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OT: Twitter Thread on 3 Decades of Russian & Mafia Relationships with Trump

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Re: OT: Twitter Thread on 3 Decades of Russian & Mafia Relationships with Trump 

Post#381 » by Clyde_Style » Tue Aug 14, 2018 10:55 pm

NoLayupRule wrote:
Clyde_Style wrote:Hey JonStarks and Wingo, I've been crazy busy the last two days and I'll talk to you guys later.

Just wanted to pass on that Manafort's defense team did not call a single witness and rested their case in a single day today. Pretty much a rout so far.

dont be too cocky

defenses rest without a witness when they feel the burden of proof hasn't been reached

lets not assume anything until the jury comes back


You think I don't know how that works? Of course. The reality is Manafort had no witnesses to back him.
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Re: OT: Twitter Thread on 3 Decades of Russian & Mafia Relationships with Trump 

Post#383 » by NoLayupRule » Tue Aug 14, 2018 10:58 pm

Clyde_Style wrote:
NoLayupRule wrote:
Clyde_Style wrote:Hey JonStarks and Wingo, I've been crazy busy the last two days and I'll talk to you guys later.

Just wanted to pass on that Manafort's defense team did not call a single witness and rested their case in a single day today. Pretty much a rout so far.

dont be too cocky

defenses rest without a witness when they feel the burden of proof hasn't been reached

lets not assume anything until the jury comes back


You think I don't know how that works? Of course. The reality is Manafort had no witnesses to back him.

yeah, because hes obviously guilty!!

lol
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Re: OT: Twitter Thread on 3 Decades of Russian & Mafia Relationships with Trump 

Post#384 » by Clyde_Style » Tue Aug 14, 2018 10:59 pm

NoLayupRule wrote:
Clyde_Style wrote:
NoLayupRule wrote:dont be too cocky

defenses rest without a witness when they feel the burden of proof hasn't been reached

lets not assume anything until the jury comes back


You think I don't know how that works? Of course. The reality is Manafort had no witnesses to back him.

yeah, because hes obviously guilty!!

lol


WTF? If you followed the trial you'll know the evidence is damning as hell
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Re: OT: Twitter Thread on 3 Decades of Russian & Mafia Relationships with Trump 

Post#385 » by NoLayupRule » Tue Aug 14, 2018 11:01 pm

Clyde_Style wrote:
NoLayupRule wrote:
Clyde_Style wrote:
You think I don't know how that works? Of course. The reality is Manafort had no witnesses to back him.

yeah, because hes obviously guilty!!

lol


WTF? If you followed the trial you'll know the evidence is damning as hell

thats exactly what I said

but lets not get ahead of ourselves either

its never too late for things to go badly and somehow this grotesque person to get off
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Re: OT: Twitter Thread on 3 Decades of Russian & Mafia Relationships with Trump 

Post#386 » by Clyde_Style » Tue Aug 14, 2018 11:08 pm

NoLayupRule wrote:
Clyde_Style wrote:
NoLayupRule wrote:yeah, because hes obviously guilty!!

lol


WTF? If you followed the trial you'll know the evidence is damning as hell

thats exactly what I said

but lets not get ahead of ourselves either

its never too late for things to go badly and somehow this grotesque person to get off


Again, I KNOW THAT, things can go wrong. But it felt like you were trying to put me in my place for no good reason. We all know Manafort was broke as hell and faking his records and that's what this trial is about. It's a straight up banking fraud trial, not a treason party. That comes later
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Re: OT: Twitter Thread on 3 Decades of Russian & Mafia Relationships with Trump 

Post#387 » by NoLayupRule » Tue Aug 14, 2018 11:12 pm

Clyde_Style wrote:
NoLayupRule wrote:
Clyde_Style wrote:
WTF? If you followed the trial you'll know the evidence is damning as hell

thats exactly what I said

but lets not get ahead of ourselves either

its never too late for things to go badly and somehow this grotesque person to get off


