AFTERMATHS: Margaret Brennan pretended to ask!

FRIDAY, JUNE 7, 2024

Bharara pretended to answer: Should Donald J. Trump be frog-marched to prison, presumably after losing his expected appeal of last week's guilty verdicts?

This morning, the New York Times offers several letters on the subject. At long last, we'll admit it:

We can no longer find our feet within the tortured discussions which rule the day as our tortured pair of nations sink beneath the sea.

More on that below. For now, though pointlessly, let's look at what Preet Bharara and Lisa Rubin have recently said.

Bharara appeared on last Sunday's Face the Nation. At one point, he was asked if Trump had any grounds for appeal.

For the record, Bharara had said, at the start of the interview, that he is personal friends with the prosecutor and the judge in the matter under review. 

There's no reason why he shouldn't be. Concerning the question of legal appeals, here's the start of what he said:

BRENNAN (6/2/24): Well, sentencing is July 4, excuse me, July 11, four days before the convention, as we mentioned. What grounds for appeal do you think Mr. Trump has here?

BHARARA: So I think they'll make a number of key points. You know, Donald Trump does not want to leave anything on the cutting room floor. I think some of his arguments are non-frivolous. 

I agree with what Jan [Crawford] said, that in the ordinary course, it's very, very difficult to get a criminal conviction overturned, but it happens. 

"Some of [Trump's] arguments are non-frivolous?"  What might he have meant by that?

As he continued, Bharara cited a pair of possible grounds for appeal, though he said those grounds weren't "strong." Quickly, though, he arrived as the longer ramble shown below. 

Instantly, viewers were sunk in a type of word salad concerning the legal theory under which Trump was convicted. As Bharara summarized "this sort of technical business [which] causes people's eyes to glaze over," viewers of this major Sunday show were thrown into some very tall grass. 

As Bharara spoke, we'll guess that some viewers' eyes did glaze over. But along the way, on two occasions, Bharara did manage to state a fairly obvious factual point:

BHARARA: And then there's this sort of technical business that I'm sure causes lay people's eyes to glaze over. And that is the degree to which the second crime, the thing that made and transformed the misdemeanor into a felony, the basis of that did not have to be decided unanimously by the jury. 

So the further crime, the felony, was appropriate, based on the jury's decision, if there was—the falsification of the business documents was done to further or to conceal or to commit some other crime, namely, an election crime in New York, and that could have been done three different ways.

BRENNAN: But—

BHARARA: But the jury instructions—and they don't have to be unanimous on those three different ways. And that's probably an issue for appeal.

Say what? We've tried to punctuate that word salad in a way which is fair. In fairness to Bharara, you really need a type of visual flowchart to illustrate the complex path by which a bunch of misdemeanors were transformed into felonies on the way to this defendant's downfall.

At any rate, Bharara made a fairly obvious factual statement at two separate points:

According to Bharara, "the jury didn't have to be unanimous" in one part of its decision making. Part of the jury's reasoning "did not have to be decided unanimously," Bharara also said.

 As with a thousand other people who have tried to explain the shape of this legal case, Bharara's overall presentation here was about as clear as mud. But on two separate occasions, he did make that fairly obvious factual statement—and he seemed to say that this might be a reasonable basis for a legal appeal.

Did Bharara think this might be the basis for a successful appeal? Brennan didn't exactly ask. Instead, viewers were subjected to the word flow we show you here:

BRENNAN (continuing directly): Let me zero in on that, because that has been something that—that Mr. Trump and his allies have talked about. 

In terms of this case, this was about trying to manipulate an election, and fraud related to that. His allies say this was just—it was a paperwork thing, somebody mislabeled this as a legal expense. 

How would you tell the lay person to understand this?

BHARARA: Look, the underlying misdemeanor, and that's why it's a misdemeanor, is falsifying business records. But the reason it becomes a felony—not the most serious felony on the books in New York but a felony, and any felony is serious—is if that crime, that misdemeanor crime was done to conceal or commit some other crime, and that other crime that the prosecutors alleged and got the convictions on was the—promoting someone's election by unlawful means—

BRENNAN: Yeah.

BHARARA: Either done by the falsification of other documents or committing some other tax crime or a further election fraud crime. 

And so the prosecution, I think, did it as well as anybody could do for lay people, because the jury obviously was a series of lay people. But this was a serious thing that undermined and interfered with the election in 2016. And that's serious and not to be taken lightly.

Once again, the salad was lustily tossed. (For the record, the jury was "a series of lay people" drawn from a district which voted for Biden over Trump in 2020 by a margin of 86 to 12!)

Alas! Within the realm of high-end American journalism, the verbal tsunami we have shown you represents a fairly typical attempt to explain the legal basis on which Donald J. Trump was charged with, and convicted of, 34 felony counts.

Sadly, we now tell you this:

Within the context of our nation's persistent non-discourse discourse, the verbal tsunami shown above represents an attempt to "zero in on" the (highly significant) matter under discussion. 

Overall, the presentation was highly unclear. Along the way, Bharara had said this:

At some point in their deliberations, the twelve jurors "didn't have to be unanimous" in their decision-making. Bharara stated that basic point two separate times—and he almost seemed to suggest that this might represent a solid basis for a legal appeal.

Or then again, maybe not! Brennan didn't specifically ask if that's what he thinks, and Bharara never specifically said.

At any rate, as Brennan "zeroed in on" Bharara's view, the tall grass only grew higher. Eventually, Bharara seemed to say that the defendant had engaged in "a serious thing that undermined and interfered with the election in 2016."

"That's serious and not to be taken lightly," Bharara also said. So did he think the serious matter in question might not provide grounds for a winning appeal? 

By now, no one watching this program would have had the slightest idea! Viewers had observed a jumble of words posing as a discussion.

Within our rapidly failing nation, this is the way our imitations of national discourse routinely tend to play out. Routinely, it will appear that a solid discussion has taken place, with participants "zeroing on" on some key point.

No such behavior will have occurred, but seeming will be believing.

