I don’t remember a time when someone on President Obama’s staff said something like this about their boss:
“Every day he looks more and more like a complete moron,” said one senior administration official who also worked on Trump’s campaign. “I can’t see Trump resigning or even being impeached, but at this point I wish he’d grow a brain and be the man that he sold himself as on the campaign.”
Or this:
“If Donald Trump gets impeached, he will have one person to blame: Donald Trump,” one of those administration officials said.
Trump spent the hours before leaving on his nine-day foreign adventure screwing every pooch in the Western Hemisphere. And he left his administration shell-shocked, distraught, and downright angry. He also made a pretty iron-tight case for removing him from office.
David C. Gomez, a former FBI assistant special agent in charge, said Trump’s comments demonstrated a profound inability to grasp the potential consequences of his words.
“In terms of potential criminal activity, it’s amateur night at the White House,” Gomez told The Daily Beast. “These guys—and Trump especially—don’t know how to not implicate themselves.
“On a big case like this, the ideal thing would be a wiretap on your number one subject,” Gomez added. “But in this case, you don’t need a wiretap. He just comes right out and says it.”
Imagine for a second the vanishingly small possibility that there’s simply nothing to the allegations of cooperation between the Russians and the Trump campaign. If Trump knew they would find nothing, then he would have been wise to urge complete cooperation and to assure the public that he would honor their concern by doing every thing he could to assure a speedy resolution of the investigation. He has done the exact opposite.
What’s odd is how he demonstrates his consciousness of guilt. If it were me, I wouldn’t be seen within miles of a Russian, let alone invite them into the Oval Office to talk about how I took the heat off the investigation by firing the FBI director.
But we don’t really need to guess what’s in his mind because he tells us. He doesn’t have someone call Comey and threaten him to stay quiet. He tweets about it. He gives interviews where he freely admits that he fired Comey because of the Russian investigation. He doesn’t reach out discretely to the Russians. He explains to them on the record in the West Wing in front of witnesses and stenographers that he thinks he can do their bidding now because he’s taken the heat off by undermining the investigation.
To say that he doesn’t know how not to implicate himself is putting it mildly.
He’s still talking about wanting to hire Michael Flynn back after this is all over, which means that he is living in an alternative universe where Michael Flynn wasn’t on the Kremlin payroll.
His best defense right now is actually mental incapacity, because it’s as plain as day that he doesn’t have a minimal grasp of reality. David Brooks appropriately compared the Trump administration to a caldera “covered by deadening ash.” There was nothing left of it when Trump boarded his plane and there will certainly be nothing left of it when he returns.
The law enforcement investigation into possible coordination between Russia and the Trump campaign has identified a current White House official as a significant person of interest, showing that the probe is reaching into the highest levels of government, according to people familiar with the matter.
The senior White House adviser under scrutiny by investigators is someone close to the president, according to these people, who would not further identify the official.
Everything that has happened up until now has been child’s play compared to what’s coming.
And the administration knows what’s coming or they wouldn’t be this desperate:
Within hours of Mueller’s appointment on Wednesday, the White House began reviewing the Code of Federal Regulations, which restricts newly hired government lawyers from investigating their prior law firm’s clients for one year after their hiring, the sources said.
An executive order signed by Trump in January extended that period to two years.
Mueller’s former law firm, WilmerHale, represents Trump’s son-in-law Jared Kushner, who met with a Russian bank executive in December, and the president’s former campaign manager Paul Manafort, who is a subject of a federal investigation.
Legal experts said the ethics rule can be waived by the Justice Department, which appointed Mueller. He did not represent Kushner or Manafort directly at his former law firm.
If the department did not grant a waiver, Mueller would be barred from investigating Kushner or Manafort, and this could greatly diminish the scope of the probe, experts said.
The Justice Department is already reviewing Mueller’s background as well as any potential conflicts of interest, said department spokeswoman Sarah Isgur Flores.
Even if the Justice Department granted a waiver, the White House would consider using the ethics rule to create doubt about Mueller’s ability to do his job fairly, the sources said. Administration legal advisers have been asked to determine if there is a basis for this.
Under this strategy, the sources said the administration would raise the issue in press conferences and public statements.