Again, I KNOW THAT, things can go wrong. But it felt like you were trying to put me in my place for no good reason. We all know Manafort was broke as hell and faking his records and that's what this trial is about. It's a straight up banking fraud trial, not a treason party. That comes later

youre being a little sensitive

weve talked about this stuff quite a bit
I wasn't putting you in your place
Im just saying lets not count our chickens
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Re: OT: Twitter Thread on 3 Decades of Russian & Mafia Relationships with Trump 

Post#388 » by Clyde_Style » Tue Aug 14, 2018 11:17 pm

NoLayupRule wrote:
Clyde_Style wrote:
NoLayupRule wrote:thats exactly what I said

but lets not get ahead of ourselves either

its never too late for things to go badly and somehow this grotesque person to get off


Again, I KNOW THAT, things can go wrong. But it felt like you were trying to put me in my place for no good reason. We all know Manafort was broke as hell and faking his records and that's what this trial is about. It's a straight up banking fraud trial, not a treason party. That comes later

youre being a little sensitive

weve talked about this stuff quite a bit
I wasn't putting you in your place
Im just saying lets not count our chickens


I'm not

But that's not the same as saying it was a rout in terms of what the prosecution presented vs. the defense

all it takes is one jury member so we'll see
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Re: OT: Twitter Thread on 3 Decades of Russian & Mafia Relationships with Trump 

Post#389 » by HarthorneWingo » Wed Aug 15, 2018 5:46 am

Reading the tea leaves and waiting for the fcking jury. I know what both of you are saying. Yes, it's a slam dunk but you never know. Ugh. :noway: :lol:

I'm still predicting a conviction on most, if not all, counts. The question is whether dick head will pardon him.
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Re: OT: Twitter Thread on 3 Decades of Russian & Mafia Relationships with Trump 

Post#390 » by Clyde_Style » Wed Aug 15, 2018 5:56 pm

JohnStarksTheDunk wrote:
Clyde_Style wrote:Maybe until 2020, but not necessarily. As you can see here some smart people are making good cases for why it is hard to remove him. I have also provided additional input on why he may still be ousted. I don't put odds on these things. That's a mistake IMO.

Better I think is to look at the big picture and understand how vast a criminal conspiracy this is and once that is grasped it becomes easier to understand why conventional logic about why he is shielded may not hold up.

If it were just Trump was a criminal, that would be another story. This is about a crew of criminals installed with the help of an even more powerful foreign criminal. And a whole party's leadership going along for the ride knowing what they were getting into bed with. Nobody should think for a second these GOP senators didn't have the security clearances to know Trump was in bed with Putin.

The Senators like Burr on the Senate Intelligence Committee have the highest clearances. He has control of the committee yet he is one of the only Republicans with actual power to work fairly with the Democrats on this investigation within Congress and that committee has worked with Mueller intimately. He knows more than most senators. But they all know what they signed up for.

There are few constitutional precedents for this situation, but what many fail to keep adding is there are few constitutional precedents either. And for that reason, new ground may be broken. For instance, Mueller may indict Trump and courts may rule a trial may proceed. That's new ground.

For that and other reasons the cohesion of a slight GOP Senate majority may not be enough to shield Trump from ouster.

He can also lose all or most of his assets due state prosecutions and asset seizures which the congress has no say in either way. This is a super complex and the strain for Trump and his associates must be close to unbearable already.

The NRA is going to be indicted. Key members of the GOP will be indicted. It's a storm that will reach cyclone force and the public support of the GOP has been broken down as about 40% of Republicans are totally hardcore and will back Trump all the way. But that portion represents only 18% of the vote.

As Congress is composed of political animals, the GOP's unity in the face of this storm looks likely to break off into flanks of the group that goes down with the ship and a core group of Republican Senators and Congresspeople who decide to disassociate from the Trump wing of the party and either stake themselves out as the salvation of the party or go down in opposition to it.

But I seriously doubt that after what is revealed, who is indicted and convicted this next 6-9 months that the unity of the GOP will resemble anything like the previous 18 months. Therefore, Trump will be impeachable.


Personally, I hope you're right, but honestly right now most of this seems like a best case scenario, rather than the most likely scenario.

At this point, things have become so partisan that what people believe matters almost as much as actual facts (and more so in some cases).