No such clear discussion took place in this exchange. That said, Bharara did at least state a basic fact—except for Face the Nation viewers who also watch Morning Joe.

We pity the fool who had watched Morning Joe only three days before! As we noted in this report, such viewers had seen legal analyst Lisa Rubin assertively offer this claim to Morning Joe's Willie Geist:

GEIST (5/30/24): I want to get some clarification from you about the jury instructions. Donald Trump, some of his minions, going on cable networks, suggesting that the judge told the jury that they don't have to be unanimous.

That's not true. Can you explain what this little dispute may be about?

RUBIN: Yeah, that's not true at all!

According to the legal analysts, the statement in question, from Trump's minions, "wasn't true at all!" Three days later, there was Bharara, saying the things he said.

Rubin was back on Morning Joe this Monday, one day after Bharara's appearance. Please don't ask us to walk you through what she said at that time.

We live within a failing society which features "imitation of discourse." To all intents and purposes, there is never a way for concerned citizens to get clear on even the most basic facts about the most significant public events.

As our devolution continues, we continue to build a two-nation nation. We've built a system in which Red America's citizens hear one set of mandated claims and Storylines, while Blue America's citizens hear a vastly different set. 

It's propaganda all the way down, except when people like Brennan and Bharara join to create heaping piles of salad. (Just for the record, we're not suggesting that either person had some ill intent.)

Within this context, a letter writer says today that Trump should be sent to jail. His letter starts in the manner shown:

To the Editor:

Re “Should Trump Be Sentenced to Prison? Two Opposing Views” (Opinion guest essay, June 3):

The retired judge Nancy Gertner’s argument against imprisoning Donald Trump omits the simple reality that without prison time, Donald Trump faces no meaningful punishment.

Mr. Trump plainly does not see the fact of having been convicted, standing by itself, as a shameful judgment on himself. Rather, he wears the guilty verdict as a badge of martyrdom. Fines would obviously be meaningless, both because he is a multibillionaire and because his supporters would pay them. And Mr. Trump is not a credible candidate for probation.

Our question might be this:

Should Trump "see the fact of having been convicted [in this case] as a shameful judgment on himself?"

For ourselves, we assume that Trump is "mentally ill"—colloquially, that he's a "sociopath." (That isn't a technical clinical term.) At the heart of such diagnoses lies the idea that people so afflicted or so handicapped will never experiences feelings of remorse or shame. That lies at the heart if the problem!

Yesterday afternoon, George Conway described Trump as a sociopath on Deadline: White House. With very few exceptions, major journalists have agreed that this obvious possibility must never be mentioned in any discussion of Trump.

In that additional way, our journalists agree that our public discussions will be mere imitations of same. But for ourselves, we can't say that Trump's behavior in this matter under review was enormously shameful. We Blue now agree to call it shameful because we've also banded together, at this point, to make this ridiculous claim:

Voters need to know who a candidate had sex with, ten years before, on one occasion, before they can know how to vote!

We Blues have stooped to the point where we stand behind that "new rule"—that point of sheer inanity. Joining the garbage-can conduct now broadcast on Fox every night of the week, this is part of the moral and intellectual breakdown which now afflicts the Blue regions of this land.

We Americans now live inside seas of salad and prisons of Storylines. As we stumble about in the dark, we increasingly pursue the only goal left—the goal of imprisoning Others.

No one has the slightest idea of any basic facts. Logic is also shown the door. It's reached the point where it's mainly a matter of who you want to lock up.

We can't seem to beat Trump at the ballot box, so we dream of locking him up. This is the level to which we've descended over here within our failing Blue world.

In this morning's New York Times, David Brooks attempts to explain our decline. We'd put it in simpler terms.

We Blues have been building toward this defeat for at least the past sixty years. Disaster may arrive on June 27.

Can President Biden engage in a full-blown debate with Candidate Trump, a highly energetic man who can bullsh*t all night long? At this point, we find it hard to believe that he can, though it may turn out that we're wrong.

On Fox, viewers are persistently told that President Biden is in a steep decline. To this day, Blue America's voters are aggressively shielded from this potent concern.

In the midst of this tribal segregation, the nation swims along in a vast sea of salad. In our view, Donald J. Trump is vastly disordered, but no one really knows what he was convicted of, and no one ever will.

Also, let's lock up the Alitos! More on the epistemology of that Blue American meltdown will perhaps be offered tomorrow.

No one gets clear on basic facts. It's all tribal Storyline now. 

With respect to Face the Nation, it's a bit like the old joke from the Soviet Union. "We pretend to work," the Soviet citizen mordantly said, "and they pretend to pay us."

So it goes on TV shows like Face the Nation:

Major figures pretend to explain. Perhaps without understanding our plight, we viewers pretend to listen!


89 comments:

  1. Harry Roland and John Burnside have died.

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    Replies
    1. Bye, Harry. Bye, John

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    2. "For the record, the jury was 'a series of lay people' drawn from a district which voted for Biden over Trump in 2020 by a margin of 86 to 12!" Bob is incapable of being objective about this case. He puts his thumb on the scale everywhere he can. The statistic he cites here is irrelevant -- for at least three reasons:
      1. That margin of 86 to 12 only reflects New Yorkers who actually voted; roughly half didn't vote; which means that probably only roughly 43% (give or take) of the New Yorkers who could potentially be called for jury duty voted for Biden.
      2. There was a rigorous jury selection process during which potential jurors were eliminated if they showed signs of anti-Trump bias (a process which included a review of news consumption and social media posts), and during which Trump himself and his lawyers vetted potential jurors and could eliminate ones they thought might be biased against him.
      3. Given the first two reasons, it's nearly certain that there were at least a few jurors who were not biased against Trump, even likely that one or more could have been Trump supporters (Adam Kinzinger thought there was more than one in his estimation); and it would have only taken ONE such juror to cause a hung jury, and yet that didn't happen. The verdict was unanimous and relatively quick.

