweek: "He'll demand loyalty from his administration and the elite of his party, but he has always been very sensitive to the baseor at least, their opinion as read by him through certain media commentators, rallies and certain legislators. That's not a demand for loyalty but an almost paranoid responsiveness.
"He knew his political career was founded on 'the base' and worked to stay sensitive to them, and tailored messages for them at every turn. I'd argue he never could 'control the monster he's created'as some of the coverage has itbut was always embroiled in a difficult, rolling negotiation with them.
"He's also very prone to testing lines out in rallies and then disowning them. Given the audience response, it's perfectly possible we won't hear him discuss vaccines again for a while unless he's put on the spot in interviews."
Another aspect that could be impacting Trump's sway over his base is his lack of social media and dwindling media presence.
"Trump was booed for recommending vaccine use in the most vaccine-skeptical state" Richard Johnson, lecturer in U.S. politics and policy at Queen Mary University of London, told Newsweek.
"He was positioning himself squarely against the policy preferences of his base, which is quite unusual for Trump.
"What is interesting to me is that surveys show that when Republican voters are told in surveys that Trump is pro-vaccine, Republican support for the vaccine increases, but there is still sizeable dissent.
"It suggests that while Trump is out of the limelight and unable to control the news agendain part because of his inability to tweethe cannot shape the issue space as he once did."
Due to that, Trump may have to emulate a tactic he embarked upon in the past for future political success.
"This returns him to the position he was in 2015/16. At that time, Trump could not simply declare a policy preference and Republican voters would follow," Johnson said.
"Trump entered into a policy space which was already widely held by the Republican electorate: Opposition to open immigration. Moreover, nearly all of the other Republicans candidates were not on the same page as the base. Trump at that time was 'hunting where the ducks were.
"I imagine that in advance of 2024, Trump will be more careful not to take stances that run in opposition to his supporters' views, at least on highly salient or emotive issues. Otherwise, he risks the same fate as his Republican primary opponents in 2016."
Newsweek has contacted Trump's office for comment.
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Addison Rae Says Trump Is Not All That, But She Still Wanted to Meet Him – Vulture
Posted: at 11:48 am
Photo: Amy Sussman/Getty Images
When are celebrities going to understand the actual impact of celebrity? Its getting embarrassing. TikTok-star-slash-actress-slash-musician-slash-bad-bleep Addison Rae has begrudgingly responded to online backlash for introducing herself to former president Donald Trump at a UFC match back in July. I mean, I dont support Trump, Addison Rae, last name Easterling, told the Los Angeles Times. And if someone does, thats their opinion and I respect everyones opinion, for each their own. But its very rare on occasion that you ever get to meet a former president, and I think most people could agree with me on that. Its very uncommon. And I consider myself a friendly person, and so introducing myself does not mean I stand behind anything that any respective person condones. Basically, retweets arent endorsements and, apparently, neither is walking up to someone while theyre watching a UFC match, tapping them on the shoulder, and saying, Hi, Im Addison. Nice to meet you. I have to say hi. Hello. Its so nice to meet you. The 20-year-old Hes All That star has been accused of being a Trump supporter more than once since breaking out on TikTok last year. Just last September, a TikTok user claimed to find her registered to vote in Tarzana, California, as a Republican. First Im from Louisiana, second Im not even registered to vote and never have been Im actually doing it for the first time with someone important and Im excited to do so, she commented at the time. Heres some useful information you can actually take away from this: Dont meet your heroes or your villains. And register to vote!
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Rand Paul undecided on Ivermectin to treat COVID-19, says hatred of Trump hinders research – The Cincinnati Enquirer
Posted: at 11:48 am
Trump shows support for vaccine, gets booed by supporters at rally
Donald Trump recommended that supporters at a rally in Alabama go and get the vaccine, which elicited some boos from the crowd.
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COLD SPRING, Kentucky Hatred of former President Donald Trump has kept researchers from looking into the anti-parasitic drug ivermectin andother drugs to treat COVID-19, Republican Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul told constituents on Friday.
The Food and Drug Administration and Centers for Disease Control have warned people using ivermectin,a drug used to treat parasitic worm infections in humans and livestock, is dangerous. The FDA went as far as tweeting out a reminderon August 21, "You are not a horse. You are not a cow. Seriously, y'all. Stop it."
But Paul encouraged more research.
"The hatred for Trump deranged these people so much, that they're unwilling to objectively study it," Paul said to the 60 people squeezed into the Cold Spring CityCouncil chambers in this Northern Kentucky suburb just south of Cincinnati."So someone like me that's in the middle on it, I can't tell you because they will not study ivermectin. They will not study hydroxychloroquine without the taint of their hatred for Donald Trump."
'Kind of a lunatic': Sen. Sherrod Brown calls out Sen. Rand Paul for not wearing a mask
It's also why they don't research hydroxychloroquine, he said, an anti-malarial drug touted by Trump as a treatment.
