Daily Archives: November 13, 2021

Betrayal review: Trumps final days and a threat not yet extinguished – The Guardian

Posted: November 13, 2021 at 11:16 am

Trumpworld is in legal jeopardy. The 45th presidents phone call to Brad Raffensperger, urging the Georgia secretary of state to find 11,780 votes, may have birthed a grand jury.

In Manhattan, the outgoing district attorney, Cyrus Vance Jr, has empaneled one of those, to look at Trumps business. As a Vanity Fair headline blared, The Trump Organization should be soiling itself right now.

In Washington, the Department of Justice indicts Steve Bannon, chairman of Trumps 2016 campaign and a pivotal figure in the Stop the Steal movement second time round.

For Trump, out-of-office has not translated into out-of-mind. He thrives on all the attention.

Amid it all, Jonathan Karl dives once again into the Stygian mosh pit, this time with Betrayal, a sequel to Front Row at the Trump Show, a New York Times bestseller.

In that book, in the spring of 2020, ABC News chief Washington correspondent prophesied that Trumps war on truth may do lasting damage to American democracy. Sadly, he wasnt wrong. Front Row preceded by months a coup attempt egged on by a defeated president. Looking back, Trumps embrace of birtherism, alternative facts and crowd violence were mere prelude to the chaos that filled his time in power, his final days in office and all that has come and gone since then.

In his second book, under the subtitle The Final Act of the Trump Show, Karl gets members of Trumps cabinet to speak on the record. They paint a portrait of a wrath-filled president, untethered from reality, bent on revenge.

Karl captures Bill Barr denouncing Trumps election-related conspiracy theories and criticizing his election strategy. Appearing determined to salvage his own battered reputation, Trumps second attorney general tells Karl his president was making it too much of a base election. I felt that he had to repair the bridges he had burned [with moderate voters] in the suburbs.

By that metric, Glenn Youngkin, Virginias governor-elect, has a bright future, a politician who puts suburban dads and rural moms at ease. No wonder Republicans think they have found a star, and with him a winning formula.

As for Trumps claims about rigged voting machines, Barr realized from the beginning it was just bullshit and says the number of actual improper voters were de minimus. No matter, to Trump: he continues to demand Republican legislatures carry out post-election audits.

Karl delivers further confirmation of Mitch McConnells fractious personal relationship with Trump, a man the Kentucky senator reportedly repeatedly mocked. According to Karl, McConnell, then Senate majority leader, sought to formally disinvite Trump from Joe Bidens inauguration. Kevin McCarthy, the chief House Republican, leaked the plan to the White House. In turn, Trump tweeted that he would not attend.

McConnell attempted to thread the needle, placating Trump while keeping the GOPs Koch brothers wing onside. But once he acknowledged Bidens victory, the damage was permanently done. McConnell was an object of Trumpian scorn.

That the senator jammed Amy Coney Barrett on to the supreme court days before the 2020 election and before that played blocking back for Brett Kavanaugh is now rendered irrelevant. Trump wants McConnell out of Senate leadership. Adding insult to injury, Trump recently told the Washington Post McConnell wasnt a real leader because he didnt fight for the presidency, and said he was only a leader because he raises a lot of money.

You know, Trump said, with the senators, thats how it is, frankly. Thats his primary power.

Hes not wrong all the time.

Betrayal also documents a commander-in-chief who scared his own cabinet witless. After Trump junked the Iran nuclear deal, for example, Tehran thumbed its nose back. Drama ensued, because Trump wanted to know his options.

Chris Miller, then acting defense secretary, tells Karl that to dissuade Trump from ordering the destruction of Irans uranium enrichment program, he chose to play the role of fucking madman his words, not Karls which meant advocating that very course of action. According to Karl, not even Mike Pompeo, then secretary of state and an Iran hawk, played along.

Oftentimes with provocative people, if you get more provocative than them, they then have to dial it down, Miller explains to Karl. Theyre like, Yeah, I was fucking crazy, but that guys batshit.

Here, the reader might pause to imagine a campaign slogan for Trump in 2024: Fucking crazy, but not batshit.

On a similar note, Karl depicts Rudy Giuliani, Trumps crony and attorney, as a walking timebomb. Jared Kushner, Trumps son-in-law and chief adviser, avoided the former New York mayor. Mark Meadows, Trumps last chief of staff, saw him as a corrosive force.

Im not going to let Rudy in the building for any more of these, Meadows reportedly told Chris Christie, New Jerseys former governor, and Bill Stepien, Trumps campaign manager, as they prepared for debates with Biden.

These days, Giuliani is suspended from the bar, reportedly under investigation and unable to persuade Trump to pay his bills. Christie and Trump are at loggerheads too, over sins real and imagined, past and present.

As for Meadows and Stepien, they are in the crosshairs of the House select committee focused on the US Capitol attack. From the looks of things only Kushner and his wife, Ivanka Trump, have so far remained intact, ensconced in Florida, sufficiently distanced from Big Daddy.

Despite such fallout, Betrayal concludes with words of warning. Karl rightly contends that Trumps betrayal of American democracy highlighted just how vulnerable the system is.