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    3. "We can't seem to beat Trump at the ballot box, so we dream of locking him up. This is the level to which we've descended over here within our failing Blue world."
      There are so many things wrong with this, it's hard to know where to begin.
      1. Again, for the sake of moral clarity, imagine someone saying this about Hitler. You can't beat him at the ballot box, so you dream of locking him up. So. fucking. what?! Defeat the monster any way possible. This isn't a game or a sport. Lives hang in the balance, as does our democracy, the rule of law, our battle against despots like Putin, NATO, the environment, etc. Is all of that of lower priority than playing by Bob's Queensberry rules?
      2. Even if Trump weren't running for president, he SHOULD be locked up. He tried to steal the 2020 election, culminating in his incitement of a violent attack on congress, during which he engaged in a disgusting dereliction of duty. He stole, hid, refused to return, and lied about some of our countries most sensitive documents. This is as much the reason we want to see Trump held accountable as is our desire to win the election.
      3. Even if Trump is imprisoned, he can still legally run for and possibly even be president.
      4. We DID beat him at the ballot box -- twice! Biden beat him of course, but Clinton also defeated him "at the ballot box" in a very literal sense. But because of our absolutely insane, outrageously undemocratic system, in which someone's vote in Wyoming has many times the power of someone's vote in California, the person who came in second was declared the "winner."

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  2. Lock the POS up with the rest of the America hating insurrectionists.

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  3. Bob worries about whether President Biden can engage in a full-blown debate. As many have pointed out, having the first debate before the Convention protects the Dems. If Biden looks lost, he will be replaced at the Convention.

    IMO a less known candidate has a better chance to win, because the campaign is mostly negative on both sides. There's less time to research and demonize a new candidate.

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    1. Biden has not been negative campaigning. It is that the press focuses on negatives. Biden has been touting his accomplishments and deliberately ignoring the trial until after the verdict. But Trump's mistakes and lack of accomplishments are fair game for other Democrats.

      Biden has not "looked lost" in any venue up to now, so why would he not do well at the debate. The problem last time was that Trump wouldn't shut up when it was not his turn to talk. Biden has requested mics for the candidates that can be turned off by the moderators, to make sure the debate is actually a debate.

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    2. Hey, David, did you catch All In With Chris Hayes last night? Great segment on how President Biden "broke OPEC" and rewrote the rules on oil trading? I remember you were very concerned about the strategic petroleum reserve the other day. LOL

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    3. @11:52 the media pretty much IS the Democrats. The media does the Democrats' work by focusing on Trump's many flaws. They even focus on fake flaws, like the Steele Dossier. That leaves Biden free to appear above the ugly negative campaigning.

      OTOH the media hides Biden's flaws, like the Hunter laptop.

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    4. No, the media is centrist right, not Democratic.

      Hunter's laptop was not a "Biden flaw". It is a smear campaign perpetrated by Rudy Guiliani with help from Russian agents. Biden's flaw is that he occasionally stutters and makes gaffes from time to time, which are minor mistakes and easily straightened out. There is nothing comparable on the left to what the Republicans have done by attacking Hunter Biden and other right wing dirty tricks (and illegal acts).

      That's why Trump is literally surrounded by convicted felons among his top staff and campaign members while the Republicans in Congress have been unable to pin anything on Biden's family or staff, despite trying very very hard to do so.

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    5. "If Biden looks lost, he will be replaced at the Convention."

      And if Trump looks crazy? Then what?

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    6. David,
      Are you absolutely sure the Wall Street Journal is pretty much the Democrats?

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  4. Trump's mental and physical conditions continue to quickly deteriorate.

    Trump's recent recorded rant literally had him foaming at the mouth, while Biden was honoring our war vets.

    It is a stark contrast, and for any non right winger/Republican, this is one of the easier electoral decisions - Biden is the clear choice, and with Biden's re-election, the country will continue to progress.

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    1. Trump is no longer energetic. He doesn't look like someone who can talk for hours any more. His speeches are more rambling and incoherent lately. Even Republicans have been noticing that he looks like he is in poor health.

      Why would Somerby characterize Trump that way?

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    2. Ummm…

      https://x.com/texaslindsay_/status/1798937683189964973?s=42&t=oYvKLjVc8YzJIvwKoQTYBQ

      Delete
    3. You are supposed to face the flag when Taps is played. Do you know where the flag is from the clip itself? Or perhaps there never was any Taps being played, but that was added to the clip to make Biden seem wrong. Without seeing the larger context and knowing what Biden was looking at, there is no reason to find it hilarious as Texaslindsay does, because she assumes he is senile.

      There is an old clip from Candid Camera that shows the way people in an elevator will turn and face whatever direction a "leader" faces, even to the point of facing the back of the elevator. Those were all normal people engaging in normal social behavior. It seems funny in the clip because there is no reason to turn around like that in an elevator, but we don't know what Biden was looking at (or looking for) or what the context was.

      So yuk it up, but what exactly are you laughing at?

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    4. This phenomenon is called social referencing. People look at and mimic other people in order to engage in socially appropriate behavior. Toddlers as young as 18 mo do it. It is how we learn. That's all that is going on in the clip. Biden is allowed to face whatever direction he wants, without ignorant assholes like Cecelia pointing and laughing because they have some other agenda.

      But this does demonstrate the lack of respect that citizens like Cecelia and TexasLindsay hold for their elected president. And it shows the cottage industry over on the right created to attack Biden for no good reason. If Biden were senile, there would be better examples of it than this one, like the clips of Trump frothing at the mouth, being unable to find words, speaking gibberish, and going into a trance when his teleprompter fails. Those are real. This is manufactured out of spite.

      Note that this takes place at the D-Day Commemoration. Trump was not invited, but if he had been, he wouldn't have been able to go because he is a felon. But the main reason he wouldn't be there is that he is a draft dodger who didn't care enough about his country to serve.

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    5. Anonymouse 3:03pm, why would I laugh at this when my day will eventually come, just as it already has for you.

      It’s fairly obvious that Biden is confused and ended up making everyone else.confused too.

      You may not be laughing Biden off, but you’re blowing this issue off while arguing that it’s a salient one as to Trump.

