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Many things have confounded me about Donald Trump over the last five years, but perhaps most confounding has been the spectacle of so many Republicans cowering and shivering in fear of his almighty tweets. I simply could not understand why they were so afraid of him. Yeah, I read all of the analysis pointing to the likelihood that if Republicans didn’t go along with Trump’s every little whim, he would insure they were “primaried” the next time they came up for election. They were in fear for their political careers, it was said. I got it. I’ve watched many men during my lifetime exhibit abject cowardice in the face of nothing more fearsome than an unreasonable asshole of a boss. Some of them had wives and kids and mortgages and didn’t want to lose their jobs. Others simply got comfortable and were willing to put up with crap from their superiors so they could stay put. So it’s understandable, if hardly commendable, that so many Republicans lived in dread of the fearsome Tweeter in Chief.
I waited in vain for some Republican, any Republican to stand up to him. In the end, it took losing re-election for Trump to appear wounded enough that Republicans, or at least a few of them, began to show some backbone. After he was beaten and on the ground, a small number of them finally decided it was safe to give him a few kicks.
This week, Democratic House managers described Trump’s campaign to intimidate Republicans around the country into helping him overturn the election.. They showed how a few of them stood up to him, as if suggesting to the senators in his party that they could risk his wrath and survive, too.
Trump fired his first shot at the courts. His campaign, and outside forces friendly to him, filed no fewer than 61 lawsuits aimed at overturning the presidential election in Arizona, Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania and Georgia. When he began to lose the lawsuits one by one, Trump ramped up his tweeting, trying to intimidate the judges, some of whom were Republican appointees, who consistently and repeatedly ruled against him. He turned loose his house hit man, Rudy Giuliani, in appearances such as the notorious Four Seasons Total Landscaping press conference, and in hearings held by rogue legislative committees in Michigan and elsewhere, trying to intimidate the local judges who were hearing his cases. When his campaign of intimidation didn’t work, he simply ignored adverse rulings and filed new cases in the same states — in different jurisdictions, and based on marginally different claims. When he had lost 60 of the 61 cases, he sent his lawyers directly to the U.S. Supreme Court, which he apparently thought was bought and paid for. When the Supreme Court slapped him down in two or three sentences, he erupted in rage.
His rage at the courts, he hoped, would intimidate Republican secretaries of state and Republican leaders in state legislatures. Trump began tweeting directly at some of them, mentioning Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensberger by name and calling him 18 times before he finally got him on the phone. Trump invited the leaders of Michigan and Pennsylvania’s state legislatures to the White House and tried to talk them into refusing to certify their states’ electoral votes and appoint Trump electors in their stead. When Raffensberger and Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, also a Republican, ignored Trump’s entreaties or outright denied them, Trump effectively blackmailed Georgia’s two U.S. senators, Kelly Loeffler and David Perdue — both of whom faced tight runoff elections — into calling for Raffensberger and Kemp’s resignations. When that didn’t work, Trump fired more tweets calling Raffensberger and Kemp RINOs and traitors. Raffensberger and his family began getting death threats and had to be protected by Georgia state police. It shouldn’t be shocking, but actually is, that none of the battleground-state officials targeted by Trump yielded to his attempts to intimidate them.
On Dec. 14, the Electoral College met and certified Joe Biden as the winner of the election. Having lost with the courts and the state legislatures, Trump then took his campaign directly to the U.S. Congress, directing his threats and tweets at Republican senators and House members. In a series of rallies, he called Republicans in Congress who weren’t going along with his scheme traitors to their party and the country. He mentioned by name senators and congressmen he had campaigned for and called on them to “Stop the Steal,” making clear that otherwise he would make sure they’d find themselves out of a job come re-election time.
He turned next to his own Department of Justice, calling on Attorney General Bill Barr to investigate all the election fraud he had been yapping about (but failing to prove) for the past month and a half. In mid-December, Barr announced that “we have not seen fraud on a scale that could have effected a different outcome in the election.” Trump called him to the White House and screamed at him in anger. House managers reported during the impeachment trial this week that Barr responded by “towering over Trump in the private White House dining room” and calling his charges of fraud “bullshit.”
Barr quit just before Christmas, and then Trump went after the deputy attorney general who had replaced him, Jeffrey Rosen. He called Rosen into the Oval Office and tried to get him to order yet another Justice Department investigation of voting fraud. When Rosen refused, Trump threatened to fire him and replace him with a lower-level lackey he had identified in the department who would follow his orders. He kept up his efforts to intimidate Rosen until Jan. 3 when his threats nearly caused a “Sunday Night Massacre,” with multiple deputy attorneys general threatening to resign en masse if Rosen was fired. Trump backed down.