Moreover, the White House has not ruled out the possibility of using the rule to challenge Mueller’s findings in court, should the investigation lead to prosecution.
Why would the investigation lead to prosecution? Who leaked this information, and did they somehow not know that it would make them look as guilty as sin?
There aren’t enough life rafts on this boat to save anyone but the women and children.
Everyone saw something like this happening. Everyone, Mike Pence included, although Republicans will still try to portray him as if he never knew what was going on with the Russians. He knew, too.
No one could jam a cork in Trump and of all people, Jared should have known his father-in-law would screw things up, so Jared might join the perp walk when the time comes because he’s been in on the grift since the campaign.
Trump and his brain dead followers will continue to squawk, “Witch hunt! Fake news!” until he’s thrown out and he’ll always believe everyone was out to get him, but we know that he destroyed himself. The tough part is dragging his sorry ass to the curb and making Republicans clean up the mess.
I doubt Trump is the kind of captain of this ship who will be the last to leave the ship, allowing the women and children to take to the rafts first.
That he likely, to this moment, does not recognize the jeopardy he, much less his staff, is/are in goes without saying.
And by the hour his reactions are growing more volatile. Unfortunately he discovered military actions when he ordered the strike on Syria, so another strike or worse is surely in the works. And N Korea is a terrifying choice.
He’s far from done wrecking havoc.
They know what’s up.
What’s most interesting about all this, from a classic Watergate “cover-up is worse than the crime” standpoint (and, Yastreblyansky had a great discussion of this the other day) is that, in a modern context with the composition of the conservative population being what it is right now, you’re actually better off just yelling out what you did, in the Trump fashion, than attempting to conceal it (as his staff is clearly scrambling to do).
Post-Iran/Contra, post-Lewinsky, post-John-Woo, the voting public’s conception of the laws and rules and principles is so feeble and inconstant compared to their understanding of the “horse race” and the ideological tribalism, that you can just break the law and brag about it and be in better shape than you would be breaking the same law and sneaking around afterwards.
Of all the crazy, unpredictable political skills that Trump somehow mastered (in his idiot/savant or idiot/idiot fashion), this may be the most important and the most powerful. He’s spent decades skating away from responsibility for everything he’s ever screwed up, simply by declaring victory and praising himself. It turns out that his supporters find this — the bragging and positioning — more “real” than the Republic of Laws, or the numbers in the budget, or the international climate, or anything else.
well put.
Thank you very much. It’s very flattering coming from you.
Exactly correct and concisely stated.
Jordan, I see your stuff on Yas’s blog all the time. Maybe it’s time for you to start your own blog. You’ve got the talent and drive. Driftglass is fond of recalling that he got his start when the late Steve Guillard banned him, saying it was time to start his own. I think you’re there, sir.
Jordan…
Excellent. Right on the money.
But you…all of us…must begin to understand that we are now living in an alternative universe. A post-factual universe.
PostFactual America. Even Time Magazine Knows What’s Happening!!!
Trump understands this on a cellular level. He helped to create it. He made his fortune using it. He personifies it!!!
And…he uses it better than anyone in the government. Perhaps better than anyone has ever used it. It’s part of his genetic makeup, I think. He’s a public relations idiot savant.
In that article above, I wrote:
Where is our old carny guy?
Comey?
I doubt it. He’s just one of the cops trying to stand far enough away from the disaster to survive.
Mueller?
Maybe, but he’s mada a career in the DC lie system just as have every one of the other players.
Is it possible that no one can turn this careening carousel of lies off?
Yes, it is.
And if that happens there is going to be hell to pay, eventually.
Watch.
The Diogenes Watch.
Looking for one honest man.
AG
P.S. I had a dream…a vision of sorts…weeks ago about Trump’s plane taking off from DC, ostensibly headed for Mar a Lago. Instead it made a 180 degree turn and headed for Moscow on the Great Circle route.
He’s In Saudi Arabia now. Moscow is much closer.
Let us pray.
The above is now a stand-alone post.
Trump-A PostFactual Visionary
If you wish to comment, please do so there.
Thank you…
AG
I think you give Trump too much credit for his ability to manage PR. I don’t believe that he is wittingly manipulating the media, the man is simply not that bright. Instead, I think he just surrounds himself with sycophants and “yes men” that support whatever his latest delusions are. So he spouts off his latest nonsense to the public believing that he is 100% right every time.