      Look again, sister.

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    6. Heather Cox Richardson describes Biden's speech at the ceremony:

      "Biden honored the visiting veterans by name—Kenneth Blaine Smith, Bob Gibson, Ben Miller, Louis Brown, Woody Woodhouse, Marjorie Stone—and recounted what they did that day: operating radar, driving an M4 tractor mounted with an anti-aircraft gun, dragging injured soldiers to safety, treating wounds, driving trucks carrying supplies, flying and fixing planes. "

      It seems possible, even likely, they were the people he was turning to look at (or honor) during the playing of Taps, seated behind him.

      Delete
    7. https://x.com/oldrowofficial/status/1798711849044595083?s=42&t=oYvKLjVc8YzJIvwKoQTYBQ

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    8. Cecelia's interpretation is biased by her belief that Biden is senile. It prevents her from considering any other explanation of a photo that is stripped of context.

      You cannot see Biden's face and thus have no reason to believe he is confused. That his relatives would also turn, suggests there was some reason to do so, not that they too were confused. They were there and heard his speech, which would have introduced the survivors he honored. They would turn because they too wished to honor them during Taps.

      The explanation proposed by Cecelia and Republicans like TexasLindsay who laughs her ass off during a solemn ceremony honor the D-Day heroes who defeated Hitler, makes no sense except as an exercise in mean-spirited slagging of our country's leader while performing his job in Europe.

      Don't call me "sister."

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    9. Anonymouse 3:27pm, there’s every reason to believe Biden is confused.

      https://x.com/nicksortor/status/1798728361415688588?s=42&t=oYvKLjVc8YzJIvwKoQTYBQ

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    10. If you look closely at the video you just posted, there is a chair behind Biden. She is not shown leading him off and he does not complete sitting down because the clip is truncated while Biden is still standing next to Macron. There is a complete clip of Biden and Jill Biden walking down a ramp. There is no clip of Macron looking confused -- he is greeting the survivors and shaking their hands, not looking for Biden. Yes, he is doing that by himself at that point, but there is no evidence Biden was supposed to join him, nor anything suggesting Biden did not greet them himself at some other point, perhaps even edited out in order to make this false claim.

      This is a blatant mispresentation of what the clips show.

      It is not surprising that the right wing works so hard to portray Biden in manufactured clips like this. I remember when they suggested that Hillary had a terrible fatal disease because she missed a step climbing onto a bus. Editing clips to make an opponent seem incompetent is not far removed from the stories in the National Enquirer that Trump fabricated in 2015-2016. It is what they do.

      Somerby has chided the left for supposedly doing this to Trump, but he has not chided people like Cecelia and the Republicans for circulating total trash like this. This is disinformation and it stinks.

      People who consume a steady diet of this stuff are not going to have any chance at knowing what is true, unless they seek out other sources of info. They are being lied to (as Cecelia tries to deceive us today) and you cannot disabuse people of such lies unless they are willing to open their minds and consider that this is propaganda.

      I have seen Biden at several functions lately that have been filmed. He is not some sort of doddering old man who doesn't know where he is, as Cecelia seems to believe, but is fully functioning in his role as president, doing his job, speaking and interacting with others, and aware of his surroundings. That's why this kind of clip makes me angry.

      I have no doubt that Trump supporters who hear about his cognitive difficulties are angry too, but they weren't very good at assessing his capabilities from the beginning, when he was speaking gibberish and lying to his crowds in 2015. And even Republicans who used to work with Trump are saying he has deteriorated markedly, to the point where supporters should be concerned about him. No one has to doctor video in order to show that. Trump is impaired. Biden is old but otherwise normal. It causes him to move slowly when grasping for a seat behind him, or to sit down cautiously. But so does Trump, when he requires someone to hold his hand while walking down a ramp. There is no reason to consider Biden senile for being cautious about physical activity. There is good reason to consider Trump senile when he cannot give a coherent speech and is fixated on getting even with his enemies to the point where he cannot tell voters what he stands for.

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    11. In the last of Cecelia's videos, there is no evidence that Biden is confused about anything. There is no dialog, but you can see from the audio of applause that he is waiting for his time to enter. He is like a performer waiting offstage for his introduction. He says nothing to anyone else, he is looking toward the stage/ceremony grounds to the right (our left) where the applause comes from and not wandering around. No one speaks to him either. They are all plainly waiting.

      But using this clip to deride the president (such as by saying he just had a diaper change when there is nothing in the clip to suggest that) is just hostility. Anyone can make up anything around such a clip. If you see what they suggest, Cecelia, you have bought into the Republican line to the point that you will believe anything.

      This is ugly stuff. I would be ashamed of the people who manufacture and consume this kind of propaganda, but you all deserve each other and there is no way to reach you, so I am instead wiping my hands of you and yours. I would leave you to your choice, Trump, but I have to live in this country too, and I don't want to see it destroyed by folks like you.

      You are perhaps performing a service by showing us lefties how bad you truly are. But Gutfeld has already done that.

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    12. Anonymouse 3:44pm, no, Biden is not fully functioning in his role as president…”

      He’s a doddering old man who looks lost, All your histrionic jibbering aside.

      There’s an Adderal shortage because most it is going to Biden. I’ve stated before that Trump looks worse for wear too. But Biden is cooked.

      Delete
    13. Oh, no, anonymices are not worried about Biden functioning at all.

      *********************

      If you look closely at the video you just posted, there is a chair behind Biden. She is not shown leading him off and he does not complete sitting down because the clip is truncated while Biden is still standing next to Macron. There is a complete clip of Biden and Jill Biden walking down a ramp. There is no clip of Macron looking confused -- he is greeting the survivors and shaking their hands, not looking for Biden. Yes, he is doing that by himself at that point, but there is no evidence Biden was supposed to join him, nor anything suggesting Biden did not greet them himself at some other point, perhaps even edited out in order to make this false claim.

      This is a blatant mispresentation of what the clips show.