The continued survival of our republic, he writes, may depend, in part, on the willingness of those who promoted Trumps lies and those who remained silent to acknowledge they were wrong.

In a hypothetical rematch, Trump leads Biden 45-43. Among independent voters, he holds a double-digit lead. Dont hold your breath.

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Betrayal review: Trumps final days and a threat not yet extinguished - The Guardian

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Liz Cheney hits fellow Republicans for following ‘dangerous and irrational’ Donald Trump – USA TODAY

Posted: at 11:16 am

Cheney has to beat Trump's hold on the GOP to keep her seat in Wyoming

Wyoming Rep. Liz Cheney soured GOP voters when she turned on Donald Trump; now she faces his endorsed candidate and his hold on the Republican Party.

Hannah Gaber, USA TODAY

WASHINGTON Rep. Liz Cheney, R-Wyo., rejoined her battle with Donald Trump on Tuesday, condemning Republican leaders for following a"dangerous and irrational man" who is at "war with the rule of law and the Constitution."

Noting that public officials swear an oath to defend the U.S. Constitution, Cheney told a crowd at a speaking eventin New Hampshire that "too many political leaders seem to have forgotten the sacred nature of that oath" in failing to speak against Trump's lies regarding the outcomeof the 2020 presidential election.

Cheney said the nation is confronting "a domesticthreat that we've neverfaced before:A former president who's attempting to unravel the foundations of our constitutional republic, aided by political leaderswho have made themselves willing hostages to this dangerous and irrational man."

More: Liz Cheney vs. Trump: The feud forcing Wyoming to ask hard questions

More: 'Just the Trump party:' Liz Cheney's demotion proves Trump still rules Republican politics, experts say

Cheney noted that Trump delivered a keynote address at a House Republican campaign fundraiser on Monday night. Trump, she said,repeated his false claims about voter fraud and claimedthat the real insurrectionwas on Election Day in November, while theJan. 6 riot was a justified protest.

"Political leaders who sit silent in the face of these false and dangerous claims are aiding a former president who is at war with the rule of law and the Constitution," she said, and are risking more violence in the future.

Trump is has made Cheney a top political target after she and nine other House Republicans voted to impeach him for inciting the Jan. 6 riot. Trump is supporting a primary challenger to Cheney in Wyoming.

In a series of statements, Trump described Cheney as a "war monger" and a "lap dog" to House Democrats. "To look at her is to despise her," he said on Oct. 20.

More: Donald Trump endorses Wyoming lawyer Harriet Hageman in GOP primary against Liz Cheney

More: 'I will not sit back': In fiery speech, Rep. Liz Cheney calls Trump a 'threat'

Cheney is also battling House Republican leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., and other GOP members who voted to remove her from her congressional leadership position because of her criticism of Trump.

Cheney, one of two Republican members of the House committee investigating the Jan. 6 riot, continues to seek national forums to critique the former Republican president. Her speech Tuesday came at a free speech awards ceremony hosted bythe Nackey Loeb School of Communications in Manchester, N.H.

New Hampshire, as always, is expected to hold the first Republican primary of the 2024 presidential campaign. Cheney has not said whether she plans to run for president.

Next year, Cheney is scheduled to give a speech on the future of the Republican Party, part of a speakers series sponsored by theRonaldReaganPresidential Foundation & Institute.

In her remarks in New Hampshire, Cheney said too many people were downplaying the violence of Jan. 6 by saying that the "institutions held." The nation may not be so lucky if there is a next time, she said.

"Our institutions do not defend themselves," Cheney said. "We the people defend them."

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Liz Cheney hits fellow Republicans for following 'dangerous and irrational' Donald Trump - USA TODAY

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Facing Trump’s opposition, Murkowski hits gas on reelection – POLITICO

Posted: at 11:16 am

Murkowski did not mention Trump in her announcement even as he hangs over every single GOP primary in the nation.

"My heart is, and always has been, in Alaska, and that's why I am proud to announce my campaign for reelection to the US Senate in 2022," Murkowski said. "I pledged to be Alaska, always. I'm still committed to those values and meeting the challenges Alaskans face today.

Murkowski has been in office since 2002, appointed by her father Frank, after he became governor. She lost her 2010 primary to tea party candidate Joe Miller, but won a write-in campaign in the general election cementing her as a legendary politician in Alaska and a key player in the Senate no matter which party controls the majority.

This cycle, the Alaska Republican is facing altogether different factors, with Trump replacing the tea party as a foil to centrists like Murkowski. Several key members of Trump's 2020 campaign are serving as Tshibaka's senior advisers and Trump has repeatedly vowed to help oust Murkowski.

In a statement, Tshibaka labeled Murkowski "Bidens Chief Enabling Officer" for her work across the aisle and dinged Murkowski for working "against President Trump, whose policies were the best that Alaska has ever known."

Still, beating Murkowski wont be easy.