Yes, in terms of the body politic and public discourse, I'd say that's accurate

If enough people can be convinced that the facts and evidence ultimately presented by Mueller are untrue, then Republicans in Congress will have enough cover to continue to do nothing. They don't need the truth on their side -- they only need an excuse to pretend to doubt Mueller's findings and justify their inaction.

True for the base which I broke down statistically earlier to be at 18% based on granular polling of how Republicans self-identify with their party affiliation. Not necessarily true for other Republics as convictions mount. Plus, polling rarely captures party defections since pollsters have confirmed that people often do not reveal they are straying from their registered party until years afterward. There are already millions who voted for Trump who will vote Democrat or stay home.

But in terms of the the GOP have the backing of the population to lie through there teeth once treason is proven in the court of law, no, I think you're wrong about the strength of that political firewall.


Even if the Dems take back the House and impeach Trump, a two-thirds majority is needed in the Senate to convict. Thus far, the assanine efforts to attack and tarnish the investigation have been more successful than I would have ever thought possible, and we can expect such efforts to continue in full force, including another push to impeach Rosenstein, which, even if it fails, still serves to discredit him for much of the public.

False actually, those efforts have been a colossal failure. In fact, the recent introduction of impeachment proceedings against Rosenstein in the House by Trump true believers was shot down immediately by almost everyone in the GOP. Not only was it an unprecedented use of those powers against a Justice Dept. official, the pure frivolity of it just lowered the bar upon which to impeach anyone. The only person it hurt was Trump.

All of the other flim-flam BS by Nunes has been made a mockery of and we are not hearing of any new schemes outside of Trump's increasingly deranged tweets and firings of McCabe and Strzok which simply box Trump in as petty, but completely ineffective. All of these activities are only successful in one sense: those gullible enough (the base) to believe they represent Trump's ability to fight back the charges heading his way will chose to remain in a state of delusion. Actual Justice officials and ranking congressional members know none of it means jack.

Assuming that Rosenstein remains in his role and the investigation is allowed to conclude, Mueller will ultimately produce a confidential report for the DOJ, and then it will be up to Rosenstein to share some, or all, of it to Congress and potentially to the public.

You don't know that. I've posted in a detailed manner laying out other pathways IN ADDITION to a report. Indicting Trump is very possible. Anyone who claims otherwise is BS'ing you. EDIT: I was answering in sequence and understand you incorporated this later in your post.


From what we know of Rosenstein, and hints of the seriousness of the allegations that will end up in the report and our best guess about Mueller's recommendation, he will likely share most/all of it with Congress. We also know that Rosenstein, like Mueller, is very much "by the book" and therefore may not make the full report available to the public. So the decision to act on it may be left with Congress, and they can decide to share all, none, or only select pieces. And from what we've seen from folks like Devin Nunes, there could be different conclusions drawn from the report from different sects in Congress, each trying to present a version that best suits their needs. At that point, Rosenstein might decide to release the entire report, but inevitably some parts will still need to be redacted for security reasons, and I expect that Trump and the Nunes crowd will point to those as information being deliberately withheld, and try to claim these redactions as evidence of their bullsh*t "deep state" conspiracy theories.

Alternatively, or in combination with the report, Mueller could attempt to indict the President. Whether he can do so will then need to be decided in the courts, and if Kavanaugh is confirmed by then, along with the extension of partisanship politics to the SCOTUS, the outcome may not be in Mueller's favor.

Yes. This may happen. I agree that Kavanaugh may become a factor in all of this.

Of course, there could be a true, undeniable, smoking-gun or something equivalent, which would change things immensely. But it remains to be seen if that will happen, and this is unfortunately a very complex, wide-ranging, and high stakes case, making the burden of proof that much more difficult. Like you, I hope for the best, but I remain skeptical.

There are multiple smoking guns. Buckle up.



Still busy, but to reply more rapidly I put comments inside your post
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Re: OT: Twitter Thread on 3 Decades of Russian & Mafia Relationships with Trump 

Post#391 » by Clyde_Style » Wed Aug 15, 2018 6:00 pm

HarthorneWingo wrote:Reading the tea leaves and waiting for the fcking jury. I know what both of you are saying. Yes, it's a slam dunk but you never know. Ugh. :noway: :lol:

I'm still predicting a conviction on most, if not all, counts. The question is whether dick head will pardon him.


