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Author Topic: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2  (Read 467450 times)

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #5008 on: April 20, 2022, 12:57:05 PM »
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DOJ faces demands to investigate if Trump 'mutilated or destroyed' records to cover up crimes

A few weeks after the revelation that White House documents turned over to the panel probing the attack on the U.S. Capitol contains a seven-hour-and-37-minute gap in call logs, a pair of U.S. groups on Monday called for an investigation into whether former President Donald Trump "willfully mutilated and destroyed critical records of his presidency before leaving office."

Building on a February 8 letter — sent before the call logs were shared last month with the U.S. House select committee investigating the January 6, 2021—Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) and National Security Archive again wrote to Attorney General Merrick Garland and Federal Bureau of Investigation Director Christopher Wray.

Demanding an investigation by the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ), the groups' letter emphasizes that the "significant gap" in Trump records corresponds to "a critical period when the Capitol was under attack by insurrectionists, raising the possibility that portions of the call logs were willfully destroyed to cover up evidence of criminal misconduct."

"As our previous letter outlines," the document reiterates, "former President Trump engaged in a pattern of conduct throughout his tenure in office that violated his record-keeping obligations under the Presidential Records Act in multiple ways."

"The time period during which there is a gap in the phone logs includes at least five calls from or to President Trump whose occurrence has been documented in the public record," the letter notes, pointing to his reported correspondence with then-Vice President Mike Pence, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, then-Sen. Kelly Loeffler, R-Ga., and Sen. Mike Lee, R-Utah—who supposedly passed his phone to Sen. Tommy Tuberville, R-Ala.

The letter also lays out key events between 11:06 am—when Trump finished a call with then-Sen. David Perdue, R-Ga.—and 6:54 pm, when he had the White House operator contact an adviser who earlier this month was referred to the DOJ for not cooperating with the January 6 panel, Dan Scavino:

President Trump spoke to a gathering of his supporters near the White House beginning at noon that day, less than an hour after his call with Senator Perdue. One hour later an initial wave of protestors began storming the Capitol, and by 1:30 pm they had overcome the police. Nearly one hour later at 2:24 pm. President Trump tweeted his criticism of Vice President Pence for lacking "the courage to do what should have been done to protect our Country and our Constitution." At 3:36 pm White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany tweeted that President Trump had ordered the National Guard to the Capitol. At 4:17 pm President Trump tweeted a video directed to his supporters inside the Capitol urging them to go home but also telling them "We love you. You're very special." Shortly after 6:00 pm police were able to clear the Capitol.

Trump's actions that day—including his furtherance of the "Big Lie" that the 2020 election was stolen from him—led to his historic second impeachment just days before President Joe Biden took office, though the U.S. Senate, then controlled by Republicans, declined to convict the GOP leader.

The new call for a DOJ probe into the call logs gap comes as members of the January 6 panel are reportedly weighing whether to refer Trump to the department for prosecution.

The letter notes that U.S. District Court Judge David O. Carter concluded last month that it is "more likely than not that President Trump corruptly attempted to obstruct the joint session of Congress on January 6," and that he and his ex-attorney, John Eastman, "dishonestly conspired" to do so.

"Judge Carter's conclusions also suggest the need for further investigation to determine whether former President Trump attempted to shield his actions during the January 6th insurrection from being discovered by Congress and the public," the document asserts. "Information contained in the missing call logs likely would help elucidate the former president's full role in those events."

"The public must have confidence that all individuals—including former President Trump—will be thoroughly and fairly investigated," the letter adds, "and be held accountable if they engaged in criminal misconduct to attack the heart of our democracy."

https://www.commondreams.org/news/2022/04/18/doj-urged-probe-whether-trump-willfully-mutilated-and-destroyed-jan-6-call-logs

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #5008 on: April 20, 2022, 12:57:05 PM »


Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #5009 on: April 20, 2022, 01:42:32 PM »
At least 50 people have testified in Georgia probe into Trump's effort to overturn 2020 election



A Georgia investigation into former President Donald Trump's efforts to illegally overturn the state's 2020 election results has seen over four dozen people voluntarily testify, Newsweek reports.

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis said at least 50 people have already testified and there are about another 60 people her team is waiting to interview. She added that she will try to subpoena an additional 30 other people who have turned down interview requests.

"The probe into Trump launched 14 months ago after the former president called Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger and told the fellow Republican to 'find' votes in order to overturn the election results," Newsweek reports. "Earlier this year, Willis was granted approval for a special grand jury by a judge, and she has requested backup protection from the FBI, citing the January 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol as a reason for added security during the investigation."

