TRUMP INDICTED

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member

Karl Rove pens op-ed saying Trump's 'childish impulse' to blame

63,031 views Jun 16, 2023 #Trump #Politics #MSNBC
Former White House Deputy Chief of Staff, Karl Rove, in a new op-ed for the WSJ says "[T]he blame for this calamity rests solely on Mr. Trump and his childish impulse to keep mementos from his time in the Oval Office, no matter what the law says."
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member

Jack Smith’s CALCULATED RISK in Trump Indictment EXPLAINED

78,950 views Jun 16, 2023
Michael Popok of Legal AF reports on the lack of real trial experience of the Trump assigned federal criminal trial judge Aileen Cannon, why Jack Smith took a calculated risk to file knowing he could have drawn her as judge, and what the department of Justice will do next if she abuses her discretion and makes bad rulings again.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
BREAKING: Legendary CNN anchor Chris Wallace, who previously worked for Fox News, gives the MAGA movement devastating news by predicting that Donald Trump might die in prison.

"Well, look, you’d have to be crazy not to be worried," Wallace said about Trump's likely emotional state.

"It’s, almost everyone, Republican and Democrat who has any kind of independence has said it’s a very strong indictment," he went on. "Now, an indictment is not proof. And a lot of people who were indicted end up being found not guilty, but there’s every reason for him to worry."

Then, Wallace dropped the hammer...

He pointed out that Trump "as a man who just turned 77, you talk about a jail term, it could be a life sentence" if he's convicted in his classified documents case — an increasingly likely outcome given the mountain of evidence that Special Counsel Jack Smith has compiled.

 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
BREAKING: Legendary CNN anchor Chris Wallace, who previously worked for Fox News, gives the MAGA movement devastating news by predicting that Donald Trump might die in prison.

"Well, look, you’d have to be crazy not to be worried," Wallace said about Trump's likely emotional state.

"It’s, almost everyone, Republican and Democrat who has any kind of independence has said it’s a very strong indictment," he went on. "Now, an indictment is not proof. And a lot of people who were indicted end up being found not guilty, but there’s every reason for him to worry."

Then, Wallace dropped the hammer...

He pointed out that Trump "as a man who just turned 77, you talk about a jail term, it could be a life sentence" if he's convicted in his classified documents case — an increasingly likely outcome given the mountain of evidence that Special Counsel Jack Smith has compiled.

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DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member

Trump REVEALS Illegal Plot in UNHINGED Rant after Indictment

169 views Jun 16, 2023
In the days following his federal indictment, Trump has pledged to appoint a special counsel to go after Biden and his family should he be elected in 2024. Harry reacts to this egregious comment, underscoring why it is so damaging to the Constitution and rule of law in the United States.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member

Jack Smith is CLOSING IN on Another Trump Indictment

15,217 views Jun 16, 2023
Although the Mar-a-Lago documents case has taken center-stage in the week of a historic arraignment, Jack Smith has continued to make progress in his investigation into Trump’s role in the January 6th insurrection. Harry gives an update on the case and explains what makes him believe more charges from Jack Smith are likely coming soon.
 

Bagginski

Well-Known Member
They aren't imagining it.
True enough, but they aren’t getting their way the way they want to, either. Having to work within constraints imposed by government is difficult, time-consuming, expensive - sometimes unreliable, and ESPECIALLY unpopular with…and frankly, a lot of rich people want to flaunt their wealth yet feel constrained from & feel bad about doing it. Call it white guilt, if you want; it fits in with the desire to bring back aristocracy and the lesson abut rubbing it in people’s faces, AND the political resentment

The owner class has been mostly content being mostly behind the scenes…but they’ve grown tired of it, they want CREDIT, RECOGNITION, to be IN CHARGE FOR REAL…and NO TAXES. EVER. Not from them.
 

HGCC

Well-Known Member
True enough, but they aren’t getting their way the way they want to, either. Having to work within constraints imposed by government is difficult, time-consuming, expensive - sometimes unreliable, and ESPECIALLY unpopular with…and frankly, a lot of rich people want to flaunt their wealth yet feel constrained from & feel bad about doing it. Call it white guilt, if you want; it fits in with the desire to bring back aristocracy and the lesson abut rubbing it in people’s faces, AND the political resentment

The owner class has been mostly content being mostly behind the scenes…but they’ve grown tired of it, they want CREDIT, RECOGNITION, to be IN CHARGE FOR REAL…and NO TAXES. EVER. Not from them.
We should eat them.

They really do hate taxes, like the klan hates black people.
 

printer

Well-Known Member
Most Americans support Trump pardon if he’s convicted, sentenced to jail in docs case: poll
A slim majority of Americans surveyed in a poll released Friday would support pardoning former President Trump if he is convicted and sentenced to jail over allegations that he mishandled classified documents.

The Harvard CAPS-Harris poll found 53 percent of total respondents — 80 percent of Republicans and 30 percent of Democrats — would support a pardon, showing a large partisan divide in opinion.

Among political independents, 52 percent said Trump should not be pardoned.

Trump was indicted on 37 felony charges related to the mishandling of classified documents — many in violation of the Espionage Act — and was arraigned at a Miami court on Tuesday. It is alleged that Trump took the documents with him from the White House and kept them at his Mar-a-Lago estate after he left office, as well as misled investigators when they requested the documents.

But to be pardoned, Trump would first have to be convicted. That is an outcome that a majority of Americans also think will be unlikely, the poll found.

Only 43 percent of respondents — 18 percent of Republicans and 67 percent of Democrats — said Trump is likely to be convicted.

However, exactly half of respondents said that he should drop out of the 2024 race because of the charges, with a conviction or not. The most recent polling shows Trump still in the lead for the 2024 GOP nomination, making a rematch between him and President Biden likely.
The survey was conducted between June 14-15 among 2,090 registered voters — with no margin of error provided.
 
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