      It is not surprising that the right wing works so hard to portray Biden in manufactured clips like this. I remember when they suggested that Hillary had a terrible fatal disease because she missed a step climbing onto a bus. Editing clips to make an opponent seem incompetent is not far removed from the stories in the National Enquirer that Trump fabricated in 2015-2016. It is what they do.

      Somerby has chided the left for supposedly doing this to Trump, but he has not chided people like Cecelia and the Republicans for circulating total trash like this. This is disinformation and it stinks.

      People who consume a steady diet of this stuff are not going to have any chance at knowing what is true, unless they seek out other sources of info. They are being lied to (as Cecelia tries to deceive us today) and you cannot disabuse people of such lies unless they are willing to open their minds and consider that this is propaganda.

      I have seen Biden at several functions lately that have been filmed. He is not some sort of doddering old man who doesn't know where he is, as Cecelia seems to believe, but is fully functioning in his role as president, doing his job, speaking and interacting with others, and aware of his surroundings. That's why this kind of clip makes me angry.

      I have no doubt that Trump supporters who hear about his cognitive difficulties are angry too, but they weren't very good at assessing his capabilities from the beginning, when he was speaking gibberish and lying to his crowds in 2015. And even Republicans who used to work with Trump are saying he has deteriorated markedly, to the point where supporters should be concerned about him. No one has to doctor video in order to show that. Trump is impaired. Biden is old but otherwise normal. It causes him to move slowly when grasping for a seat behind him, or to sit down cautiously. But so does Trump, when he requires someone to hold his hand while walking down a ramp. There is no reason to consider Biden senile for being cautious about physical activity. There is good reason to consider Trump senile when he cannot give a coherent speech and is fixated on getting even with his enemies to the point where he cannot tell voters what he stands for.


      AnonymousJune 7, 2024 at 3:51 PM
      In the last of Cecelia's videos, there is no evidence that Biden is confused about anything. There is no dialog, but you can see from the audio of applause that he is waiting for his time to enter. He is like a performer waiting offstage for his introduction. He says nothing to anyone else, he is looking toward the stage/ceremony grounds to the right (our left) where the applause comes from and not wandering around. No one speaks to him either. They are all plainly waiting.

      But using this clip to deride the president (such as by saying he just had a diaper change when there is nothing in the clip to suggest that) is just hostility. Anyone can make up anything around such a clip. If you see what they suggest, Cecelia, you have bought into the Republican line to the point that you will believe anything.

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    14. He is an old man who is being unfairly portrayed as doddering. He looks lost to you because you watch films edited to suggest he is lost or confused. That is mind-reading of a very negative sort being used to push you to believe untruths about Trump's opponent. It is no different than when he said Ted Cruz's father killed JFK or Hillary had an alien baby. Biden doesn't use Adderall -- that is Trump's drug of choice, which he obtained from the White House Dr. Feelgood.

      If Biden is cooked, how was he able to fly to Europe and give a speech at all? How has he managed to push Israel and Hamas into a ceasefire? How did he implement a new border asylum cap? Why are there more shots of Trump flubbing than of Biden? Trump said in AZ at a Town Hall that he was in TX. That is more than confusion. He doesn't even campaign in TX.

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    15. Cecelia, people can go to your links and SEE what is in them, just as I did. They will also see the surrounding narrative supplied by Republicans who wish to disparage Biden, suggesting things that do not appear in the clips and providing explanations that are patently false. For example, Biden's drivers and security detail do not change diapers.

      Was it a mistake that you repeated so much of my comment without responding to it? Are you perhaps confused and doddering yourself?

      Delete
    16. Anonymouse 4:08pm, but you can see what’s actual too. Dismiss it as utterly partisan all you want. but there’s no denying this.

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    17. No, I don't see what you claim is there. I see the other possibilities listed above. That's why I described them. This kind of propaganda is fake.

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    18. When you put a caption on a picture, it changes how people interpret what is happening in the image. It is then very hard to get them to see that image as something different. The caption biases what people see. That is what is happening in the videos Cecelia posted.

      Delete
  5. Somerby posts the same garbled nonsense every day now, the same rehash of faux confusion in defense of Trump and Republicans.

    Somerby can not be bothered to put in any effort into his sad endeavor.

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  6. Sociopathy is not a mental illness. It is a personality disorder. We all have personalities (habitual ways of reacting to and coping with the environment). A disorder arises when someone is distressed, unable to conform to the demands of society, cannot form relationships, cannot hold a job, is often in trouble with the law. Until recently, none of these criteria fit Trump. No matter how obvious someone's personality characteristics are to others, they are not considered to be disordered unless they experience problems because of it. Trump has been shielded from consequences of his personality and behavior since childhood, but that doesn't make him mentally ill (as clinical psychologists and physicians use the word).

    Somerby will never read this comment, so he will go on misusing a serious diagnosis to excuse Trump for acts he should have been held accountable for long ago, as other people are.

    But whether Trump is mentally ill or has a personality disorder (or two), he is manifestly unfit to be re-elected as president. Somerby should spend more time discussing that fact and less time complaining because journalists aren't using psychiatric labels to discuss political candidates.

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    1. Don't fall for the "Somerby doesn't read his comments" shtick. He's disappeared my comments many times, when I pointed out how the Republican Party is an amoral dumpster fire.

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  7. "Voters need to know who a candidate had sex with, ten years before, on one occasion, before they can know how to vote!"

    Trump was not charged for having sex with anyone. He was charged for the cover up, which was ongoing and involved meddling in the 2016 election as well as falsifying business records, breaking FEC rules and cheating on his business taxes. His techniques were similar to those used in his massive business fraud trial, in which he was found liable for serious fraud and fined hundreds of millions of dollars.

    Somerby knows this, but he pretends this is only about Stormy Daniels and not about Trump being dishonest and committing crimes in order to win an office he didn't deserve to hold.

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    1. Trump didn't do catch and kill one time. He didn't encourage the National Enquirer to print one false story about Hillary Clinton, Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio and other opponents. He didn't commit fraud one time but 34 times. And shouldn't voters be told that a candidate is such a crook BEFORE they vote?

