c_hawkbob wrote:First day of institutional torture was today. The next two weeks will be all range of motion with the technician doing all the work and me acting like it doesn't hurt ... Actually it wasn't that bad, not near as bad as the same portion of my microfracture knee surgery a couple decades ago. Just glad to be finally getting on with it!
c_hawkbob wrote:But wait, I thought there was no chance?
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:Indictment is one thing; conviction is another; then sentencing is another. If they can make something stick, more power to them.
Aseahawkfan wrote:After 6 plus years, there is an indictment for the most appropriate of crimes: paying off a pornstar. I'm still not holding my breath it will amount to much, but it's funny and appropriate.
RiverDog wrote:The more I think about this, the more I'm having mixed feelings. I intensely despise DJT, and anything that causes him to suffer or diminish his chances for another shot at the White House, I'm in favor of. I want to see him off the political scene for good. He's the worst thing to have happened to this country since 9/11.
But on the other hand, the prosecutor is obviously playing politics with this indictment. He's a Democratic party hack and is notorious for reducing criminal charges to misdemeanors. The NYPD has complained about him over the years, accusing him of being soft on crime. Yet in this one, he's done a flip, elevating a misdemeanor election violation charge to a criminal one. Although I want to see the Republicans give themselves an enema and purge themselves of that POS, they do have a point about a double standard being used by the prosecutor.
RiverDog wrote:The more I think about this, the more I'm having mixed feelings. I intensely despise DJT, and anything that causes him to suffer or diminish his chances for another shot at the White House, I'm in favor of. I want to see him off the political scene for good. He's the worst thing to have happened to this country since 9/11.
But on the other hand, the prosecutor is obviously playing politics with this indictment. He's a Democratic party hack and is notorious for reducing criminal charges to misdemeanors. The NYPD has complained about him over the years, accusing him of being soft on crime. Yet in this one, he's done a flip, elevating a misdemeanor election violation charge to a criminal one. Although I want to see the Republicans give themselves an enema and purge themselves of that POS, they do have a point about a double standard being used by the prosecutor.
Aseahawkfan wrote:You already know this is a political attack. The Clintons have been pushing this hard. Hilary set it up. She has tons of connections in New York as a former New York Senator. It's a heavy Democrat political attack on Trump that he opened himself up to. None of this changes how bad the Democrats are. They are using this as petty revenge against Trump. Tons of politicians have paid off women to keep quiet about affairs and such using illegal funds. No one prosecutes it unless behind the scenes they get the go ahead from other powerful party members. This guy and all the other investigations are funded by Democratic power and pushed by upper echelon Democratic Party members in positions of power. I think some Republican power players also signed off on it because of how stupid and problematic Donald is or we'd be seeing Democratic politicians getting embarrassed as well.
I think January 6 pulled a lot of Trump's Republican protection from him as no one can do good business in that kind of chaos. I don't mean the random manipulated Republican voter. I mean his real protection and upper echelon money and power. We already know Mitch McConnell hates him even if he doesn't publicly say so. Romney can't stand him. He pisssed off the Cheney's. Liz may have lost her election, but I can guarantee her and her father still have plenty of contacts in Washington D.C. There are plenty of rumors the show of resistance to the Trump indictment is nothing more than fake outrage and Republican acting when they really want the guy gone. Letting the Democrats take him out suits them just fine as they can use it to fuel their next candidate.
RiverDog wrote:There's a lot of ways to look at this. Yes, it's a highly politicalized attack. Any other person would not have had these charges elevated to a criminal status. The Democrats are truly applying a double standard.
But on the other hand, the consequences of Trump's illegal hush money were such, an election to the most powerful position in the world, wouldn't have happened without the commission of this crime, that it justifies handling this case differently than all others.
And as far as the Clintons go, I don't necessarily disagree with you. But whatever they did is not an excuse for anyone to overlook what Trump has done. Two wrongs don't make a right.
Hawktawk wrote:Havent seen the big riots yet in support of the porn star president. Maybe hearing about all those big prison sentences from Jan 6 might calm them down.
Lets see Trumps in NY a day early. If theres riots he should be jailed.
Stream Hawk wrote:It’s now 34 counts. Odds are pretty stacked against him at this point. I don’t expect him to spend much (or any) time in prison, but my biggest fear is him winning again. However, that would be shocking if this rallies folks. As Kasich said something to the effect of “there is no way Trump will have the support from of all independent voters”.
https://twitter.com/occupydemocrats/sta ... pMkhpLC7ng
If it were you or any other American had done what Trump is accused of, you would have been prosecuted too.
NorthHawk wrote:If it were you or any other American had done what Trump is accused of, you would have been prosecuted too.
NorthHawk wrote:Don’t they look at a pattern of crimes and adjust the charges accordingly? After all he’s got something like 34 accusations against him. So if there are multiple allegations of a similar nature, is that even considered?
c_hawkbob wrote:No they're not. Many separate incidents involving three separate payments; to two women to suppress information about extramarital sexual encounters they said they had with years earlier, and one to a onetime Trump Tower doorman who claimed to have a story about a child he alleged Trump had out of of wedlock
c_hawkbob wrote:That's not the point I commented on, I commented on your contention that all of this stemmed from a single incident. Besides that speaks more to appropriate final disposition of the case than it's genesis.
c_hawkbob wrote:I'm sorry but those are purely your assumptions and I disagree. Dems can be as holier than thou with there own every bit as much. Look what they did to Al Franken for a hint of a whisper of what Trump has bellowed from the mountaintop.
c_hawkbob wrote:I am already aware of the conservative talking points, you needn't show them to me in print.
c_hawkbob wrote:First, if you believe that to be, or even contain, Braggs statement regarding the Trump indictment I believe we have discovered our political disconnect. Not only was that not Braggs statement but most of it was a staff memo prior to that indictment.
c_hawkbob wrote:Second, if you read the relevant passage it specifically includes Trumps issue: In his first memo to staff on Monday, Alvin Bragg said his office “will not seek a carceral sentence” except with homicides and a handful of other cases, including domestic violence felonies, some sex crimes and public corruption.
As is usually the case, it wasn't the affair(s) but the coverup and the subsequent attempts to charge the payoff money as business and even campaign finance expenses that lift this to felony levels. Public corruption.
Besides, even if found guilty of all charges this case still will probably not end in your "carceral sentence". This ain't the case that'll land him behind bars, this is the least of the lot, it just happened to be first.
c_hawkbob wrote:Again, you're confusing internal memos with statements to the press. And I don't much care for your narrow interpretation of corruption. I'm completely OK with considering a public official expensing hush money payments to a porn star as business or campaign expenses corruption.
If you're completely OK with this action, then I guess you're completely OK with Trump raising millions in campaign funds and widening his lead over his Republican opponents for the nomination due to this indictment. You must be damn confident that Sleepy Joe can beat him in 2024. I hope you're right.
c_hawkbob wrote:Your final conclusion, despite the fallaciousness of it's logic route is correct. I don't think Trump will ever be a viable candidate again.
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