credit: A. Zyglis, Buffalo News |
The infamous scofflaw, Donald Trumpillini has returned to twit 're-truths' on Twitter, thanks to billionaire boy, Elon Musk, buying the platform. He said banning the sociopathic liar from the Internet was "stupid" Herr Trumpillini's re-post of screed from his own platform, is anything but the truth; it is poisonous broadcasting of propaganda. Joseph Goebbels would be impressed. A shocking 38% of gullible 'Mericans who want to believe still persist in thinking the election of 2020 was stolen from their leader. As the Washington Post correctly pointed out in its editorial, perpetuation of the Big Lie is detrimental to democracy because the extremist demagogue inspires his enthralled followers for another assault on the needlessly fragile infrastructure of representative government. And the morally bankrupt GOP is his blunt instrument.
TWIT saw the Crime Boss escape being called as a witness before the January 6th Select Committee. The Chairman, Benny Thompson, said the panel has no expectation of calling the scofflaw. This is a mistake in US Person's and other legal pundits' opinion. If the Committee wants to make a complete record to turnover to DOJ in order to save our democracy, Trump should be given the opportunity to explain his anti-social behavior--specifically why he was sending handwritten notes to his flying monkeys on how to conduct the coup. This egregious example of his deep involvement in the plotting came to the surface as John Eastman, the coup legal architect, attempted to defend his claims of evidentiary privilege before a judge clearly skeptical of his assertions. Federal judge David O. Carter of Santa Ana, CA has already concluded that Eastman and Trump were probably planning a coup. As readers have learned there is no privilege when the client is planning the most consequential crime in modern American history.
credit: A. Zyglis, Buffalo News |
“How many look up to him [Hitler] with touching faith as their helper, their savior, their deliverer from unbearable distress.” —Louis Solmitz, Hamburg schoolteacher, 1932 |