Pardon would backfire. That's why he only used them on dickheads like Arpaio and D'Souza. That way Trump baited his co-defendants into hoping he'd pardon them and zip their mouths in anticipation (which is actually a form of obstruction or witness tampering when you get down to it).

The worse thing for Trump to do is try and pardon his way out of this. I hope he does. It will sink him even faster as the pardons can be annulled and/or it frees up the pardonee to testify against Trump without consequences. But Trump and Giuliani are idiots so they might try to do it anyway.
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Re: OT: Twitter Thread on 3 Decades of Russian & Mafia Relationships with Trump 

Post#392 » by j4remi » Wed Aug 15, 2018 7:58 pm

Read on Twitter


This is nuts and they did so without consulting Coats apparently?
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Re: OT: Twitter Thread on 3 Decades of Russian & Mafia Relationships with Trump 

Post#393 » by Clyde_Style » Wed Aug 15, 2018 8:10 pm

j4remi wrote:
Read on Twitter


This is nuts and they did so without consulting Coats apparently?


It is nuts and the IC is just going to gun for Trump even harder now.

Their rationale was literally "They hurt my feelings"

None of this is going to fail to get its final reckoning.
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Re: OT: Twitter Thread on 3 Decades of Russian & Mafia Relationships with Trump 

Post#394 » by JohnStarksTheDunk » Wed Aug 15, 2018 8:25 pm

Clyde, as I said, I hope you're right and I'm wrong. But I remain skeptical.

Clyde_Style wrote:
JohnStarksTheDunk wrote:Even if the Dems take back the House and impeach Trump, a two-thirds majority is needed in the Senate to convict. Thus far, the assanine efforts to attack and tarnish the investigation have been more successful than I would have ever thought possible, and we can expect such efforts to continue in full force, including another push to impeach Rosenstein, which, even if it fails, still serves to discredit him for much of the public.


False actually, those efforts have been a colossal failure. In fact, the recent introduction of impeachment proceedings against Rosenstein in the House by Trump true believers was shot down immediately by almost everyone in the GOP. Not only was it an unprecedented use of those powers against a Justice Dept. official, the pure frivolity of it just lowered the bar upon which to impeach anyone. The only person it hurt was Trump.

All of the other flim-flam BS by Nunes has been made a mockery of and we are not hearing of any new schemes outside of Trump's increasingly deranged tweets and firings of McCabe and Strzok which simply box Trump in as petty, but completely ineffective. All of these activities are only successful in one sense: those gullible enough (the base) to believe they represent Trump's ability to fight back the charges heading his way will chose to remain in a state of delusion. Actual Justice officials and ranking congressional members know none of it means jack.


How do we define failure here? I'm not saying that these efforts succeeded in convincing a large number of non-Trumpers to believe in a deep state conspiracy. I'm saying they were more successful in creating questions and doubts than I thought they would've been (because these arguments are plainly ridiculous).

Do folks like you and I think Nunes is a joke? Absolutely. But what about those who don't follow the news so closely, or get their news from different sources, and just hear rumblings in one ear about the DOJ supposedly withholding information, or FBI agents sending anti-Trump texts, or allegedly improper FISA warrants, etc? Over time, adjectives like "controversial" and "embattled" start to be placed in front of Mueller's name, and that serves to normalize the idea that the investigation could be improper or partisan, in spite of Mueller's own stellar reputation in both parties. In an "accuse the accusers" strategy, the goal is to take attention off the accusations and plant seeds of doubt in people's minds. To some extent, the mere fact that the news is reporting on an effort to impeach Rosenstein, for example, helps normalize it for those who might not be paying attention or just hear it in passing.

But perhaps I'm being overly cynical. I just know that people are willing to believe pretty incredible things, especially if these things are presented as relating to Hillary or Obama.

Clyde_Style wrote:
JohnStarksTheDunk wrote:Alternatively, or in combination with the report, Mueller could attempt to indict the President. Whether he can do so will then need to be decided in the courts, and if Kavanaugh is confirmed by then, along with the extension of partisanship politics to the SCOTUS, the outcome may not be in Mueller's favor.