In reality, the man is just a pathological liar and says whatever he thinks people want to hear so that he’ll receive adulation, money, or both. Our dumb media laps it up because he speaks in easy-to-repeat soundbites (not an intentional effort, just the result of having a terrible vocabulary), and his even dumber followers treat it all as gospel.
As George Costanza said “it’s not a lie, if you believe it”, and sadly, that’s the existence of our very dumb president.
Well mcafferey…there are millions of compulsive liars loose in the world, but only one is the president of the United States of America. He is a promotional idiot savant. That doesn’t mean he’s intelligent, just talented in a particular…very focused and thus very limited…way.
AG
the successful, succinct distillation of the thing down to its very essence. Like this:
In this situation, you’d hope that Trump supporters would just set aside the Russia business and start concentrating on what Trump and the Republicans are doing to them and how Trump isn’t delivering on much that he promised for them. But a lot of these folk seem to have an extraordinary (and very self-injurious) ability to be distracted from such substantive matters by manipulative appeals to gut feelings and emotions.
Yeah, exactly.
I mean, if they really believe that everything reported in The New York Times and CBS News and The Washington Post and CNN is “fake”…well, that’s obviously a serious problem, but on a more limited scale, if they believe that “the Russia story” is a vengeful partisan plot, we’ve got an only slightly less serious problem.
Trump supporters? You mean the 84% of his base that are thrilled with this shit-show?
I gave up trying to reason with these people 10 years ago. Nothing you can say, no facts, no logic, no common sense can penetrate their tea-brains.
As George Carlin said: “Think of how stupid the average person is, and realize half of them are stupider than that.”
They elected their President and they are happy.
There are two ways to deal with these folks…
You write:
“There are two ways to deal with these folks…”
Really?
What are they?
AG
No, Trump is living in this universe where he’s on the Kremlin payroll too. Seriously, Putin just called him up and told him to meet with Lavrov and Kislyak – and he did it.
What special prosecutors and investigations are best at it destroying the lives of the people who do not have the money or connections to protect themselves. Those peoples lives are about to be ruined, their bank accounts drained, their personal lives shifted through.
Kushner, even if he goes to jail will come out a millionaire, with fine homes, ski vacations in Aspen, and access to private jets. Just like his daddy did.
Not so the office workers.
.
Martyrs of the Revolution.
Bannon can design, or have designed, an appropriate decoration they can be given. Gorka may have one the two of them can use as a model. Or something with Pepe on it.
They can take heart. President Pence will simply pardon them all.
Honestly wondering about this.
Presidents can pardon people before they’re formally charged, right? And they can pardon themselves in all cases except impeachment?
If I’m Trump, I immediately pardon everyone in my inner circle, and myself. Bang. Done.
he will certainly pardon all of his people. And if he can pardon himself, that’s plan B. But I doubt any of it will come to pass.
I guess I don’t understand why it’s not Plan A. It’d stop the investigations, wouldn’t it? ‘Ignore the subpoenas, lie to the FBI. You’re pre-pardoned.’
But why would any of them, except maybe Ivanka and Jared, believe him if he promised that? Given his track record of broken promises, refusals to pay, under-bus-tossing, and so forth. Plus it’s hard to lie convincingly when your interrogators already have substantial documentary and testimonial evidence they’re working from to quiz you. Why add perjury charges to whatever else they’ve already got on you? Much better, especially if you’re a second-tier target, to cut a deal.
Forgot to add: Competent investigators don’t bring their targets in for questioning in cases like this until they already have a damn good idea of what a lot of the answers should be based on the investigatory work they’ve done beforehand. And you can bet the competence level of the people working on this is sky-high.
And they work their way up the food chain.
Do they need to believe his promise? That’s my question. Can’t a president pardon crimes for which someone hasn’t been charged? I’m pretty sure they can. So why not just issue blanket pardons right now?
Yes, the President can. Ford pardoned Nixon before the law could get him.
.