The World Health Organizationin April foundbased on six clinical trials thathydroxychloroquine"had little or no effect on preventing illness, hospitalization or death from COVID-19."
A woman in the audience had asked Rand Paul, an ophthalmologist, why ivermectin wasn't more available.The woman said she had some ivermectin stashed away "just in case."
Sen. Rand Paul tells NKY cops: Media, many in public portray police as '99% bad'
Paul told her he didn't know if it works because there isn't enough research.When asked by The Enquirer after the meetings about the FDA and CDC warnings on ivermectin, Paul reiterated what he said in the town hall
"I don't know if it works, but I keep an open mind," Paul said.
One treatment Paul and the nation's top infectious disease expert agree on is monoclonal antibodies to treat COVID-19 in the early stages of the infection.But other than that, Dr. Anthony Fauci and Paul don't get along and have had very public clashes over the nation's COVID-19 response.
Paul spent a large portion of the town hall criticizing vaccine and mask mandates. Paul encouraged older people to get vaccinated but said it's a personal choice. Those who already had COVID-19, like Paul who contracted the disease last year,don't need it, Paul said.
A study published in early August by the Centers for Disease Control and Preventionfoundunvaccinated people who have had COVID-19 are more than twice as likely to be reinfected with the virus compared with people who were fully vaccinated after contracting the virus.
News: More businesses and venues are requiring masks and COVID-19 vaccines. Here's the updated list
Paul did encourage older people to get vaccinated but maintained his stance that it's personal choice and shouldn't be mandated.
"I think I'm in the middle ground of the vaccines," Paul said. "CNN invites me on all the time. They have announcers calling me an 'ass' on TV. Then they have doctors saying I'm thoroughly anti-vaccine. You heard me, I'm not against the vaccine. I've already recommended if you're at risk to take it...It's still your choice if its a free country."
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Donald Trump Is Now Focusing His Efforts on Getting Back Access to His YouTube Account – Yahoo Entertainment
Posted: at 11:48 am
Despite promising to start his own social media platform, it looks like Donald Trump is trying to find a way back to YouTube, Facebook and Twitter by going to court. It turns out that not having a social media presence to get his political message out is hurting his voter base.
The former president is starting with YouTube by asking a Florida judge to reinstate his access to the platform, per the New York Post, after being suspended indefinitely from the platform back in January along with Facebook, Instagram and Twitch. Hes also banned from Twitter and Snapchat, but Trump isnt going down without a fight. His class-action lawsuits filed in July against Facebook, YouTube and Twitter are what hes calling an illegal and shameful censorship of the American people, per the court documents, via the New York Post.
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Trump is working with America First Policy Institute, an organization involving former members of his administration, to get the message out that YouTube and other social media platforms have inconsistently applied their terms and services and their community standards. And what executive director of AFPIs Constitutional Litigation Partnership Kate Sullivan is trying to say is that there is a bias toward conservative voices. What they do is say, Hey, look, we have this free and open community you should join where you can share political thought, updates on family, or even have the ability to make a living, she told the New York Post. But the defendants do not apply their rules evenly or consistently they censor specific voices and thought so that other users only hear one side of a story.
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But what Trumps lawsuit is failing to acknowledge is that he was bumped off social media after the insurrection on Capitol Hill on Jan. 6. Twitter acknowledged that the 45th presidents tweets were silenced due to the risk of further incitement of violence and Facebook is keeping their indefinite suspension in place until 2023 when the risk to public safety has receded. With his blog meeting a swift demise earlier this year and no new social media platform in place, Trump is hoping the courts will help him find his voice again.
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Before you go, click here to see the most important celebrity lawsuits over the past 15 years.
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Launch Gallery: 10 Times Donald Trump Has Talked About Women's Looks, Because Apparently Mar-a-Lago Has No Mirrors
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The Real Story Behind the $25000 Trump Donation to Pam Bondi – The Daily Beast
Posted: at 11:48 am
It was the personally signed $25,000 check that landed then-presidential candidate Donald Trump in hot waterthe check that sparked accusations that he had bribed Floridas top prosecutor, Pam Bondi, with funds from his charity.
Much has been written about the suspicious timing of Trumps 2013 gift to the Florida attorney generals political campaign. But contrary to previous claims from Trumps presidential campaign and company executives, new records acquired by The Daily Beast show that Trump Organization employees were explicitly told this was a donation to a political group, and emails show that Trumps own executive assistant had met in person with Bondis finance director in New York City.
In its 2018 case against the Trump Foundation, the New York attorney general noted how Trump broke the law by using his charity to fund Bondis political group. And the charity was ultimately dissolved after a state judge found Trump had breached his fiduciary duty to the charity in other ways, behavior that the AGs office called a shocking pattern of illegality.
The donation occurred just as Bondi was supposed to be considering joining New Yorks investigation of the Trump University scam. And Trump himself got off easy. His campaign and foundation executives chalked it up to a mistake. The nonprofit didnt realize it was a political group, the campaign told The Wall Street Journal. An ignorant company clerk hadnt known, otherwise we would have taken it out of [Trumps] own personal account, Trump Organization Chief Financial Officer Allen Weisselberg told The Washington Post.