As of October, the incumbent had $3 million on hand compared to about $300,000 for Tshibaka. Murkowski has the support of the National Republican Senatorial Committee and Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell. In a recent interview, McConnell said the NRSC, the Senate Leadership Fund and GOP senators are all in for Lisa.

She's a remarkable politician. Other than Strom Thurmond, she's the only person in American history to win write-in to the Senate, McConnell said.

NRSC chair Rick Scott of Florida has also vowed to defend Murkowski.

Whats more, Alaska voters changed the states primary system to insulate her from a Tshibaka head-to-head. The top four vote-getters advance to a run-off election, and the winner of that round will be determined by ranked-choice. That means even if Tshibaka outpaces Murkowski in the states open primary, Murkowski could still win the general election.

Its also apparent that Murkowski will have plenty of air cover. Murkowski's reelection campaign announcement comes after a new super PAC, "Alaskans for Lisa," filed paperwork with the Federal Election Commission this week. Still, in an interview in August, Murkowski expressed hope the states system will help steer the country away from increasingly divisive politics.

It actually helps to ensure that you dont see these primary results, where the individual further to the right prevails in a primary and then is not able to prevail in a general, Murkowski said. I cant stand the destructive, negative nature of so much that we see in campaigning. And I dont think most people appreciate it.

Murkowskis coalition includes some Democrats, Native Americans, centrist Republicans and the states independent voters. Its not clear if Democrats will mount a serious challenge in Alaska, given their close relationships with Murkowski and the fact that a Democrat hasnt won a Senate race there since 2008.

Augmenting her bipartisan appeal, Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.) endorsed her during a rare joint interview earlier this year.

People understand that they have a person that understands Alaska and has Alaska in her blood and in every part of her veins and every morsel of her body, Manchin said in April.

Murkowski was a key player on the bipartisan infrastructure bill that President Joe Biden will sign on Monday, one of several moves that irked Trump. She also has developed a working relationship with Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, though after considering whether to vote for Democrats coronavirus relief bill, Murkowski ended up opposing it.

She has, however, supported some of Bidens embattled nominees. She backed Interior Secretary Deb Haaland and Rachel Levine as a health official, the first openly transgender person to win confirmation in the Senate. Murkowski has also been the Republican senator most involved in rewriting the Voting Rights Act.

Though shes often in the mix in Washington, Murkowski remains engaged with the particular issues facing a massive and sparsely populated state, inlcuding with transportation and health care. Last week during an interview about her party's win in Virginia's gubernatorial race, Murkowski had her head buried deep in papers documenting the spread of coronavirus in Alaska, which has struggled of late with its pandemic response.

But even as she attends to the sluggish economy and dire coronavirus situation in Alaska, she also said shes paying attention to the national political mood and it looks good for Republicans.

You pay attention to how these races are going, she said. I certainly think that it is a signal to Biden that hes got some real challenges in front of him in terms of the level of support.

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Facing Trump's opposition, Murkowski hits gas on reelection - POLITICO

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They raised millions for Trump, spent barely any of it on him. Now theyre indicted. – POLITICO

Posted: at 11:16 am

Tunstall, 34, has been linked to a number of political action committees including as recently as this spring using Trumps name in order to raise money. Campaign finance disclosures showed that those PACs contributed little or none of that money to Trumps campaign or causes. And Tunstall has reportedly used the returns to fund a lavish lifestyle for himself, or one portrayed as such online.

So-called scam PACs have proliferated on the political fundraising scene over the last decade. A POLITICO investigation in 2019 identified more than a dozen pro-Trump PACs with no actual ties to the president, including one committee operated by Tunstall. The phenomenon has grown serious enough to trigger a warning from the FBI earlier this year urging would-be donors to be on the lookout for such schemes.

The operator of another pro-Trump scam PAC admitted in May that hed swindled Trump supporters and pleaded guilty to wire fraud in connection with the operation. The FEC, meanwhile, has weighed options aimed at fighting scam PACs and received recommendations from a working group on the issue this spring.

The scheme prosecutors zeroed in on in Wednesdays indictment took place in the lead up to the 2016 election, when Tunstall, Reyes and Davies formed two PACs claiming to support candidates on the right and the left, respectively.

The indictment does not name either candidate but makes clear that the defendants Liberty Action Group PAC claimed to support then-candidate Trump and their Progressive Priorities PAC claimed to support his Democratic rival Hillary Clinton.

Both PACs made false and misleading representations in robocalls and written and radio ads soliciting donations, which sought to portray the committees as being affiliated with or working to financially support both directly and indirectly their respective candidates, prosecutors said. They offered campaign swag like stickers and signed photos as rewards for larger donations.

Tunstall, Reyes and Davies instead used the funds they acquired through the scheme to pay for additional fraudulent solicitations for money, to enrich themselves directly, and to support their independent, unrelated business ventures, according to the indictment, which charges that the PACs reported little or no operating expenditures while money was transferred to the defendants or falsely reported as advertising expenses.

The defendants also allegedly used the names of others including a friend of Davies, his then-girlfriend, an associate of Davies, and an accountant who did compliance work for the PACs to conceal their involvement with the scam PACs in campaign finance records, sometimes without the others knowledge and occasionally forging others names on FEC filings or other related documents.