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    2. anon 12:18 - you miss the point. True, Trump was convicted under the NY statute making it a felony for falsifying business records - a felony if the records were falsified to conceal another crime. The other "crime" he was supposedly trying to conceal by the falsified records was his participation in a conspiracy to influence the presidential election by "unlawful means." And the way he unlawfully influenced the election was through the payment of "hush money" to Daniels - to keep her quiet about her claim (true or not) that she had sex with the married Trump, and her whole lurid story about that event. In that sense, the prosecution at its root was about Trump having sex with Daniels - ok, it probably wouldn't matter, technically, if Daniels fabricated the sexual episode. But still about a fabricated claim about sex. You claim also that one of the unlawful acts had to do with Trump cheating on his taxes. My understanding is that his overpayment to Cohen was deemed unlawful because it resulted in Cohen overstating his income (Cohen was repaid $430,000 for his $130,000 payment to Daniels, and, as I understand it, Cohen filed a tax return reporting the $430,000 as income - and the tax violation was the false overstatement of income. I'm pretty sure there was no allegation or evidence at trial that Trump claimed the payment to Cohen as a tax deduction.

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    3. The unlawful means were also the use of the National Enquirer to present false stories about his opponents and the failure to report in-kind campaign donations according to FEC rules.

      The repayment to Cohen was not unlawful because of taxes but because Cohen's payment to Daniels was an in-kind donation to the campaign that was not reported, and because it far exceeded the limit on individual contributions ($2600). The tax cheating involved Trump's business reporting the reimbursements as for legal services, which were deductible as business expenses for Trump's business, resulting in him not paying his full tax liability. That was tax fraud. It did not have to be proven to have occurred in order for that to be the other crime that the falsified business records covered up.

      The affair with Stormy Daniels was presented in court because it demonstrated the motive for the actual crimes, the cover up, not because it was illegal for Trump to sleep with her. The catch-and-kill operation and Trump's affair with Karen McDougal similarly demonstrated Trump's motive to cover up his sexual activities, in order to keep public knowledge of them from damaging his election prospects. Hope Hicks also testified that he did not want knowledge of his sexual behavior to become public because it might affect the outcome of the election.

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    4. We may be underestimating the intelligence of members of the general public, like AC/MA (whether he is a lawyer or not).

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    5. AC/MA, congratulations. All bullshite allusions aside as to how this verdict has been coherently explained (by someone other than them…) a million times… you are the first person in the world who has truly elucidated upon it. No one else has made a lick of sense.

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    6. AC/MA has it all wrong.

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    7. Cecilia, thank you.

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    8. anon 4:31, what a strongly reasoned retort!!

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    9. @1:52 addressed the problems with what you said. That means the rest of us do not have to repeat those points. But you and Cecelia really should read what other people say here.

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    10. anon 4:31, oh that explains it, you merely had to add that every I said was wrong, but there was no need to provide any support for that assertion, based on 1:52's post. But 1:52 didn't show that anything I said was "wrong." Anon 1:52 talks about some things that I didn't discuss. she claims one of the "unlawful" acts was Trump's tax fraud in taking a business deduction for his payment to Cohen - I think she is quite wrong about that. I don't think there was any evidence that Trump deducted the $430K paid to Cohen from his return. I didn't say that "it was illegal for Trump to sleep with" Daniels - nothing like that at all. I was addressing what another anon said (no way to tell if all you anons are actually different people) that Trump's alleged sexual escapade, and his desire to hush it up, was what was at the root of the whole criminal charges. but for that there wouldn't have been any prosecution. (I know there was the Playboy model - that was part of conspiracy.) I think it's possible you are being disingenuous.

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    11. Again with the "she"? Do you and Cecelia both have to misgender those you disagree with in comments?

      As I said before, it was not necessary to prove that Trump deducted the $430K in order for it to be tax fraud. The second crime didn't need to be proven in order to make the misdemeanors into felonies. It merely had to provide a motive for the cover up. You don't know this stuff because you didn't follow the trial closely and thus don't know about the motions and clarifications ordered by Merchan.

      You, like David, ask questions then receive answers which you ignore in order to repeat your original misunderstandings. It is very annoying to those of us who dislike wasting our time with you. I wouldn't bother except that you keep reintroducing your confusions and that may affect other readers. @1:52 talked about the things you were confused about. And yes, several things you said were "wrong."

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    12. AC/MA,
      Thank you for dis-abusing me of the belief that lawyers are smart and know more about the law than most 10-year olds.

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    13. anon 10:49, glad that your comfort zone in nitwit land hasn't been disrupted. Having to actually think can be quite uncomfortable.

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  8. "Should Trump "see the fact of having been convicted [in this case] as a shameful judgment on himself?"

    Yes, he should. Why would Somerby even ask this question? Has Somerby too lost his moral compass?

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    1. @12:22 asks, "Should Trump "see the fact of having been convicted [in this case] as a shameful judgment on himself?"

      Well, "Should Martin Luther King see the fact of having been convicted for participating in a lunch counter sit-in in Atlanta ] as a shameful judgment on himself?"

      Trump is no MLK, obviously. My point is that convictions can be unjust. The fact that someone was convicted is not necessarily proof of shameful behavior.

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    2. As anyone who has had to watch Trump over these past 8 years, it is obvious that he is incapable of shame. He is incapable of humility or contrition. That's what you love about him, David. All you maggots who stick to him like flies on shit, should hang your heads in shame for the rest of your miserable lives.

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    3. Just as Trump is incapable of shame, so too is Skurnick.

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    4. Trump was not engaging in civil disobedience to further a civil rights cause. He was manipulating an election in a self-serving manner for his own benefit, committing fraud in the process.

      Since you know that Trump was no MLK and did not have even remotely the same motives, why bring MLK up at all? If you have any reason why Trump should not be ashamed of his behavior, put that forward instead. The fact that someone was convicted means they did the crime, just as MLK would have been rightly convicted for participating in the sit-in (in the sense that he did it) but also justified in his larger cause.