Former Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi at the Republican convention in 2020.
Olivier Douliery/AFP via Getty
The conversation is laid out in an email exchanged on Aug. 28, 2013 between Bondi campaign finance director Deborah Ramsey Aleksander and Trumps long-serving executive assistant, Rhona Graff.
Aleksander provided Graff with the name and federal tax identification number for And Justice for All, a political action committee associated with Ms. Bondis re-election campaign. Aleksander described it as an ECO, which stands for Electioneering Communications Organization.
Again, it was a pleasure meeting you today!!! Thanks again for always being so responsive and wonderful to work with. Aleksander wrote to Graff. Let Mr. Trump know that we are SO VERY thankful for his commitment of 25k and If he wants to make it 50k, thats perfectly acceptable. 🙂 Seriously, thanks again for everything!!!
In a subsequent email sent exactly two weeks later on Sept. 11, 2013, Aleksander mentioned their previous meeting in New York City and provided Graff with a copy of And Justice for Alls Internal Revenue Service W-9 form, which lists the groups federal tax classification as a political organization.
Two days later, Trump sent Bondi the check with a signed letter that misspelled her name as Pam Biondi and read, Dear Pam: You are the greatest!
The signed check to the political group was issued from The Donald J. Trump Foundation, Inc., a tax-exempt nonprofit regulated by Section 501(c)(3) of U.S. tax codewhich prohibits political donations by charities.
The Daily Beast showed these documents to Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, a government watchdog group that filed the initial complaint that exposed this entire ordeal. Jordan Libowitz, the CREW communications director who led this project, called the emails a smoking gun.
It kind of blows up their whole story, Libowitz said. The Trump Organization staffers knew they were making this political donation. There are no questions about it. There is no ambiguity.
The Trump Organization did not respond to questions about the matter on Wednesday. Bondi, who is now listed as a partner at the Washington offices of the lobbying firm Ballard Partners, did not respond to a request for comment, neither did Aleksander, who lists herself as an independent fundraising consultant for Sen. Rick Scott (R-FL).
The emails obtained by The Daily Beast also cast doubt on another explanation given by the Trump Organization when this matter came under public scrutiny in 2016.
At the time, finance executives claimed that a series of blunders allowed the funds to be drawn from the Trump Foundation and led to the charity incorrectly identifying the recipient on annual tax forms submitted to the IRS.
According to the Trump Organization, a clerk erred by using an outdated list of charities to identify a non-political nonprofit in Utah also called And Justice for All. And staff made another mistake when they tallied up donations on the charitys 990 tax form and listed yet another nonprofit in Kansas called Justice for All.
I dont understand how you could be this sloppy, even for people working for Donald Trump.
Jordan Libowitz, communications director for Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington
But these emails show that Bondis campaign staff twice provided the Trump Organization the correct groups Federal Employer Identification Number, which does not match the Utah or Kansas nonprofits.
I dont understand how you could be this sloppy, even for people working for Donald Trump, Libowitz said.
The check was dated Sept. 9, 2013, nearly two weeks after Trump company staff were told that the group was related to electioneering. The check appeared to be cut two days before Bondis campaign sent over the IRS form, but it was still sent anyway.
The ordeal revealed how the Trump Foundation was essentially an empty vessel that relied entirely on the staff at the for-profit Trump Organization. To get answers about how the check was erroneously cut from the charity, for example, New York Attorney General investigators had to question Jeff McConney, a high-ranking accountant at the Trump Organization. During a confidential 2017 interview, McConney told an investigator he probably didn't know at that time that we probably shouldn't be using foundation funds for this type of thing.
We made a mistake, McConney said.
The emails between the Trump Organization and the Bondi campaign were obtained by The Daily Beast via a public records request to the New York Attorney General, which has conducted multiple investigations into Trump corporate entities over the years.
Under Eric T. Schneiderman in 2016, that office helped win a $25 million class action settlement from Trump University after the for-profit school was caught duping wannabe entrepreneurs and squeezing cash out of students seeking to learn Trumps art of the deal. Then, in 2018, under Barbara D. Underwood, the office got the Trump Foundation to dissolve itself in the aftermath of a fishy fundraiser for veterans that got caught holding back donations and supporting his own political campaign.
Now, in 2021, current Attorney General Letitia James has teamed up with the Manhattan district attorney to indict the Trump Organization and its CFO, Allen Weisselberg, for criminal tax fraud. That case is ongoing.
As for the check itself, Bondi reportedly tried to return the donationbut that was rejected. She never did investigate Trump University, and a local prosecutor in Florida cleared her of wrongdoing.
Months after she left office in 2019, she joined the Trump team fighting his impeachment.
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The Real Story Behind the $25000 Trump Donation to Pam Bondi - The Daily Beast
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