Finally, prosecutors allege that a common third-party vendor for the two committees was used to launder more than $350,000 in illegal proceeds to bank accounts belonging to Tunstall and Reyes or controlled by them.

Attempts to reach Tunstall and Reyes were unsuccessful. There was no readily available contact information for Davies.

Prosecutors say Tunstall and Reyes overpaid the vendor, an unnamed company that disseminated robocalls, and then arranged for the company to wire the excess funds in a series of nearly two dozen transactions between June 2016 and April 2017 to bank accounts belonging to three companies: Matte Media Creations and Supreme Dream Media, which Tunstall controlled, and Modern Media Group, which Reyes controlled. In other instances, the defendants or the companies linked to them received payments from at least one of the committees themselves.

Tunstall made his initial appearance in the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California on Tuesday, according to a press release from the Justice Department. Reyes and Davies will make their initial appearances on Wednesday in the U.S. District Courts for the Northern District of California and the Western District of Texas, respectively.

If convicted on all counts, Tunstall and Reyes face up to 125 years in prison, while Davies faces up to 65 years in prison if convicted on all counts.

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They raised millions for Trump, spent barely any of it on him. Now theyre indicted. - POLITICO

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Are Ivanka And Donald Trump Jr. Headed For Court Soon? – The List

Posted: at 11:15 am

Similar to their father, Ivanka Trump and Donald Trump Jr. have also gotten into a bit of legal trouble over the past few years. Most recently, the pair have been involved in a lawsuit filed by Karl Racine, the attorney general of Washington D.C., against the Trump Organization and the Presidential Inaugural Committee. According to Mother Jones, Racine alleges that Trump's inauguration committee misused charitable funds in order to further enrich the Trump family. Allegedly, this enrichment occurred when the Trump family used more than $1 million in charitable funds from the inauguration fund to "overpay" for a space in the Trump International Hotel and to throw a private party that cost several hundred thousand dollars.

As it turns out, Ivanka and Donald Jr. were involved in negotiations surrounding this misuse of funds. Filings show that Ivanka knew about and was involved in negotiations to use a space in the Trump International Hotel for a price that far exceeded the typical costs that the hotel charged (thus allegedly padding the Trump family's pockets with even more cash), per Mother Jones. Additionally, the final decision to go ahead with the private party using funds from the inauguration committee was ultimately up to Donald Jr. and other key members of the Trump Organization.

On Monday, according to CNN, a D.C. Superior Court ruled that these claims accusing the inauguration of overpaying for the event space at the hotel will move forward meaning that Ivanka and Donald Jr. will soon be defending their actions in court.

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Are Ivanka And Donald Trump Jr. Headed For Court Soon? - The List

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Stephen Colbert Is Tickled by a Judges Takedown of Trump – The New York Times

Posted: at 11:15 am

The only good part of inflation I was always jealous of those old guys who would go, like, Back in my day, you could buy a house with a dollar! It looks like now if inflation gets bad enough, well get to be those old guys: Oh, yeah? Back in my day, a million dollars could buy a whole lot more than just a haircut! TREVOR NOAH

I feel like a million bucks, and thats not nearly enough, because everything is getting so expensive. STEPHEN COLBERT

All your favorite stuff is more expensive. Prices have gone up for autos, energy, furniture, rent and medical care. That is terrible! One of my favorite things is being mobile, warm, comfortable, dry and alive. STEPHEN COLBERT

This is a big danger to Biden politically, because inflation is the one economic concept that normal people actually care about. Like, the debt ceiling, the Federal Reserve, derivatives thats all just [expletive] we pretend to understand: [mocking] The debt ceiling, the debt ceiling. But when you hear inflation is rising, you know it means youre about to be a broke [expletive]. TREVOR NOAH

OK, how much more bad news is Biden going to get? At the end of the month, were going to find out the turkey he pardoned was at the Capitol on Jan. 6. SETH MEYERS

Yesterday, the N.F.L. fined Rodgers and the Packers for violating Covid-19 protocols. Phew. Now that Covid protocols are being enforced, we can get back to safely enjoying the beautiful game of 300-pound men crushing each others spines like a sleeve of Ritz crackers. STEPHEN COLBERT on the Green Bay Packers and their quarterback Aaron Rodgers

Rodgers attended a Halloween party despite being unvaccinated, for which the N.F.L. fined him $14,650. Which sounds like a lot of money, but its the equivalent of fining an average American $33.80 or one beer at a Packers game. STEPHEN COLBERT

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Stephen Colbert Is Tickled by a Judges Takedown of Trump - The New York Times

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The Truth About The Viral Video Of Donald Trump Talking About His COVID-19 Recovery – The List

Posted: at 11:15 am

Per the Associated Press, a still from the video of former President Donald Trump addressing his supporters from Walter Reed National Military Medical Center included a caption that read, "The doctors said they've never seen a body kill the coronavirus like my body. They tested my DNA and it wasn't DNA. It was USA."