Prosecutors in Trump Election Case in Georgia Have Heard Dozens Testify

More than four dozen people in Georgia have voluntarily testified in an investigation into whether President Donald Trump tried to illegally overturn results in the state for the 2020 presidential election, according to the district attorney working on the case.

In an Atlanta Journal-Constitution story published Tuesday, Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis said at least 50 people have already offered up testimonies before prosecutors. Willis also said there are about another 60 people her team will contact in the upcoming weeks, and she added that she will try to subpoena an additional 30 other people who already turned down interview requests.

The probe into Trump launched 14 months ago after the former president called Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger and told the fellow Republican to "find" votes in order to overturn the election results. Earlier this year, Willis was granted approval for a special grand jury by a judge, and she has requested backup protection from the FBI, citing the January 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol as a reason for added security during the investigation.

Willis also told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution that she will wait until after Georgia's May 24 primaries to have witnesses testify before a jury. Part of her reason behind the decision to wait is to stave off potential criticism that her probe is a political effort to undermine Republican candidates.

"I don't want anyone to say 'oh, she's doing this because she wants to influence the outcome of this upcoming election,'" Willis, a Democrat, told the newspaper. "The people will decide the outcome of this upcoming election. It will have nothing to do with this district attorney's office."

Among the people Wallis would likely seek to interview that are on the primary ballot include Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, Governor Brian Kemp and Attorney General Chris Carr. The three men, all Republicans, reportedly received calls from Trump following the 2020 election results.

The selection of the special grand jury is scheduled to start May 2 but Willis indicated they won't hear from witnesses until June 1. Along with waiting for the conclusion of the primaries, Willis said another factor in the month-long break is that it would allow jurors more time to approve subpoenas for witnesses and for her office to deliver the subpoenas.

According to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Willis has a team of 10 prosecutors and investigators working on the probe into Trump's efforts to interfere with Georgia's election results.

https://www.newsweek.com/prosecutors-trump-election-case-have-heard-dozens-testify-1699071

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #5010 on: April 20, 2022, 02:48:37 PM »
'Sheer lunacy': Morning Joe shreds Republicans for allowing QAnon 'craziness' to take over

MSNBC's Joe Scarborough urged Democrats to call out the Republican Party's "sheer lunacy" as they head into the midterm election campaigns.

The "Morning Joe" host agreed with Democratic strategist James Carville, who recently blasted the GOP's pivot to QAnon conspiracies, 2020 election denialism and other fringe viewports, and he said Democrats must do a better job of highlighting their extremism as a campaign issue.

"The Republican Party, and James points it out, the Republican Party, the conservative movement -- crazy, absolutely crazy, what they've been allowing extremists to do since Donald Trump came there," Scarborough said. "If you don't speak out against it and you're a Republican, then you're endorsing it, for the most part. If you have people saying really extreme, really dangerous things, as they've been saying other over the past five, six years -- yeah, just absolutely bizarre things going on."

Michigan state Sen. Mallory McMorrow, a Democrat, pushed back against GOP state Sen. Lara Theis' "hateful" allegations that she's a "groomer" and supports child abuse, and Scarborough shamed Republicans for allowing QAnon conspiracies to leak into mainstream political discourse.

"We're going to have a state senator from Michigan who is going to come on, who had a bizarre attack against her," Scarborough said. "Somebody like Ron DeSantis deciding to create an issue and try to make money off of it. Mallory just said no, no more of it, and called the craziness out, called the lunacy out, called the phony, performative Christianity out. I think that's what Democrats have to do. They should see what she did on the state floor."

Watch:


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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #5010 on: April 20, 2022, 02:48:37 PM »


Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #5011 on: April 21, 2022, 01:30:45 PM »
'Very dishonest -- you're a fool!' Trump storms out of interview after Piers Morgan says 2020 election wasn't stolen

Donald Trump recently sat down for an interview with one-time supporter Piers Morgan -- but things quickly went downhill after Morgan told him that he legitimately lost the 2020 presidential election.

The New York Post reports that Morgan told Trump during the interview, which is scheduled to air next week, that the 2020 election was "a free and fair election" that "you lost."

“Only a fool would think that,” Trump angrily replied.

“You think I’m a fool?” Morgan asked.

“I do now, yeah,” Trump said.

Morgan then informed Trump that he still hadn't produced "hard evidence" of voter fraud.