Yes. This may happen. I agree that Kavanaugh may become a factor in all of this.


Don't forget that many Republicans still stuck with Nixon until the release of the tapes, which only occurred because the SCOTUS ruled that he must disclose them. Do we trust the current SCOTUS, or one with Kavanaugh, to make a similar ruling now?

Clyde_Style wrote:
JohnStarksTheDunk wrote:Of course, there could be a true, undeniable, smoking-gun or something equivalent, which would change things immensely. But it remains to be seen if that will happen, and this is unfortunately a very complex, wide-ranging, and high stakes case, making the burden of proof that much more difficult. Like you, I hope for the best, but I remain skeptical.


There are multiple smoking guns. Buckle up.


Such as? When I say smoking gun I mean something that isn't based solely on someone else's testimony (they could say that person is lying), and/or isn't something that could have realistically been doctored or fabricated (though they will still try to say it was). Something like the Nixon Tapes. Marcy Wheeler claims that Mueller has evidence that likely implicates the President directly. I'm inclined to believe her, and there could be even more evidence that is even more incriminating. But at this point we don't know. If/when this information comes to light, I'll be more likely to believe that Trump can be removed before 2020.
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Re: OT: Twitter Thread on 3 Decades of Russian & Mafia Relationships with Trump 

Post#395 » by Clyde_Style » Wed Aug 15, 2018 8:31 pm

Penn Jillette claims Trump said 'racially insensitive' comments during 'Celebrity Apprentice'

https://www.cnn.com/2018/08/14/entertainment/penn-jillette-trump-apprentice/index.html

SHORT ARTICLE:

Spoiler:
Magician Penn Jillette, one half of the duo Penn &Teller, claims he heard President Donald Trump say "racially insensitive" remarks during his time appearing on the reality competition show, "The Celebrity Apprentice."

Jillette stopped short of confirming the details of Trump's alleged comments, but his assertion comes at a time of renewed discussion about whether Trump purportedly said the N-word, a racial epithet, during production of the reality TV series.

"He would say racially insensitive things that made me uncomfortable," Jillette told Vulture in an interview. "I don't think he ever said anything in that room like 'African Americans are inferior' or anything about rape or grabbing women, but of those two hours every other day in a room with him, every ten minutes was fingernails on chalkboard."

Asked if tapes of Trump making those comments exist, Jillette said, "Yeah, I was in the room."

Jillette gave one example of Trump speaking about women in a demeaning way, but declined to provide more specifics.

"If Donald Trump had not become president, I would tell you all the stories. But the stakes are now high and I am an unreliable narrator," he said. "What I do, as much as anything, is I'm a storyteller. And storytellers are liars. So I can emotionally tell you things that happened racially, sexually, and that showed stupidity and lack of compassion when I was in the room with Donald Trump and I guarantee you that I will get details wrong."

Jillette appeared on Seasons 5 and 6 of "The Celebrity Apprentice," the latter of which was an all-star season and also featured Omarosa Manigault Newman.

Manigault Newman, a former Trump aide, claims in her new tell-all book, "Unhinged: An Insider Account of the Trump White House," that Trump used a racial slur on the set of the NBC reality show.

This week, Trump fired back at Manigault Newman in a tweet, saying, "When you give a crazed, crying lowlife a break, and give her a job at the White House, I guess it just didn't work out. Good work by General Kelly for quickly firing that dog!"
Trump's use of the term "dog" drew a firestorm of criticism.

White House press secretary Sarah Sanders has said the book is "riddled with lies and false accusations."
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Re: OT: Twitter Thread on 3 Decades of Russian & Mafia Relationships with Trump 

Post#396 » by Clyde_Style » Wed Aug 15, 2018 8:39 pm

JohnStarks

Some stuck by Nixon, but quite a few Republicans bailed on him as well

We would actually have to be completely disconnected to not think there are many smoking guns due to the simple fact almost all of the operatives meeting with Trump's team are routinely tracked by the American and European IC going back years now. The SIGINT on Trump is what started the investigations in the first place.