However, after several fact checks, it later emerged that the video still and accompanying quote were false, and there is no evidence that the former president ever made this statement.

Although false, the video was shared thousands of times across social media platforms like Twitter and Facebook. In the real video clip, Trump actually said, "I came here, wasn't feeling so well. I feel much better now. We're working hard to get me all the way back. I have to be back because we still have to make America great again."

Per USA Today, the former president also said that his wife, Melania Trump, was handling the coronavirus "very nicely" and described potential cures for COVID-19 as "miracles coming down from God."

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The Truth About The Viral Video Of Donald Trump Talking About His COVID-19 Recovery - The List

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When Will January 6th Be Over? – The New Yorker

Posted: at 11:15 am

After Donald Trump lost the Presidential election last year, a law professor named John Eastman drafted, for Trumps use, a two-page manual for unlawfully throwing out the electoral votes of certain states as they were being tallied in Congress, on January 6th. The name he mentions most often in the memo is that of Vice-President Mike Pence. It appears in such statements as Pence then gavels President Trump as re-elected and, regarding disrupting the count, The main thing here is that Pence should do this without asking for permission. Eastman also spoke at Trumps January 6th rally, where he said that what we are demanding of Vice-President Pence is that he intervene in the electoral count. Trump, speaking shortly afterward, cited Eastmans authority when he said, If Mike Pence does the right thing, we win the election.

Soon afterward, the assault on the Capitol began, and, once it became clear that the Vice-President was not going to do what Trump and his allies demanded, a group of insurrectionists chanted Hang Mike Pence. Members of the Pence family were also in the Capitol, and in danger. Eastman is expected to be subpoenaed in the coming days by the House select committee investigating the events surrounding January 6th. In addition to writing that memo, and a revised, more detailed onein which he declares that letting the results stand would mean thatAmericans were no longer a self-governing peoplehe attended a meeting with Trump and Pence in the Oval Office on January 4th. (Eastman says that he ultimately advised Pence to delay the count, not to stage a coup.) An area of inquiry for the committee is how much pressure Trump put on Pence to help him overturn the election. (A lot, it seems.)

But one person who doesnt appear eager to dwell on that question, at least not publicly, is Pence himself, who has been biding his time giving speeches and setting up an organization called Advancing American Freedom. Last month, in an interview with Sean Hannity, on Fox News, he said that the media is trying to use January 6th to distract from President Bidens failed agenda and to demean the character and intentions of people who voted for Trump. He assured Hannity that he and Trump had parted amicably after leaving office, and had stayed in touch. On social media and in a podcast he has launched, he steadily repeats the phrase Trump-Pence Administrationlinking his name with that of a man who was ready to abandon him to a mob.

Pences position is intriguing on a human level, but it is significant in political terms, too, because it captures so much about the state of the G.O.P., where the 2024 Presidential race is headed, and how much the contest over the legacy of January 6th matters in setting that course. Trump seems to realize that as much as anybody. After Pence appeared on Fox News, Trump put out a statement saying that the interview very much destroys and discredits the Unselect Committees Witch Hunt on the events of January 6th. The interview does not do that, of course. But the Trump-Pence dance underscores how high the stakes are for the committee. Trump, in trying to obstruct the investigation into January 6thwith spurious claims of executive privilege, for exampleis fighting not only to impose his view of the past but to insure his political future.

A simple explanation for Pences complacency is that he wants to run for President himself, and cant afford to alienate Trump if he is to have any hope of making it through the primaries. According to a recent poll, Trumps favorability rating among Republicans is eighty-six per cent. His Save America PAC, the new Make America Great Again, Again! super PAC, and ancillary political funds have raised more than a hundred million dollars. But Trump may not want to help anyone but Trump. In September, when asked by Fox News if he would run, he said, It is getting to a point where we really have no choice. Its hard to know whom he means by we. In a Morning Consult/Politico poll that asked Republicans whom they would support out of more than fifteen potential candidates for 2024, forty-seven per cent chose Trump. Pence came next, with just thirteen per cent. Close behind Pence was Ron DeSantis, the governor of Florida and a Trump ally, with twelve per cent. (Six per cent chose Donald Trump, Jr.twice as many as picked Senators Ted Cruz or Marco Rubio.) When Trump was asked recently, in an interview with Yahoo Finance, what he thought of DeSantiss Presidential prospects, he said, If I faced him, Id beat him like I would beat everyone else. But Trump didnt believe it would come to that. He said he thought that, if he ran, most people would drop out, I think he would drop out.

Trump may be right. Nikki Haley, the former governor of South Carolina, criticized him in straightforward terms after January 6th; in February, she told Politico that the Party had been wrong to follow him. A few weeks ago, she told the Wall Street Journal, We need him in the Republican Party. She also said that, if theres a place for me in the 2024 race, I would talk to him and see what his plans are.... We would work on it together. Perhaps she was hinting at the Vice-Presidential spot; its extraordinary to think that there are people who would like to be the next Mike Pence. One wonders if candidates for the job would be given copies of Eastmans memos and asked to check off the unconstitutional moves that they would be willing to make.