"I don't think you're real!" Trump fumed, and then called Morgan "very dishonest."

Morgan also said he blamed Trump's refusal to concede the election for the January 6th riots at the United States Capitol building.

"Then you’re a fool!" Trump told him. "And you haven’t studied!"

Trump then walked away while telling the crew to turn off the cameras and stop filming.

The full interview is set to air on Monday, April 25.

Watch a preview of the interview below.


Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #5012 on: April 21, 2022, 01:39:37 PM »
Kevin McCarthy and Mitch McConnell wanted Trump to resign over Jan. 6 -- but soon changed their minds



"I've had it with this guy."

That was House minority leader Kevin McCarthy's declaration to Republican leaders in the days immediately following the deadly Jan. 6 insurrection when told them he would push Donald Trump to resign. That tune soon changed, according to a new book by New York Times reporters Alexander Burns and Jonathan Martin.

The book, which was excerpted Thursday by the Times, details how McCarthy and Senate minority leader Mitch McConnell privately were much closer to pushing for the president's resignation than previously known. It also illustrates the vast difference between what they said behind closed doors and what they parsed in public.

"The leaders’ swift retreat in January 2021 represented a capitulation at a moment of extraordinary political weakness for Mr. Trump — perhaps the last and best chance for mainstream Republicans to reclaim control of their party from a leader who had stoked an insurrection against American democracy itself," they write.

The political calculations they made once the smoke cleared from the Capitol could not be more clear than in a comment made by McConnell to a friend when explaining why he backed off a public fight with Trump and his political machine. “I didn’t get to be leader by voting with five people in the conference,” McConnell said.

Both McConnell and McCarthy abandoned the notion of pushing for Trump's resignation when "it became clear it would mean difficult votes that would put them at odds with most of their colleagues."

“This Will Not Pass: Trump, Biden and the Battle for America’s Future” draws on hundreds of interviews with lawmakers and officials, and contemporaneous records of pivotal moments in the 2020 presidential campaign.

"During the same Jan. 10 conversation when he said he would call on Mr. Trump to resign," according to the book, "Mr. McCarthy told other GOP leaders he wished the big tech companies would strip some Republican lawmakers of their social media accounts, as Twitter and Facebook had done with Mr. Trump. Members such as Lauren Boebert of Colorado had done so much to stoke paranoia about the 2020 election and made offensive comments online about the Capitol attack."

“'We can’t put up with that,' Mr. McCarthy said, adding, 'Can’t they take their Twitter accounts away, too?'”

The authors say that McConnell’s office declined to comment and that a spokesman for McCarthy denied that the Republican leader told colleagues he would push Trump to leave office. “McCarthy never said he’d call Trump to say he should resign,” the spokesperson said.

https://www.nytimes.com/2022/04/21/us/politics/trump-mitch-mcconnell-kevin-mccarthy.html

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #5012 on: April 21, 2022, 01:39:37 PM »


Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #5013 on: April 21, 2022, 02:07:07 PM »
'They knew this man was deranged!' George Conway busts McCarthy and McConnell's 'cowardice and corruption' after Jan. 6

Republican congressional leaders Kevin McCarthy and Mitch McConnell violated their oaths of office by allowing Donald Trump to remain president after Jan. 6, according to George Conway.

The conservative attorney told MSNBC's "Morning Joe" that new reporting that shows McCarthy and McConnell privately discussed pushing Trump to resign over the insurrection, but they quickly changed their minds over concerns that breaking with the GOP president could endanger their leadership roles.

"It is a display of cowardice and corruption that I just couldn't, was unimaginable a few years ago, and I think is unparalleled in American history," said Conway, whose wife Kellyanne served in Trump's White House until August 2020. "I say corruption because these are men who took oaths of office to defend the Constitution of the United States and they knew this man was deranged, they knew this man tried to overthrow the Constitution and they knew it was an impeachable offense to end all impeachable offenses, and yet they did nothing at the end of the day."

"Mitch McConnell refused to hold a trial before the end of Trump's term, and at the end of the day Kevin McCarthy ended up sucking up to Trump," Conway added. "This is a bare constitutional minimum for members of Congress who have the privilege of representing us in government. The bare minimum has to be standing up to a man who is trying to end constitutional democracy. We don't ask our elected officials to arm themselves and defend a warren of tunnels in a dystopian steel plant that's surrounded and bombed. We ask for them just to do, you know, impeach a man who tried to overturn the Constitution, vote to bar him from ever holding office again and they completely failed to live up to their obligations."


Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #5014 on: April 21, 2022, 02:18:25 PM »
‘Grifters central’: Trump campaign consultant says his DC hotel ‘was America’s lobby of corruption’

The end of Trump Hotel DC represents the end of a bizarrely unique period in American presidential history.

"Even though it opened only a few weeks before Mr. Trump’s election in 2016, the 263-room hotel quickly achieved a status in Washington that historians agree was unlike that of any other venue owned by an American president," Eric Lipton reported for The New York Times. "The hotel generated millions of dollars in direct payments to Mr. Trump’s family, starting from even before he was sworn in, as his own inaugural committee paid the venue more than $1 million."

The lease of the government-owned building was sold to CGI Merchant Group of Miami, which announced it will rebrand the hotel as Waldorf Astoria. The newspaper estimates the Trump family will see a $100 million profit.

"Even before Mr. Trump was sworn in, the hotel became a magnet for foreign officials, including from Saudi Arabia, whose government rented out a block of rooms, spending $190,000 on its room tab and another $78,000 for meals and beverages, lobbying disclosures show," The Times reported. "Soon enough, foreign business and government groups from Bahrain, Kuwait, Turkey and Azerbaijan, among others, followed by hosting events at the hotel, with representatives from at least 33 nations sighted there by Zach Everson, a journalist who created an online newsletter tracking social media posts from the hotel during Mr. Trump’s presidency."

Trump 2016 campaign consultant Healy Baumgardner said the hotel "Was America's lobby of corruption."

"It was grifters central," he explained.

Read the full report: https://www.nytimes.com/2022/04/20/us/politics/trump-hotel-sale-washington.html

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #5015 on: April 21, 2022, 03:02:16 PM »
‘TURN THE CAMERAS OFF!’ Donald Trump foamed at the mouth


Trump bellowed insults at Piers Morgan for disbelieving his claims the election was rigged

'PIERS, we have a problem.’

I was standing inside the gilded gold-plated confines of President Donald Trump’s exclusive Mar-a-Lago private member’s resort in Palm Beach, Florida, and one of my production team was brandishing a document with a concerned look on his face.

'What’s that?’ I asked, bemused.

‘This is a collection of quotes you’ve apparently said about President Trump in the past two years. Someone sent it to him in the last hour, and the quotes are not good. In fact, they’re really bad.’

 I was due to start an interview with Trump in precisely eight minutes, and it was intended to be a blockbuster exclusive to rocket-launch my new global TV show, Piers Morgan Uncensored, on Monday, April 25.

My 4-camera crew were all set up in a palatial bar, I was suited, booted, made-up and had been exchanging cordial small talk with secret service agents designated to ensure we behaved ourselves.

But as I hurriedly scanned the 3-page white paper document, my heart sank.

There were several dozen comments from me, taken from columns I’d written and interviews I’d given, in which I was savagely critical of Trump’s conduct in the last year of his presidency, from his woeful handling of the coronavirus pandemic to his refusal to accept defeat in the 2020 election, and the appalling January 6 riot at the Capitol which followed.

Whoever sent it knew exactly what they were doing.

These were by far the worst things I’d ever said about a man with whom I’d been friends for 15 years, but I felt they were justified when I said them, and I still do now.

In the suddenly very chilly light of a sun-kissed Florida afternoon however, they made distinctly unhelpful reading.

‘Is he going to cancel the interview?’ I asked, trying not to panic.

 ‘I don’t know,’ came the reply. ‘But he is VERY upset.’

‘See if I can go and talk to him about it,’ I suggested.

Twenty minutes later, I was sitting in Trump’s office.

Normally, he’d greet me with a cheery smile and the words ‘How’s my champ?’ because I was his first Celebrity Apprentice on the series that made him a TV superstar.

But this time, there were no such welcoming niceties.

He was staring at me across his desk with undisguised fury, clutching the document entitled ‘Piers Morgan Comments About President Trump.’

‘What the f**k IS this?’ he snarled.

Then he began slowly reading out some of the quotes.

‘Trump’s a supreme narcissist….’

Pause..

‘Trump’s now too dangerous, he’s morphed into a monster that I no longer recognise as someone I considered to be a friend and thought I knew.’

Pause.

‘He’s now acting like a mafia mob boss.’

Pause.

‘And all because Donald’s stupendous ego couldn’t accept losing and sent him nuts.’

Each time he paused, he peered over the document at me, with mounting rage in his eyes.