Yes. But that doesn’t make any of this go away. I’d propose that Trump making indiscriminate use of his power to pardon would actually increase the chances of a successful impeachment. You don’t pardon innocent people after all. (At least that’s the common thought, much like you don’t take the 5th unless you’re guilty of something.) It’s stupid on some level, but in this case it’s mostly true and that is going to work against Trump and the Republicans.
Trump has also not shown the message discipline to pull off such a thing without giving up the goods on why he did what he did.
If Booman and others are to be believed, the group of voters we have to win back still have some sense of fairness. If their sense of fairness doesn’t get offended by Trump just pardoning everyone, then the US is done for because they’ve falling too far down into the wingnut black-hole to escape again.
Yes on all this.
That does not mean he won’t do it. IMHO he will do it.
And once he does…….
.
DOJ response to WH ethics complaint re Mueller would be to assign another special atty to deal with Jared and Manafort.
Isn’t Mueller subject to being fired by Trump? Or by Trump’s creatures in charge of the DOJ?
What does the “special” in special prosecutor in fact mean for DOJ?
Under the new rules, yes, the Special Counsel could be fired by the DAG.
I haven’t actually worked up the pertinent data, but my sense is that there’s been a steep decline in the frequency of diaries claiming that there’s nothing to the Trump/Russia allegations. Anyone else notice this?
Besides the ones where the author uses a sock puppet account to recommend their own diary?
.
There’s certainly been a marked decline in comments bitching about why waste our precious time on this nothingburger, which used to litter every post Booman wrote about it. Seems like even the most diehard apologists are choking on reality these days.
“Talking about Trump and the Russians is just a distraction! Here, look at my chart of how white men with last names starting with the letter ‘M’ in a Ohio district voted, it shows definitively how Clinton sucks!’
.
Hell, it’d be just as nice if they were to acknowledge the fact that Russia =! Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, and that Putin =! a left wing leader.
Trying to paint the Strongman Trump/Russia thing as a “new red scare” is using almost all of the terms in that phrase 180 degree backwards/incorrectly.
As if there isn’t a direct line from Joe McCarthy -> Roy Cohn -> Strongman Trump. As if there aren’t a whole lot of similarities between what Strongman Putin has accomplished, and what Strongman Trump would like to accomplish, if only he weren’t incompetent at almost everything he does.
As if Strongman Trump was somehow a great candidate for 2016, instead of the fact that the Republican party voter base has been designed by Masters Ailes, Limbaugh, Hannity, and O’Reilly to literally seek out fascists with their inherent right-wing authoritarian fever, over the past 30 years.
Never mind the connections between Russia and Strongman Trump.
Check out this pile of nonsense.
http://www.boomantribune.com/story/2017/5/15/20659/0186
These useful idiots find themselves defending fascists because of shared ideology.
And self recommended by a sock puppet account.
Pretty much the definition of a troll.
.
When you think the law doesn’t apply to you, you think that what you say is irrelevant and just a demonstration of your arbitrary power.
The only way to stop that behavior is to take that arbitrary power away. When the followers to his leadership demands say “No”, it’s over and no fear of retribution from Trump Donald I will be well-grounded. When he loses the people willing to be his enforcers, it is over.
So far that hasn’t happened and he enjoys the thought of people thinking he’s in bed with the Russkies not matter what the reality. It is a third rail of US politics touched without consequences. A decade ago, the consequences for a politician would have been immediate, the politician would have retired out of the limelight, and the illusion of his collaboration with Commies would not have been analyzed in any depth. You have to say that Rushbo and the shock jocks have changed that with their continuing support of Trump.
Except the third rail touching isn’t without consequences even for our god-emperor; his administration is tied up in knots over it, staff morale is kaput and the rats are scrambling for their lives, leaking like the proverbial sieve, nothing beyond Gorsuch is being accomplished, and no matter what he says or does he can’t stop the wheels of the juggernaut from rolling inexorably forward toward him and his closest associates.
Immediate consequences? No; but long term he’s being ground down into hapless dust.
And so we have faith. From your lips to God’s ear.
Do you think that perhaps the reason that Trump can be visibly in bed with “the Russkies” and not suffer significant consequences is that “the Russkies” are not only not “Commies,” but the very opposite? That Russia is now a right-wing oligarchy, in which the regime is dedicated to sucking money out of the system for itself and the oligarchs with which it is allied? That seems to be the fundamental appeal of Putin and his ilk to Trump — is it also appealing to Trump’s apologists and his base?