Far from being a witch hunt, the investigations into January 6th have continued to uncover unsettling material concerning Trumps efforts to overturn the election. (The Senate Judiciary Committee reported last month on his attempts to enlist officials in the Department of Justice in that cause.) Theres no shortage of reminders that he hasnt moved on. Last week, the Wall Street Journal published a lengthy letter to the editor from Trump, full of baseless claims that the vote count in Pennsylvania was wrong. The election was rigged, which you, unfortunately, still havent figured out, he informed the Journal. In a statement a week earlier, he spoke in even more strident terms: The insurrection took place on November 3, Election Day. January 6 was the Protest!

There can hardly be a better example of why a clear accounting of the events leading up to the assault on the Capitol is so crucial. According to Trump, the real insurrection was never put down. January 6th, in that sense, is a long way from over.

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When Will January 6th Be Over? - The New Yorker

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Donald Trump Did What? He Accidently Made Up the F-52 Fighter Jet – The National Interest

Posted: at 11:15 am

During his presidency, Donald Trump said a lot of wild, outrageous, and untrue things. But a Trump misstatement unlike any other was the time he made up a nonexistent fighter jet.

As reported by the BBC, Trump made the statement in early 2018 that the United Stateshad sold F-52 fighter jets to Norway.

In November we started delivering the first F-52s and F-35 fighter jets, Trump said at a joint appearance at the White House with the then-Norwegian prime minister Erna Solberg, as reported by the Washington Post. We have a total of 52 and theyve delivered a number of them already a little ahead of schedule.

There is, in fact, no such jet in existence, although a fictional jet of that name is in the video game series Call of Duty, specifically the Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare game. TheNational Interestnotedin a piece last year that the F-52 in the video game is clearly based on early 1990s-era Lockheed Martin concepts for the Naval Advanced Tactical Fighter and the later A/F-Xboth of which were based on the YF-22 demonstrator aircraft that eventually became the F-22 Raptor.

There really was a sale of jets to Norway and presumably, the president had confused the number of jets, fifty-two, with the name of the jet.

Speaking of fighter jets, Trump was also known to confuse stealth with invisibility.

According to Popular Mechanics, the 45th president often created the impression that he thought the F-35 jet in particular was literally invisible.

No, they have the money, and they allthey would like to order quite a few F-35s; its the greatest fighter jet in the world, as you know, by far. Stealth. Totally stealth. You cant see it, Trump said in a White House briefing in August of 2020. Makes it very difficult. I was asking a pilot, What do you think is better: This one? This one? That one? Talking about Russian planes, Chinese planes. He said, Well, the advantage we have is you cant see it. So when were fighting, they cant see us. I say, That sounds like a really big advantage to me.

Stealth fighters are invisible to radar, but not to the naked eye itself unless theyre operated by Wonder Woman.

Earlier this year, under President Joe Biden, the United Statesreached another agreement with Norway, per Reuters.

The agreement regulates and facilitates U.S. presence, training and exercises in Norway, thus facilitating rapid U.S. reinforcement of Norway in the event of crisis or war, the Norwegian government said at the time of the deal.

Stephen Silver, a technology writer for The National Interest, is a journalist, essayist and film critic, who is also a contributor to The Philadelphia Inquirer, Philly Voice, Philadelphia Weekly, the Jewish Telegraphic Agency, Living Life Fearless, Backstage magazine, Broad Street Review and Splice Today. The co-founder of the Philadelphia Film Critics Circle, Stephen lives in suburban Philadelphia with his wife and two sons. Follow him on Twitter at @StephenSilver.

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Donald Trump Did What? He Accidently Made Up the F-52 Fighter Jet - The National Interest

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Alt-Right | Southern Poverty Law Center

Posted: at 11:14 am

The Alternative Right is characterized by heavy use of social media and online memes. Alt-righters eschew establishment conservatism, skew young, and embrace whiteethnonationalismas a fundamental value.

Martin Luther King Jr., a fraud and degenerate in his life, has become the symbol and cynosure of White Dispossession and the deconstruction of Occidental civilization. We must overcome!National Policy Institute column, January 2014

Immigration is a kind of proxy warand maybe a last standfor White Americans, who are undergoing a painful recognition that, unless dramatic action is taken, their grandchildren will live in a country that is alien and hostile.National Policy Institute column, February 2014

Since we are fighting for nothing less than the biological survival of our race, and since the vast bulk of Jews oppose us, we need to err on the side of caution and have no association with Jews whatsoever. Any genuine Jewish well-wishers will understand, since they know what their people are like better than we ever can. Saving our race is something that we will have to do ourselves alone.Greg Johnson, White Nationalism & Jewish Nationalism, August 2011

I oppose the Jewish diaspora in the United States and other white societies. I would like to see the white peoples of the world break the power of the Jewish diaspora and send the Jews to Israel, where they will have to learn how to be a normal nation.Greg Johnson, White Nationalism & Jewish Nationalism, August 2011

