Diebert van Rhijn wrote: ↑Wed Dec 11, 2019 5:18 pm
Okay, fair enough. This is exactly what I'm trying to find out. Kevin
responded to David saying that exact phrase, which I used as a starting point. But you mentioned "facts" around the coverage of Trump & "regime". To simply ask "which facts" seemed a bit too much as I know a lot has been posted including links to reporting and government inquiries. But I wanted to zoom in on exactly which exactly which undisputed facts had the strongest disagreements. And to limit the scope a bit, to see if we could select the main ones. One reason I'm asking is that right now many discussions I've seen end in "look at the whole picture" or "add hundred small things together to make one big". Now that method can work but I'd like to see if it can be put simpler with
leading facts about particular things people
did and not merely said or meant.
I don't know how to address those questions without invoking the broad picture, which for me is pretty much the whole point. But there's a couple of things I think should be addressed before I even begin to delineate the matters I think are most pressing and 'factual'.
Criminality: I've said elsewhere I think David's use of this word with respect to Trump is a bit problematic because, technically, Trump is not a criminal, and the use of the term allows people like Kevin to dismiss the larger point being made on the basis of this 'technicality'.
However, as a rhetorical device in a largely vernacular discussion the label strikes me as perfectly legitimate. In many other nations/jurisdictions he'd be in jail over the University fraud and the recent Charity scam - among other things. In America such matters are treated as civil cases unless the fraud involves the government. It's incredibly convenient for the wealthy. And, I mean, are we really saying that no-one should ever have characterised Al Capone as a criminal before he was convicted of something? Are we really doing that?
Corruption: This is a somewhat problematic area for us given the subjective, contextual nature of how we wish to perceive and/or define 'corruption'. If there's insufficient overlap of perception as to what does and does not constitute corruption by a POTUS and the elected and unelected officials around them, there's probably not much point in this discussion.
But let's toss a few around:
Nepotism: Federal law 5 U.S. Code § 3110
Conflict of Interest: This is, of course, an utterly massive area of overt corruption on the part of Trump, his family, his Cabinet and the GOP more generally. Trump is, in full view, profiting - and profiteering - off his Presidency in a staggering fashion. Again, one may not care about such matters or consider it to be a case of corrupt behaviour - that's all well and good but this is exactly one of those cases of 'fact' I'm referring to. There is no denying it's happening.
It would take me endless pages to outline all the ways in which it is, but the bare fact of it stares us in the face. And it started happening almost immediately.
# A few days after the election Kuwait canceled a planned event at the Four Seasons Hotel. It instead held the event at the Trump International Hotel in Washington. There are numerous examples of this sort of thing.
# As of May 2018 the Secret Service has paid $175,000 for the hire of golf carts at two Trump golf courses. Just for golf carts.
# There are at least 2 pending Emoluments Clause cases. Whatever the technical legal outcome of those, the dynamic surrounding them are clear.
# Visits to Trump properties by government officials, 1,594. Events held at Trump properties,193. Promotion of Trump properties by White House officials,323. Foreign trademarks granted to Trump brands, 63. Miscellaneous official interactions with the Trump Organization, 555.
# President Trump's trips to Trump-brand properties: All properties, 406. Golf, 245. International, 6.
# There has been in the order of 110 visits by Gov't officials to Trump properties. Trump has publicly promoted his business around 240 times, and that's not counting how many other officials have also done so. Trump literally refers to Mar-a-Lago as the winter White House. Blurring the lines between Government and his business empire may seem altogether innocent to some, but for me they are transparently stupid people.
# Kelly-Anne Conway has breached the Hatch Act so many damn times Special Counsel Henry J Kerner felt compelled to write an official letter of complaint to the White House. It was ignored. She's not the only one to have violated the Act but she's certainly the main culprit. But again, I concede some people might not give a flying shit. The GOP certainly doesn't - at least not when it's one of theirs doing it.
# More than 164 former lobbyists work in the administration, including the EPA's Andrew Wheeler and now help oversee industries for which they worked - or more importantly, have a financial interest.
# Trump suggested Prime Minister Shinzo Abe grant a coveted operating license to a casino company owned by Sheldon Adelson, who donated at least $20 million to Trump’s presidential campaign.
Anyway, this could go on forever. Conflict of interest matters hang over Trump and this Administration like a giant cloud of laundered bank-notes. But again, you may not care.
Robert Mueller outlined multiple ways in which Trump has obstructed justice. While he did not go forward with an indictment on the basis of DoJ advice that a sitting POTUS could not be indicted, he nevertheless made it clear that an alternative remedy existed - Congressional Indictment, indicating that sufficient substance for an indictment exists.
Oh, and I ought not forget that the Southern District of New York is waiting patiently for Trump's reign as
Patron Saint of the Paranoiac to end so they can indict him as co-conspirator in the Cohen case. You may remember him in this matter as 'Individual 1'. God knows what other State level indictments are sitting ready to go. Grand Juries must be a terrifying thing for a man like Trump (as an aside I'm not sure I like it that such things actually exist).
The Mueller report also contains manifold ongoing investigations the results of which are yet to be seen. But there was a lot of redactions. And let's not forget the ongoing Rudy Giuliani and Lev Parnas drama. One of them, and likely both, are headed for jail. How much that drama falls back on Trump is yet to be determined, but it won't be pretty.
So, basically what we're seeing here is a general theme of absolute disregard for multiple, basic and important principles of democracy, and frankly a blatant disregard for democracy itself. We're seeing overt kleptocracy, blatant neo-fascism (which admittedly has been a thing in the US for ages), nepotism of the most errant and arrant kind.
But, hey, none of this may constitute 'corruption' for you, which essentially means corruption doesn't exist. Or perhaps you recognise it as such but are willing to ignore it for the sake of some grand, higher purpose. My issue with that is said higher purpose rests on the mentality and activities of a man who doesn't like power-saving light bulbs because they make him look too orange.
That is your Accidental Hero. Good luck with that.