When I won Trump’s Celebrity Apprentice show in 2008, his final words to me as he announced the result were: ‘Piers, you're a vicious guy. I’ve seen it. You're tough. You're smart. You're probably brilliant. I'm not sure. You're certainly not diplomatic. But you did an amazing job. And you beat the hell out of everybody…. you’re the Celebrity Apprentice.’

When he won the 2016 election, I returned the favour by sending him a card saying: ‘Well, Donald, you're a vicious guy. I’ve seen it. You're tough. You're smart. You're probably brilliant. I'm not sure. You're certainly not diplomatic. But you did an amazing job. And you beat the hell out of everybody…you’re the President of the United States.’

So, we had a reasonable understanding of each other’s personalities, good and bad.

And it wasn’t like we’d never had a spat.

He unfollowed me on Twitter (he only followed around 50 accounts at the time, so this didn’t go unnoticed!) in April 2020 after he’d proposed using household disinfectant to fight Covid, and I’d hammered him in a column for spreading ‘bats**t crazy coronavirus cure theories.’

But a few months later, he called me for a lengthy chat before the election and chuckled about how ‘mean and nasty’ I’d been about him, so I mistakenly assumed he didn’t really mind me verbally whacking him from time to time.

Wrong!

I’d never seen him so livid or felt so uncomfortable in his presence as I did right now in his office.

He was almost foaming at the mouth and kept shaking his head slowly and menacingly at me, like Don Corleone when he felt he’d been disrespected.

MOUNTING RAGE


Donald Trump stormed out of his interview with Piers Morgan

There was no point in trying to deny the quotes.

I’d said them, and I’d meant them.

‘I’ve always been critical of you when I’ve felt you deserved it,’ I eventually said, ‘but as you know, I’ve also written and said many supportive things about you too. This is a one-sided hatchet job designed to stop you doing our interview.’

‘It’s definitely a hatchet job,’ he retorted, ‘ON ME!’

 Then he read another line: ‘January 7, 2021 - President Trump needs to be removed from office. As soon as possible… through new emergency articles of impeachment, which would have the additional benefit of barring him from ever running for the presidency again.’

‘REMOVED FROM OFFICE?!’ he spat. ‘BARRED FROM EVER RUNNING FOR PRESIDENT AGAIN?!’

Then he threw down the document and threw me a look of withering contempt.

'I thought we were friends?’ he shouted. ‘This is so disloyal! After all I’ve done for you? Why would say all this about me?’

‘I thought what you did was wrong,’ I replied, feeling myself beginning to sweat.

This wasn’t going well.

It looked for sure like Trump was about to can the interview, which would have been a massive waste of time and money for me and our team and leave me an even more massive hole for the first show.

I was desperately thinking of some way to salvage things.

‘I don’t intend our interview to be confrontational,’ I said. ‘A lot of time has passed since I said those things, and a lot has happened in the meantime.’

‘Why should I do it at all?’ he scoffed. ‘You’re not real. You’re a fake.’

‘No, I’m just brutally honest.’

‘DIS-honest!’

‘You didn’t make me your Celebrity Apprentice because I’m a shrinking violet who sits on the fence or doesn’t say what he really thinks.’

We stared at each other for a few seconds, his eyes boring into mine with all the warmth of an Arctic glacier.

It was time to change the mood music.

‘I’d love to talk about your recent golf hole-in-one,’ I stammered. ‘Your playing partner Ernie Els was raving about it.’

Trump sat bolt upright.

‘He was? Where?’

‘In a newspaper interview I read. He said it was a brilliant shot and you played really well.’

‘I did, I did.’

‘Was that your first hole-in-one?’

‘No! I’ve had seven!’

Seven?

 This claim seemed highly implausible (I’m a keen golfer and only had one. Most amateurs haven’t even had that.) but this wasn’t a good moment to fact-check him about his sporting prowess.

 ‘Amazing,’ I replied. ‘Congrats!’

 Suddenly, Trump clapped his hands.

‘OK, I guess I’ll still do the interview. I don’t know why, honestly, but I’ll see you down there.’

'VERY ANNOYED'


Trump was later heard denouncing Piers as a 'scumbag' and wishing he'd never done the interview

My extremely fractious audience was over, and I felt a huge wave of relief as I headed back to my team.

 ‘How was he?’ asked my Executive Producer, Winnie Dunbar-Nelson who’d flown from London to oversee the interview.