At the core of the JI [Jewish Identity] is a malevolent supremacy. This is the manifest in their rejection of outgroups who wish to participate and innovate traditional Jewish cultural activities. Why reject diversity and progress within your community if not a false feeling of betterness? The root of this problem is, of course, a sexual feeling of inferiority. Mighty psychosexual urges must not be downplayed within group dynamics. As a remedy to this, the JI must be infiltrated with foreign members to procreate with their men and women. That way, the deep psychological psychosis can be treated at the root.A Critical Analysis of the Jewish Identity, The Right Stuff, January 2016

The new left doctrine of racial struggle in favor of non-Whites only, a product of decolonization and the defeat of nationalists by egalitarians after WWII, must be repudiated and Whites must be allowed to take their own side in their affairs. A value system that says Whites are not allowed to have collective interests while literally every other identity group can do so and ought to do so is unacceptable.The Fight for the Alt Right: The Rising Tide of Ideological Autism Against Big-Tent Supremacy, The Right Stuff, January 2016

This is our home and our kith and kin. Borders matter, identity matters, blood matters, libertarians and their capitalism can move to Somalia if they want to live without rules, in the West we must have standards and enforce them. The freedom for other races to move freely into white nations is nonexistent. Stay in your own nations, we dont want you here.Matthew Heimbach, I Hate Freedom, Traditionalist Youth Network, July 7, 2013

Those who promote miscegenation, usury, or any other forms of racial suicide should be sent to re-education centers, not tolerated.Matthew Heimbach, I Hate Freedom, Traditionalist Youth Network, July 7, 2013

The Alternative Right is a term coined in 2008 by Richard Bertrand Spencer, who heads the white nationalist think tank known as the National Policy Institute, to describe a loose set of far-right ideals centered on white identity and the preservation of Western civilization. In 2010, Spencer who had stints as an editor of The American Conservative and Takis Magazine launched the Alternative Right blog, where he worked to refine the movements ideological tenets.

Racist alt-right celebrity Richard Spencer was slated to speak at the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville.

Spencer describes the alt-right as a big-tent ideology that blends the ideas of neo-reactionaries (NRx-ers), who advocate a return to an antiquated, pseudo-libertarian government that supports traditional western civilization; archeofuturists, those who advocate for a return to traditional values without jettisoning the advances of society and technology; human biodiversity adherents (HBDers) and race realists, people who generally adhere to scientific racism; and other extreme-right ideologies. Alt-right adherents stridently reject egalitarianism and universalism.

At the heart of the alt-right is a break with establishment conservatism that favors experimentation with the ideas of the French New Right; libertarian thought as exemplified by former U.S. Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas); anarcho-capitalism, which advocates individual sovereignty and open markets in place of an organized state; Catholic traditionalism, which seeks a return to Roman Catholicism before the liberalizing reforms of the Second Vatican Council; and other ideologies.

It is a reaction to the conservative establishment as exemplified by the nomination of Barry Goldwater for the presidency in 1964. According to Spencer, that solidified several aspects of contemporary conservatism, including an emphasis on liberty, freedom, free markets and capitalism. Spencer considers these ideas to be anti-ideals and says the alt-right is redefining categories for a new kind of conservative.

Spencer describes alt-right adherents as younger people, often recent college graduates, who recognize the uselessness of mainstream conservatism in what he describes as a hyper-racialized world. So, its no surprise that the movement in 2015 and 2016 concentrated on opposing immigration and the resettlement of Syrian refugees in America. Although such stances align with older forms of white racism, Spencer insists that the alt-right is a liberation from a left-right dialectic.

The alt-right is intimately connected with American Identitarianism, a version of an ideology popular in Europe that emphasizes cultural and racial homogeneity within different countries. One difference is that while European Identitarians indict the generation known as the 68ers, a reference to the left of the 1960s, their American counterparts attack baby boomers, who are presumed to comprise the bulk of the current Republican Partys base. But the movements on both continents are similar in accusing older conservatives for selling out their countries to foreigners.

Spencer left his Alternative Right blog on Christmas Day 2013 in order to focus on the Radix Journal, an online journal published by the National Policy Institute that promotes the creation of a white ethno-state. Spencers abrupt departure, referred to as the Christmas Day Purge, left the blog to two fellow white nationalists, Colin Liddell of the United Kingdom and Andy Nowicki, a former college professor. The blog has struggled since then to stay relevant to the white nationalist movement.

Matthew Heimbach, co-founder of the Traditionalist Youth Network, was slated to speak at the Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville.

Although Spencer has positioned himself as the effective leader of the alt-right, other proponents include several well-known names on the far right, including Jared Taylor, editor of the American Renaissance racist journal; Greg Johnson of the publishing house Counter-Currents; Matthew Parrott and Matthew Heimbach of the Traditionalist Youth Network; and Mike "Enoch" Peinovich, who runs The Right Stuff blog. But the general population of the alt-rightis composed, by and large, of anonymous youths who were exposed to the movements ideas through online message boards like 4chan and 8chans /pol/ and Internet platforms like Reddit and Twitter.