It was only three days before the Congress met to certify the Electoral College ballots, and Trump had gotten more and more desperate. Now he turned on his own vice president, Mike Pence. Trump called him into the Oval Office for repeated tongue lashings, trying to get Pence to use his ceremonial role in the certification of electoral ballots to overturn the election by approving challenges to the totals in battleground states and giving those electoral votes to Trump. Pence apparently refused several times, sending Trump to Twitter to punish him with one blast after another, calling him a coward and telling him he’d be remembered as a “pussy” if he didn’t do his “duty” to help Trump cheat and overturn the election.
Pence stood up to Trump and was in the middle of overseeing the certification of the electoral votes when Trump sent his mob of looters, racists and militia members to attack the Capitol. More than 140 Republicans in the House and Senate caved to Trump’s pressure and objected to the electoral ballots from two states — even after a full day of televised violence — but all the Democrats and the other Republicans in both houses voted them down. In the wee hours of Jan. 7, Vice President Pence and Speaker of the House Pelosi — who only hours before had fled from a mob that wanted to kill them — presided over a joint session in the still-damaged House chamber and announced that Joe Biden had been elected president of the United States.
Trump tried to strong-arm and intimidate every level of government in the United States from the courts to state legislatures to secretaries of state and governors to the Department of Justice to individual congressmen and senators to a final violent attack on the U.S. Capitol itself. He failed. Now he stands accused of inciting an insurrection against the government and the Constitution he had sworn to uphold and protect. The House managers have made their case, step by step, incident by incident, tweet by tweet, threat by threat.
Trump lost the presidency. He failed in his attempt to overturn the election and remain in power. He’s a beaten man. Now we’ll see how many Republicans in the Senate are willing to recognize the corpse at their feet and finally put him in the ground.
But despite all this, he WILL be acquitted. We all know that. He still has most GOP Senators in his pocket, and he knows they will NEVER vote to convict him. He's laughing at the Dems by hiring the most clownish, incompetent lawyers he can find, because he knows he doesn't need any defense lawyers; the cowering, terrified GOP Senators are all the defense he needs. Just watch him crow and sneer and gloat when he's again acquitted.
This week is my first week away from work since last summer. Looks like it was meant to be, having some free time while this trial is going down. And perhaps my ramblings in my journal this morning are the reason for the co-incidence of events, vacation and impeachment trial.
The central story of today, for me, is the mob lawyers and mob defendant and mob boss in the shadows who are running the show. The fix is in. Between Putin controlling the Republican Senators who are voting for acquittal against the evidence, and Trump being Putin’s enforcer by threatening damage to their livelihood (primary fights to threaten their careers) and their safety (sic-ing rabid Trumpsters on them to threaten them and their families), the Bad Guys look like they’re going to win this vote. But the news is out. The impeachment managers and their staffs have done the important job of exposing the crime of Putin, through his partner Donald Trump, of attacking the American democracy.
We all realize how very, very limited conventional news reports are. What the conventional media decides to highlight is rarely more than a sliver of the full story. Our job is to see into the core of the problem, to see the heart of the issue. We need insight into the critical portions of the full story that perhaps are being neglected.
Can you see how mob lawyers working for a mob boss might not need to be competent trial lawyers, since their job is to intimidate and threaten? Their job is not to convince and persuade, unless it's through bribery of the jury.
Oh how naive we all are when we refuse to believe that crime is real, that crime is the foundation of Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin and their partnership. How naive we are when we avoid seeing that criminal threat is what can turn people like Mitch McConnell and Jim Jordan and Lindsay Graham into simpering sycophants.
Remember, the essence of crime is to prey upon a person’s weaknesses, with no regard for humanity or morality. You threaten to harm a person. You threaten to harm others the person cares about, close family and friends. You threaten their livelihood. You threaten their financial security. You wheedle and cajole, using flattery. You bribe, attempting to use money and material gifts. You blackmail, using coercion and threats of exposure of sensitive secrets.
Putin and Trump are criminals. Remember that. Criminals do not play by the rules that you and I play by. They play by a different set of rules. Look at this entire story through their eyes.
Let's suppose that we are justice officials viewing this entire story from the criminal point of view.
Imagine being a Senator in this predicament. If you are being supported financially with big bucks by a mob boss in Russia, if you are being blackmailed, or if you have threats against yourself and your family, how do you get out of that pickle?
How to deal with having Trump, mob enforcer, threaten to make you and your family the target of whacko Trumpster fans.
That's how we should be looking at this. Look at this trial through the eyes of the jurors who are victims under criminal threat, who are the victim of jury tampering.
Look at this trial through the eyes of Putin, the mob boss who has been pissed off at America ever since Hillary as Secretary of State put him in his place. Look through the eyes of Tя☭mp, the mob enforcer, who has his own sordid reasons for attacking our democratic institutions aside from his partnership with Putin.