As great as the Russians are at the disinfo campaigns, they are not good enough to evade our listening skills so when Ambassador Kislyak has "private" meetings with Reince Priebus in Trump Tower and at the Cleveland RNC, they're not eluding our IC. So I don't even have to indulge in the more sordid speculations to say Mueller already has plenty of conclusive dirt yet to be revealed.

The rest I won't rehash. What you're calling success at attempts to derail the investigation is merely a restatement that true believers will believe anything and that will carry the day for Trump. It has not derailed anything at all, the courts keep ruling EVERY TIME in Mueller's favor in both the Manfort trial and in grand jury hearings. If you didn't read about it before, go find the 92 page handed down in the Roger Stone hearings. It was a new legal precedent confirming Mueller's role and how he cannot be fired on a whim. That's new law handed down this month. So Devin Nunes means dick.
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Re: OT: Twitter Thread on 3 Decades of Russian & Mafia Relationships with Trump 

Post#397 » by stuporman » Wed Aug 15, 2018 9:42 pm

The difference is Nixon was one of them, Trump isn't, so the GOP will bail on him and pile on top in the fraction of a news cycle. The establishment GOP is just using Trump to push through all their policy and they don't care that Trump takes all the credit which is all he wants anyway. The reason they let him is because it's terrible policy that as soon as the US public realizes how terrible it is for them they get to blame Trump for the effects from it since he took all the credit.

As soon as Trump is fully exposed through his own incompetence the GOP, Fox News and anyone who jumped on his bandwagon during the rise will turn on him and it will be a bloodbath of 'insider sourced' dirt flowing around the media. They will lap it up because that's what they want yet the horrible policies, which many Dems support anyway, will be ignored and remain in place hurting citizens as the media flogging on Trump will take precedence in attention.
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Re: OT: Twitter Thread on 3 Decades of Russian & Mafia Relationships with Trump 

Post#398 » by Clyde_Style » Wed Aug 15, 2018 9:45 pm

stuporman wrote:The difference is Nixon was one of them, Trump isn't, so the GOP will bail on him and pile on top in the fraction of a news cycle. The establishment GOP is just using Trump to push through all their policy and they don't care that Trump takes all the credit which is all he wants anyway. The reason they let him is because it's terrible policy that as soon as the US public realizes how terrible it is for them they get to blame Trump for the effects from it since he took all the credit.

As soon as Trump is fully exposed through his own incompetence the GOP, Fox News and anyone who jumped on his bandwagon during the rise will turn on him and it will be a bloodbath of 'insider sourced' dirt flowing around the media. They will lap it up because that's what they want yet the horrible policies, which many Dems support anyway, will be ignored and remain in place hurting citizens as the media flogging on Trump will take precedence in attention.


Yes, I realized after I posted I should have said as much. Very different GOP = very different circumstances.
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Re: OT: Twitter Thread on 3 Decades of Russian & Mafia Relationships with Trump 

Post#399 » by reub » Wed Aug 15, 2018 11:15 pm

Why does Brennan need an intelligence clearance now? Ricky please explain.
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Re: OT: Twitter Thread on 3 Decades of Russian & Mafia Relationships with Trump 

Post#400 » by HarthorneWingo » Wed Aug 15, 2018 11:40 pm

Clyde_Style wrote:
HarthorneWingo wrote:Reading the tea leaves and waiting for the fcking jury. I know what both of you are saying. Yes, it's a slam dunk but you never know. Ugh. :noway: :lol:

I'm still predicting a conviction on most, if not all, counts. The question is whether dick head will pardon him.


Pardon would backfire. That's why he only used them on dickheads like Arpaio and D'Souza. That way Trump baited his co-defendants into hoping he'd pardon them and zip their mouths in anticipation (which is actually a form of obstruction or witness tampering when you get down to it).

The worse thing for Trump to do is try and pardon his way out of this. I hope he does. It will sink him even faster as the pardons can be annulled and/or it frees up the pardonee to testify against Trump without consequences. But Trump and Giuliani are idiots so they might try to do it anyway.


And Manafort would still have to testify against Trump. No 5th Amendment privilege at that point.

Edit: And by accepting the pardon, I believe that the pardonee is required to accept that he did what what was alleged.

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