How long will it take for him to tear himself apart?
I wouldn't hold my breath. He's displaying all of the same personality traits he showed on the campaign trail and that led to a magnificent result.
How long will it take for him to tear himself apart?
...If he's this upset three days into his term, he'd better buckle up. It's going to be a rough four years (or however long he lasts).
I guess everybody's piling on you -- sorry! -- but do we know the groping was consensual? I don't think we do. What could a woman do exactly? If it was a production assistant back stage who did the groping he probably gets slapped or the woman complains to management. When it's a mega-celebrity they know they don't have much recourse unless Trump gets completely out of control.
Most women would consider being groped that way to be humiliating. If you don't believe me, ask one.![]()
Watching this whole thing unfold, I am increasingly suspicious if Trump will remain President for the whole four years. Especially seeing how stressed out he is because the media said "his" crowd was smaller than "Obama's." How will a real crisis effect him?
In earlier years he said in interviews that "getting" meant more to him than "having." That by the time he accomplished something he often lost interest in having it. I wouldn't give odds on Trump resigning but I think it's a possibility.
Allegations are not evidence.
How about a lawsuit from these guys?
Erwin Chemerinsky - Dean of School of Law at University of California, Irvine
http://www.law.uci.edu/faculty/full-time/chemerinsky
Norman L. Eisen - ethics attorney, former Obama administration
https://www.brookings.edu/experts/norman-eisen
Deepak Gupta, Supreme Court litigator (3 cases currently pending before the court)
http://guptawessler.com/people/deepak-gupta
Richard W. Painter, ethics counsel, former George W. Bush administration
https://www.law.umn.edu/profiles/richard-w-painter
Zephyr Teachout, Fordham University law professor, expert in the Emoluments Clause
https://www.fordham.edu/info/23186/zephyr_teachout
Laurence H. Tribe - Harvard constitutional scholar
http://hls.harvard.edu/faculty/directory/10899/Tribe
Sean Spicer just gave a briefing in which he complained that it's "demoralizing" and "unbelievably frustrating" when the media doesn't support Trump.
Maybe Trump needs a Safe Space where people can't say mean things about him. Maybe the media needs to use Trigger Warnings before they talk about him.
If he's this upset three days into his term, he'd better buckle up. It's going to be a rough four years (or however long he lasts).
His crowd and his genitals! What a loser. If he can do 4 years he has exceded Jesse Ventura, who barely showed up in the end.Watching this whole thing unfold, I am increasingly suspicious if Trump will remain President for the whole four years. Especially seeing how stressed out he is because the media said "his" crowd was smaller than "Obama's." How will a real crisis effect him?
In earlier years he said in interviews that "getting" meant more to him than "having." That by the time he accomplished something he often lost interest in having it. I wouldn't give odds on Trump resigning but I think it's a possibility.
That is what worries me.
Litigation can accomplish several purposes. Not all lawsuits are winnable, nor are they all intended to be won. Good lawyers know all this.
Is this the group that filed the lawsuit against him on the grounds that his business holdings were unconstitutional? It will be interesting to follow. My guess is it will be dismissed on standing grounds. However, that is just a guess, or perhaps a tiny bit more. I like following cases like that one, though. I find it fascinating to read the legal reasoning employed.
Obama paved the highway around the Constitution, are you going to fault Trump for following it?
Chris B.
...My guess is it will be dismissed on standing grounds...
It's a tough call. Yes, assault is a thing, and it's real, and it shouldn't be downplayed. On the other hand, there are a lot of rock stars and movie gods out there that have groupies. Groupies are also a real thing.
For those who came forward and said that Trump's advances were unwanted, it was definitely assault. What I don't know is what portion of the women he groped viewed it that way. If, for example, he groped 100 women, and 99 of them loved it (as groupies), he could feasibly be completely unaware that 1 of those 100 was offended by his actions.
That doesn't excuse his actions, but it does add some plausibility to his belief that they were not assaults.
Do you think that the fashion show contestants whose dressing rooms he bragged about being able to barge in on at will were all Trump groupies?
I'm not a lawyer either but do you mean standing as in they don't have it? I wonder if they might. First of all, most of them appear to be pretty accomplished attorneys or law professors so you think they'd know. Second, they're suing the President of the country in which they are citizens. Suing him on the basis he is violating the law in a way that will impact his ability to lead the United States in a true and faithful manner. That suggests to me they may have standing, that any American citizen would.
Btw, the same group of lawyers who are suing him have said, or at least some of them have, handing over the businesses for his children to run is not a blind trust.
http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/...rid_collaborative_3_na&utm_term=.7f83b2423607President Trump on Monday signed an executive order instituting a hiring freeze on all nonmilitary federal employees. At a press briefing, White House press secretary Sean Spicer said that the move “counters the dramatic expansion of the federal workforce in recent years.”
In both raw-number and percentage terms, this is an inaccurate statement. ......
In raw-number terms, the number of federal employees is nearly the same today (2.8 million) as it was when Barack Obama took office (2.79 million). It is also similar to the number of federal employees at the end of the Clinton administration (2.75 million) and lower than at any time during the Reagan administration (when it peaked at 3.15 million).
Obama issued 277, pretty much middle of the pack historically. They're not holding up very well, just too easy to overturn. Trump may experience the same thing with the next Democratic President.
Nope, fewest of post-war two term presidents:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_United_States_federal_executive_orders
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs...-to-react-accordingly/?utm_term=.e3b10d400ddeAnyone who is not considering the possibility that this may be an outgrowth of Trump’s well-established authoritarian streak is missing what may be happening here. As libertarian writer Jacob Levy has written, Trump may be experimenting with a time-tested tactic, in which a leader “with authoritarian tendencies” will regularly lie in order to get others to internalize his lies, as “a way to demonstrate and strengthen his power over them.”