      Was Trump justified in cheating during the 2016 election? Are you seriously defending someone who did what he did, just to win? Are all the rules to be broken now because some Republican thinks he shouldn't have to follow them? There are people who think that way -- they are called criminals.

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    5. Was Trump justified in hiding his affair during the 2016 election? I think so, It's normal for candidates to hide negative things about themselves.

      One could provide any number of examples. Here's one: Biden is currently hiding the audio tape of his interview with Special Counsel Robert Hur
      https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/republicans-hammer-defiant-ag-garland-to-hand-over-biden-hur-audio/ar-BB1nCKJ8

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    6. The DOJ is following established policy and guidelines. You maggots have no need to have the audio released.

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    7. This wasn't just about hiding an affair. It was HOW Trump did it, using fraud. But don't ignore his fake articles against his opponents in National Enquirer. That is subverting the press. And his illegal payments that were outside the rules for campaign financing. This wasn't only about a one-night affair. It was ongoing corruption of several kinds, all indicating a lack of respect for the rules and law in general.

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    8. There has been a suggestion that the Wall Street Journal article yesterday attacking Biden's age was a put-up job on behalf of Trump in exchange for his promise to get Putin to free their hostage reporter. A tit-for-tat bargain. Why wouldn't it be? That is how Trump operates.

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    9. Anonymouse 1:43pm, and it’s not like Biden is old.

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    10. It's not like Biden is senile or cannot function as president.

      Being old affects different people differently. Biden needs to be judged based on his performance, which has been outstanding, not some number on a calendar. Trump on the other hand, had a terrible presidency even 8 years ago, when Trump was younger than Biden has been during this current term (2021-2024). Trump was listed as the worst president ever, whereas Biden was 14th.

      https://www.npr.org/2024/02/19/1232447088/historians-presidents-survey-trump-last-biden-14th

      Why would anyone vote again for the person who was considered the worst president ever -- Trump? And that was before Trump's current, concerning symptoms of cognitive decline. Biden meanwhile, is going ahead the same as he has been without showing signs of slipping, despite the right wing's frenzied attempts to manufacture some, and their accusations that Biden wears diapers and similar childish shit.

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    11. If Warren Buffet wore diapers does that mean you wouldn't consider his investment advice?

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  9. "Yesterday afternoon, George Conway described Trump as a sociopath on Deadline: White House. With very few exceptions, major journalists have agreed that this obvious possibility must never be mentioned in any discussion of Trump."

    Isn't this a contradiction? Somerby describes Conway calling Trump a sociopath, then he says no one does that. I'll bet Somerby has never counted the number of people or the number of times Trump has been called a sociopath. If you count the comments on blogs, it is an overwhelmingly large number of times.

    Is Somerby seriously suggesting that the reason right wingers are supporting Trump is because they don't know he is a sociopath? They need the press to tell them that more often? Will calling Trump crazy cause anyone to skip voting for Trump, when Somerby says that calling him a crook won't work?

    It makes me wonder whether Somerby is at all serious about telling anyone that Trump is unfit to be president.

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  10. "Can President Biden engage in a full-blown debate with Candidate Trump, a highly energetic man who can bullsh*t all night long?"

    The purpose of a debate is NOT to exchange bullshit, much less all night long. It is to present one's political platform to the public and to answer questions about their qualifications for office and their plans for governing. None of that should be "bullshit". So being able to bullshit at length is NOT a positive for the upcoming debate, much less for someone elected president.

    Biden did fine at his state of the union speech, which was longer and arguably more important than this upcoming debate. Both Trump and Biden will have rest periods to think, while the other person is speaking. The answers will be time-limited and brief, not hours of bullshit. What will matter is the cogency of the responses and the ability to think on one's feet, not the rambling and incoherent buzz phrases, tired anecdotes that go nowhere, that Trump typically spews.

    We have seen that Trump gets a deer-in-headlights look and freezes when his teleprompter goes off unexpectedly. He will have no teleprompter at the debate. When Trump speaks extemporaneously, he wanders and makes no sense. That won't trouble the MAGAs, who fill in their own meanings, but it may bother swing voters, the people able to be swayed by the debate.

    Biden is able to be witty and he responds appropriately to press questions. He makes sense when he talks off script, with an occasional gaffe (which he has made throughout his career). But he speaks to the point and in a friendly and responsive manner. Trump doesn't do that. The difference should be stark enough to sway votes, and it does not favor Trump but Biden, who won't look half as old as he has been portrayed, most recently by the Wall Street Journal (who interviewed several Republican partisans who confirmed that Biden is indeed old). Trump is old too, but unlike Biden, Trump cannot hold it together any more in public.

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    1. I frankly wonder what the purpose of the debates is. I recall watching Kennedy v. Nixon. Even though I was a strong Kennedy supporter and hated Nixon, I thought Nixon won., His answers were more cogent and more fact=based. As we now know, Nixon lost because of his five-o'clock shadow and Kennedy's good looks.

      It hasn't gotten better IMO As 12:37 says the debate should be a forum to present one's political platform to the public and to answer questions. But, they're so scripted that we generally learn nothing. The two candidates generally just parrot their talking points.

      I wonder what would happen if they had a real debate, with just the two of them talking and more time to discuss matters in detail.

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    2. right, Dick in Cal, we should give the bullshitter more time to bullshit. no fact checking allowed though

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    3. David is repeating mythology about the JFK/Nixon debate, which was the first to be televised.

      Many people do not follow politics closely and a debate gives them a chance to become familiar with and compare two (or more) candidates. They will not be previously familiar with any candidate's talking points, so they will hear them for the first time. They will learn a great deal, if they pay attention to what is being said. Debates that are a circus of name-calling and interruption, as recent Republican debates have been, invite viewers to compare other qualities of the candidates, ones that may be entirely irrelevant to the traits needed to do a good job. Trump's stage theatrics are an example of that

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    4. Trump does not have the civility to observe debate time limts. That would make a debate a farce and grossly unfair to Biden, who isn't going to shout him down. Making his opponent stand by quietly doing nothing while he hogs the stage would be Trump's idea of "winning" (no matter what the content of his statements), but it would reflect badly on Trump among those who value good behavior. But that is the main divide between Republicans and Democrats -- Republicans are OK with law-breaking and being gross and stupid while engaging in misbehavior. They would think Trump was winning a debate simply by shutting out Biden's chance to speak.