The movement is not monolithic. The diversity of far-right ideologies that it includes has resulted in some disagreement with regard to Jews, and whether to blame them for the perceived plight of white culturea belief that has undergirded many sectors of white nationalism for decades. While some alt-right leaders are unquestionably anti-Semitic, others, like Jared Taylor, are not, seeing Jews simply as white people. For his part, Spencer has repeatedly brought in anti-Semites to speak at his events.

In March 2016, for instance, Spencer invited former California State University-Long Beach professor Kevin MacDonald, the author of a trilogy purporting to show that Jews seek to undermine the host Christian societies in which they often live, to speak at an event titled Identity Politics. After the event, Spencer stopped just short of questioning the Holocaust, telling a Huffington Post reporter that if it really happened, then of course it wasnt justified. If it happened differently than what the story weve been told [is], then I think that needs to be let out.

Social media have been instrumental to the growth of the alt-right. Legions of anonymous Twitter users have used the hashtag #AltRight to proliferate their ideas, sometimes successfully pushing them into the political mainstream.

The best example of that is probably the term c---servative a combination of cuckold and conservative, coined to castigate Republican politicians who are seen as traitors to their people who are selling out conservatives with their support for globalism and certain liberal ideas. The phrase has a racist undertone, as some of its backers have suggested, implying that establishment conservatives are like white men who allow black men to sleep with their wives. It received widespread media attention, including, to the delight of Spencer and others, in The Washington Post.

But the alt-right has taken on many more issues than that, including issues of high importance to white nationalists like the resettlement of Syrian refugees in the U.S. and Europe in 2015 and 2016, the Black Lives Matter movement and immigration reform. Propaganda campaigns also have been organized around hashtags such as #WhiteGenocide, a reference to the myth that white people are being subjected to an orchestrated eradication campaign; #ISaluteWhitePeople; #BoycottStarWarsVII, a racist campaign to protest the black actor who was cast in a lead role in the 2015 Star Wars reboot; and #NROrevolt, which arose after the National Review, a journal that has historically served as the gatekeeper to mainstream conservatism and has vehemently opposed Donald Trumps candidacy for president.

Trump is a hero to the alt-right. Through a series of semi-organized campaigns, alt-right activists applied the c---servative slur to every major Republican primary candidate except Trump, who regularly rails against political correctness, Muslims, immigrants, Mexicans, Chinese and others. They have also worked hard to affix the alt-right brand to Trump through the use of hashtags and memes.

The movement is not limited to the Internet. At least twice a year, Spencer reserves the National Press Club in Washington, D.C., for a coat-and-tie gathering of his followers. The events are open to reporters but also cloaked in secrecy attendees regularly use false names or refuse to identify themselves for fear of being labeled as racists. Topics and themes vary. The gathering in March 2015 was titled Beyond Conservatism and capitalized on the strength of the c---servative meme.

Identity Politics in March 2016 focused heavily on the continued success of Trumps presidential campaign. Each of the speakers featured there addressed a different facet of Trumps influence of politics and American culture. Kevin MacDonald classified Trumps rise as part of an implicit white backlash against present-day politics, while Spencer declared that Trump was merely creating a political space, intentionally or not, in which the alt-right could grow.

The alt-right also has a stable of publishing houses. Most notably, both NPI and Counter-Currents have publishing arms NPIs is Washington Summit Press that focus on historical and contemporary extremists. They distribute the works of such well-known white nationalist writers as Alexander Dugin, Corneliu Codreanu, Guillaume Faye and Alain de Benoist, along with more contemporary authors like F. Roger Devlin, Andy Nowicki, Greg Johnson and Richard Spencer.

Milo Yiannopoulos speaking at UC Santa Barbara, May 2016

In March 2016, Allum Bokhari and Milo Yiannopoulos wrote an article for the right-wing Breitbart news site that claimed that the alt-right was fundamentally about youthful provocation and subversion, rather than simply another vehicle for the worst dregs of human society: anti-Semites, white supremacists, and other members of the Stormfront set, a reference to an online forum run by a former Alabama Klan leader. Yiannopoulos, who was instrumental in the online harassment campaign against women in the electronic gaming world known as Gamergate, was not well received. Virtually every mainstream conservative publication, from the National Review to The Federalist, condemned it. And some on the furthest extremes of the alt-right attacked him as a Jewish homosexual, in the words of Andrew Anglin, who runs the neo-Nazi Daily Stormer website, which Anglin describes as The Worlds Most Visited Alt Right Web Site. Anglin said Yiannopoulos had a history of engaging in sneaky Jewish tricks and added that this is how they get you. Clearly, the man seeks to undermine right-wing movements for Jewish purposes.

That last attack, which came despite the fact that Yiannopoulos has been photographed wearing a necklace with the German Iron Cross symbol, illustrates the diversity of opinion within the alt-right world. But, at the end of the day, neo-Nazis like Anglin, coat-and-tie racists like Richard Spencer and Jared Taylor, and oddball figures like Yiannopoulos have more in common, in terms of sharing a vision of society as fundamentally determined by race, than they disagree about.

Excerpt from:

Alt-Right | Southern Poverty Law Center

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