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THE TRUMP 2024 THREAD
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<blockquote data-quote="fishtm2001" data-source="post: 5481131" data-attributes="member: 54375"><p>1. donald was repeatedly made aware of evidence and data that showed he had lost, as well as evidence that his claims of election fraud were bogus. The Big Lie was not only false but also premeditated well in advance of Election Day. Steve Bannon: “He’s just gonna <em>say</em> he’s a winner,” as well as Roger Stone, who politely told associates that in the event of unfavorable results, “the key thing to do is claim victory…. No, we won. friend--k you.” </p><p></p><p>2. donald was informed in an internal campaign memo and the Department of Homeland Security’s Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Agency that Dominion machines were accurate, reliable, and definitely not connected to foreign adversaries. Nevertheless, the president chose to lie. Rather than listening to his staff donald hired a new legal team—referred to by former Attorney General William Barr as the “clown car”—to carry out his election fraud claims in court. </p><p></p><p>3. donald himself did not believe his own claims, based on a a phone call with lawyer Sidney Powell, who described a conspiracy theory similar to the one donald himself promulgated about Dominion. In response to Powell, donald muted his telephone, laughed, and told others in the room: “This does sound crazy, doesn’t it?”</p><p></p><p>4. donald's efforts to secure cooperation from state and local officials in changing the election results was not some product of overzealous subordinates, but something in which he himself played a personal and central role.</p><p></p><p>5. During a discussion on Jan. 4, an advisor, Max Miller, tried to dissuade donald from going to the Capitol, citing the security risks. In response, donald “floated the idea of having 10,000 National Guardsmen deployed to protect him and his followers from any supposed threat by left-wing counterprotesters.” In contrast, he never ordered the National Guard “to protect the U.S. Capitol, or to secure the joint session proceedings.”</p><p></p><p>6. As the Commander in Chief, donald, more than any other American, had the power to marshal U.S. government resources to stop the attack on the Capitol. Yet, he made no calls to any federal law enforcement agency, to the Department of Defense, the Capitol Police Department, or to the D.C. Mayor’s Office to quell the violence. For 187 minutes, he preferred to watch TV.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="fishtm2001, post: 5481131, member: 54375"] 1. donald was repeatedly made aware of evidence and data that showed he had lost, as well as evidence that his claims of election fraud were bogus. The Big Lie was not only false but also premeditated well in advance of Election Day. Steve Bannon: “He’s just gonna [I]say[/I] he’s a winner,” as well as Roger Stone, who politely told associates that in the event of unfavorable results, “the key thing to do is claim victory…. No, we won. friend--k you.” 2. donald was informed in an internal campaign memo and the Department of Homeland Security’s Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Agency that Dominion machines were accurate, reliable, and definitely not connected to foreign adversaries. Nevertheless, the president chose to lie. Rather than listening to his staff donald hired a new legal team—referred to by former Attorney General William Barr as the “clown car”—to carry out his election fraud claims in court. 3. donald himself did not believe his own claims, based on a a phone call with lawyer Sidney Powell, who described a conspiracy theory similar to the one donald himself promulgated about Dominion. In response to Powell, donald muted his telephone, laughed, and told others in the room: “This does sound crazy, doesn’t it?” 4. donald's efforts to secure cooperation from state and local officials in changing the election results was not some product of overzealous subordinates, but something in which he himself played a personal and central role. 5. During a discussion on Jan. 4, an advisor, Max Miller, tried to dissuade donald from going to the Capitol, citing the security risks. In response, donald “floated the idea of having 10,000 National Guardsmen deployed to protect him and his followers from any supposed threat by left-wing counterprotesters.” In contrast, he never ordered the National Guard “to protect the U.S. Capitol, or to secure the joint session proceedings.” 6. As the Commander in Chief, donald, more than any other American, had the power to marshal U.S. government resources to stop the attack on the Capitol. Yet, he made no calls to any federal law enforcement agency, to the Department of Defense, the Capitol Police Department, or to the D.C. Mayor’s Office to quell the violence. For 187 minutes, he preferred to watch TV. [/QUOTE]
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