      Biden would never insult the Queen of England (King now) or elbow another world leader out of the way so that he could stand in front of everyone else in a group photo, as Trump did. But Republicans think someone who shows respect is a pu**y. So, if people don't want to hear what the candidates have to say, there is no point in debating, in my opinion. Trump is not capable of really debating and I expect him to disrupt the proceedings, if he even shows up (many are predicting he will use some excuse to skip the debate).

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    5. Biden certainly did insult a world leader of a close ally, namely Netanyahu.

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    6. And you can't tell the difference between diplomacy and civility?

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  11. Bob: for a fair analysis of the Turmp verdict and his possible paths forward see https://youtu.be/u23t__ysVjU

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    1. Jed Rubenfeld is married to Amy Chua and works as a law professor at Yale. He is not uncontroversial.

      https://www.techdirt.com/2021/05/11/disgraced-yale-law-professor-now-defending-anti-vaxxers-court-with-his-nonsense-section-230-ideas/

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    2. Just stick to his legal analysis. Not everyone worth listening to has to be a rabid leftist

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    3. If his political analysis is messed up, why should anyone trust his legal analysis?

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  12. "Viewers had observed a jumble of words posing as a discussion."

    Heh.

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    1. I wouldn't trust Somerby evaluation of whether words pose as a discussion or are actually saying something, given that he doesn't seem to understand much these days.

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  13. I am a Soros troll. I seethe bitterness.

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    1. My breath smells like Wintogreen Lifesavers.

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    2. My breath smells like dark chocolate.

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  14. "Can President Biden engage in a full-blown debate with Candidate Trump, a highly energetic man who can bullsh*t all night long?"

    But perhaps he could play the familiar role of a well-meaning elderly man with a poor memory, and generate some pity and sympathy for himself? Many elderly people manipulate others this way.

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    1. Trump is just as elderly as Biden.

      What do you make of the fact that Biden has been making many more public appearances than Trump lately. And Trump, that highly energetic man, cannot keep his eyes open at his own criminal trial. They have been hiding him from rallies and public appearances but he still screws up during softball interviews, as when he wouldn't stop talking to let the interviewer end the segment during his last appearance.

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  15. It gets discussed by both sides about how the judge's charge didn't require unanimity on any one of the "unlawful" actions Trump was accused of, as long as the jury unanimously found that he committed a violation of any of three "unlawful" acts. (this related to the other misdemeanor, conspiracy to unlawfully promote a candidate in an election). I am pretty sure, however, that even if the jury had to be unanimous as to at least one specific "unlawful" act, they would have done so. I assume the judge could have avoided the controversy by having the jury slip require that the jurors vote separately on each of the 3 alleged unlawful acts. Then you'd know for sure if there was unanimity on at least one of them. I don't know if the fact that the judge charged the jury the way he did on the unanimity issue creates a basis for an appellate reversal. I haven' read the briefs addressing it or done any research. (Bad enough I'm spending time writing this post). You'd think that the judge would be on solid ground on that particular issue, but sometimes the answers to legal issues aren't so clear.

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    1. The problem with this is that when the crime itself involves covering up some other crime, the cover prevents the kind of certainty required to be unanimous. The crime was the falsification of records that covered up the other serious crime(s). Further, the definition of the felony is that a crime must exist but need not have been proven, because of the tampering with the evidence in the cover up.

      Bragg has convicted numerous people of this crime, so if it is overturned on appeal, there will be a large impact on those other cases. This is not one of the so-called novel applications of legal theory. The judge has been careful to be fair to Trump and to stay on solid ground, so this idea that Trump's conviction will be overturned may be wishful thinking.

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    2. IMO Trump would have been convicted even if the judge required unanimity. The judge's instructions and the bias of the jury ensured a conviction no matter what.

      BTW there's now a possibility that the trial had a problem. See Judge in Trump hush money trial flags Facebook post claiming juror spoke about case
      https://abcnews.go.com/US/judge-trump-hush-money-trial-flags-facebook-post/story?id=110940375

      If the verdict were overturned now, that would be bad for Trump IMO It would mean a repeat of the trial. The repeat would likely look like the original. It would take Trump away from campaigning and remind the public of his misdeeds.

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    3. David, the jury was selected by Trump's defense as well as the prosecution and judge, explicitly for its lack of bias. A big deal is made about NYC being blue, but the largest group of people in NYC is not Democrats or Republicans but non-voters, people who do not follow politics at all. That favored Trump as much as anyone else in his trial. You could see from the juror questionnaires that one listed Truth Social as a news source while others listed only the most familiar names, such as the NY Times, which they may not have been reading closely. As you note, the judge did not say anything was wrong with the verdict in the article you linked to.

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    4. The person posting the comment on Facebook describes himself as a professional shitposter and is unlikely to be genuine. Take a look at this:

      https://meidasnews.com/news/facebooker-at-center-of-jury-controversy-calls-himself-professional-sh-tposter

      It is someone trying to mess with the system.

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    5. David,
      Do you have proof all 12 jurors love the United States of America and for all in which it stands (i.e. are biased against Trump and Republicans)?
      If so, now is the time to show the receipts.

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    6. 6:46,
      A few years ago, we had a poster here at TDH who insisted there were Republican voters who cared about something other than bigotry and white supremacy. He was challenged for months to name one. He left TDH after a while, and hasn't been heard from again.

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  16. I know how everyone here wants to hear the other side of the story, and not make decisions based on only hearing one side. I recommend my fellow TDH followers to go on line to the Reason website and read Jacob Sullum's seeming evisceration of those defending the basis of the Bragg prosecution. TDH, if you're out there, i recommend you read it too. Reason is free online.

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