‘He’s very annoyed,’ I said, ‘more annoyed than I’ve ever seen him. Spitting blood, in fact. But he’s going to do it.’

Ten minutes later, President Trump arrived in the interview room, and acted like nothing had happened as we posed for smiling photos together.

He was even charm personified to Winnie, who he remembered from three previous presidential interviews we’d taped for my old show, Good Morning Britain, in Davos, on board Air Force One and inside the Churchill War Rooms.

But I could sense he was still very wound up, and there was none of the usual bonhomie between us that I was used to in our many previous encounters.

I’d been promised 20 minutes and feared he would cut that down to punish me.

But in the end, I got 75 minutes, by far the longest time I’d ever had with him on camera.

I also agreed with him about a number of issues, as I have done in the past.

I’ve never been tribal or partisan about Trump – of the 100 or so columns I wrote about him during his presidency, around half were positive, half negative.

But things took a dramatic downward turn when I finally brought up his refusal to accept defeat in 2020 and the appalling scenes on January 6.

I told him I believe he lost the supposedly ‘rigged, stolen’ election, I repeatedly pointed out his failure to produce any evidence of the widespread voter fraud he insists occurred to rob him of his presidency, and I blamed his refusal to admit defeat for the deadly riots at the Capitol.

‘Then you’re a FOOL!’ he sneered. ‘And you haven’t studied!’

He was back to the furious Trump he’d been in his office and branded me a fool six more times, in between calling Senate minority leader Mitch McConnell ‘stupid’, and his former vice-president Mike Pence ‘foolish and weak.’

Our collective crime was that none of us agree he had the election stolen.

Now abandoning any pretence at cordiality, Trump ranted that he was far more honest than me, and again sneered that I wasn’t ‘real’ before haranguing me for exceeding our 20 minutes which was particularly disingenuous given that during all our previous interviews, he’d invariably decided exactly how long he wanted to keep talking.

As he bellowed insults at me for disbelieving his rigged election bulls**t, it reminded me of the scene in A Few Good Men where Jack Nicholson’s arrogant deluded Colonel Jessup calls Tom Cruise’s military lawyer Lt.

Kaffee a ‘snotty little b*stard’ for grilling him about ordering a deadly Code Red punishment on a marine.

‘I want the truth,’ demands Kaffee.

‘YOU CAN’T HANDLE THE TRUTH!’ roars a contemptuous Jessup, before losing his rag, lecturing Kaffee about loyalty and honour, and then finally admitting his culpability.

I don’t expect Trump to ever admit he lost the election fairly or confess to being responsible for the January 6 carnage.

We’ll never hear him say ‘You’re g*ddam right I did!’ like Col. Jessup because ironically, he can’t handle the truth.

'TURN THE CAMERAS OFF'



Incensed Trump tried to end things by declaring ‘That’s it!’ before I reminded him that we hadn’t discussed his hole-in-one, which he then sat down again and did - briefly - before abruptly jumping to his feet, looking hateful, and barking at the shocked crew: ‘TURN THE CAMERAS OFF!’

Then he turned on his heels, and sloped angrily off through a side door, loudly muttering ‘SO dishonest…’

It wasn’t a rhetorical observation.

Apparently, he was later heard denouncing me as ‘scumbag’ and saying he wished he’d never done the interview.

But I thought it was the best one we’ve ever done together, and all the tension created by the damning document he was given gave it a crackle and energy that makes for compelling television.

As for who sent him the document in the first place, Trump told me it came from London and gave it to me to ‘keep as souvenir of your treachery.’

Mysteriously, it contains two random, very positive comparative quotes from British politician Nigel Farage who now works as a presenter for my rival UK network GB News.

Oh, and by an extraordinary coincidence, Farage happened to have dinner with Trump at Mar-a-Lago on April 8, just three days before I was there.

You don’t need to be a rigged election conspiracy theorist to work out who probably sent it.

The next day, I sent Trump an email thanking him for his time and included these words: ‘You had every right to get annoyed and call me a fool for not believing the election was stolen from you, but I also have every right to my opinion, and I wasn’t going to lie to your face just to avoid annoying you. The best friends are the most honest/critical ones, not the sycophants.’

As I write this, ten days later, I haven’t had any reply.

Perhaps we’ll never speak again, and our friendship is over?

https://www.the-sun.com/news/5166418/piers-morgan-donald-trump-storms-out-interview/

JFK Assassination Forum

Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #5015 on: April 21, 2022, 03:02:16 PM »