As others have commented in response to this post, it is puzzling that some commenters on this site seem to confuse concern about Russian influence over our government with Red-baiting. It’s as though they don’t realize that the Cold War ended a while ago, and that Putin’s dream is to lead a New World Order of authoritarian fascist regimes in Europe and the United States. I trust you don’t share that confusion.
Hear! Hear! During the Cold War, Capitalism and Democracy were on the same side, so small-d democrats could (usually) count on Capitalism’s help. Now, Capitalism is on both sides of the current conflict, so we should not count on Capitalism being our reliable ally.
This post and others like it illustrate both why the Trump administration hasn’t staffed up remotely adequately, and why they are unlikely ever to do so.
To fill the hundreds of appointed jobs in any administration, its leaders have to be able to delegate authority to people they trust. Trump comes up short on both counts: he has no experience in delegating or capability to do so, and there is practically no one he really trusts (for good reason).
On the other side, the administration has to find people willing to take these jobs — which requires that they strongly support the administration and can have some basic confidence that working for it will be for the good both of the country and of themselves. There aren’t remotely enough even modestly capable people who support Trump, and every day bring more evidence — and more advice from respected observers — that working for him cannot help the country and may do the staff great personal harm. People aren’t going to take jobs that include the threat of spending their retirement funds to pay lawyers, just as nobody would buy a ticket on the “Titanic” once it hit the iceberg.
We’re in for an interesting experiment in how to run the USG with with a bare-bones management structure largely composed of malicious incompetents. After 27 years as a Foreign Service officer, I have a pretty good feeling the outcome of that experiment won’t be happy.
Yes, I believe you’re correct, Booman.
I’m still on the fence about what did or didn’t happen, but it looks like a soft coup to me.
Trump, like his sort of “mentor,” Roger Ailes, appears to be a victim of believing his own hype, spin, lies and bullsh*t. I read an article about Aisle (post demise), which claimed that Ailes began to believe the lies and bs pumped out by the Fake Noise, Hate Radio mighty wurlitzer (mostly developed, designed and engineered by Ailes) and became allegedly increasingly weird and paranoid. Well if you imbibe that lying, alternate non-reality propaganda 24/7/365 it warps your brain. Who knows? Maybe it even messes with your DNA (only partial snark).
Trump began his campaign quite a long time ago by jumping on the Birther Bandwagon – one of the penultimate FAKE news propaganda – and only with yuuuuuge reluctance ungraciously “took it back” last summer, no doubt with his fingers crossed behind his back.
As many have opined since the none-too-timely demise Aisles earlier this week that Trump was the ultimate and quite predictable outcome of Aisles’ (via Lee Atwater) propaganda efforts. All roads led directly to someone SUCH AS Trump. Anyone truly surprised by Trump’s success hasn’t been paying attention.
Some smaller, but still significant, portion of Trump voters are not necessarily racist. They were desparate and hoped that somehow an outsider, like Trump, could break the logjamb of Versailles on the Potomac.
Even for someone who had their sh*t together – say an outsiderish person like Sanders – it would be difficult, at best, to break the logjamb. But perhaps some incremenatal improvements and steps could be made and taken.
The problem, of course, is that Trump is a CONman grifter, first and foremost, combined with the fact that he’s a totally incurious, ill-educated, know-nothing boorish egomaniacal narcissist. A dangerous combo.
What I’ve seen, as depicted in this post, is Trump attempting to bull and bluff and bluster his way forward, which, clearly, is his standard MO. And that MO has mostly worked for him but not this time.
Trump truly had NO CLUE. As others have posited, I think he saw Obama – the N-word – as POTUS, and in his nasty, stupid, calculating way thought: Sh*t! How hard can THAT job be, if some darky like him is doing it? I could do it better inna heartbeat, and think of the sweet sweet GRIFT!! (which he and his family hestitated not one NY nanosecond to go after with a passion).
What a buffoon.
Well it’s the PTB who are against him – PTB from various “sides” of the aisles, if such “sides” really exist much anymore.
