blutoski
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Jan 10, 2006
- Messages
- 12,454
The text of the settlement requires Trump to be aware of it: Cohen can't make him a party to the deal without his knowledge.
Not legally, anyway
Either Trump agreed to the terms of the contract (pay $130k), or he didn't.
If Cohen signed on Trump's behalf without informed consent, then that's illegal and a good reason to nullify the contract.
This is the thing about this elitist subculture: they have a hokey pseudo law that works most of the time when they're ripping off the little people (employees, contractors), but it kinda only works because the victims mistake it for actual legal stuff. The environment's function is to look like law, but isn't actual law. It's a mechanism to circumvent law with sort of performance art.
We see exactly this with the Freemen on the Land: all this effort to author millions of pages of contracts in the hope that the other party is also participating in this imaginary parallel universe. Competence in actual law is irrelevant. It all comes to a screeching halt when it comes in contact with actual real law.
And the connection is fascinating. A fake billionaire who plays the role of a businessman on a TV show has fake lawyers... because of course he does.
Trump has coasted with these incompetent lawyers for decades, but I think this case is going to start a process of dismantling this legacy network of pseudocontracts.
This gave me a chuckle: [Real Law vs Alitoland: Trump desperately needs a crack legal team. But his lawyers are no match for Mueller, and no sane attorney would join them now.]