I think it might have been on Crooks & Liars, but I saw a listing of the Headers from Fox Noise programs where they are still desparately pumping out that Trump is this much maligned person, who’s “doing a good job” and it’s the DFHs who going after him. Yeah, right. The always punchable DFHs to the rescue again.
If they do remove Trump from office by whatever means, I think it’s going to be very ugly. There is that 30% of our population who has drunk the Fox/Hate Radio propaganda Kool Aid for decades now. Factual reality of what’s really happening in the DC Swamp is beyond their ability to grasp. They will eagerly be misled to hate on the dirty Libtards for this, per usual, aka Round up the Usual Suspects.
OTOH, I am squirming a lot because although it becomes more apparant with each paasing day how woefully inadequate Trump is for this job, I am concerned that the next time a Democratic candidate is elected, the Fox base will at least attempt to go after him or her tooth and nail. And what we saw happen with Obama will look like child’s play.
Sh*t. Empire in decline. What. A. Mess.
Trump, like his sort of “mentor,” Roger Ailes, appears to be a victim of believing his own hype, spin, lies and bullsh*t
It wouldn’t be the first time a grifter got lost in the grift. L. Ron Hubbard comes to mind, although maybe the fictional Howard Beale from “Network” is a better analogy in that clearly the Republican party and their billionaire backers regard Trump as a useful idiot.
The thing is, Trump was “successful” in his previous efforts largely due to the fact that government (and the media) has been increasingly co-opted to favor money over the interests of the rest of us. He should have been wiped out several times over, but thanks to clever lawyers and lax bankruptcy rules, instead he survived and left others holding the bag. He’s largely escaped scrutiny for his financial entanglements with dubious foreign entities because of the worship of unrestricted laissez faire capitalism that our politicians have been paid to promote has resulted in the decimation of restrictions (or even transparency) on global investments. Maybe we can hope for a rebound on this stuff once they throw him out of office. At least there is the possibility that the more his faux economic populism gets exposed for the bs it is, the less we will have to worry about his die-hard supporters.
I’ll believe its going down when congressional republicans start jumping ship and I dont mean Amash types.
This is an open comment to all of the credulous centrist posters on this site who think that the people who are busily…and so far apparently successfully…trying to take down Trump are “the good guys”:
They are not. They are people who are shoring up the corporate-owned globalist movement that has caused the economy of the U.S. to almost totally tank over the past 35 years or so. They prosecute wars in defense of the .01% and sell them to the rubes as “righteous.” They have made the U.S. the primary enemy of a huge part of the population of the world, and I do not mean ISIS, al Queda or any other terrorist organization. They are preparing to rule a worldwide serf class…you folks included…by means of total surveillance.
Sometimes there is more than one group of bad guys in action. Partisan politics has nothing to do with this. Not really. It’s just another tool that the controllers use to fragment and deceive the population. Knee-jerk Republicans and knee-jerk Democrats are all fools.
Trump has probably met his match.
So what?
He will be replaced by yet another cooperative front man, and the Big Con will continue.
Here is the real deal:
Four professional front men yukking it up for the camera.
Two Republicans and two Democrats.
You think that they were not owned lock, stock and barrel by international monies?
Give me a break!!!
You think that the almost total media opposition to Trump from the very beginning wasn’t based on his not being owned by “the right people?” That it was because his is some kind of stupid candidate? If that is true, why were equally stupid candidates like Bush II and Ronald Reagan not totally opposed by the same media?
Answer me that riddle, please.
And answer this question as well.
Are you better off than you were before Bush I…the first in this most recent line of PermaGov hustlers to be president…was elected?
Is the U.S.?
I don’t think so.
The rich are richer and their gentrified areas are doing well, but what about the rest of the country?
In fact…what about you!!!
Unless you are a compliant part of the Big Lie Machine…Big Media, Big Finance, Big Tech, Big Med, Big Insurance, Big Academia, Big Politics, etc…you are not doing very well at all.
And a third and final question.
Do you think this con game can go on forever?
I don’t.
So…go snark your empty snark and rate your empty ratings. Your time will come. Bet on it.
AG
P.S. When two Big Lies meet, the bigger one will always win.
And here we jolly well are, aren’t we.
Up Con Creek without a paddle.