September 28, 2022

Does Roger Stone have a new tattoo on his back?

Does Roger Stone have a new tattoo on his back

By Hal Brown 

This is from Heather Digby Parton's column:

Is a major bombshell coming? It sure looks like it


If there is one prominent through-line connecting the two most corrupt presidents in U.S. history, Richard Nixon and Donald Trump, it would have to be the person of Roger Stone. The man has been at the heart of every election scandal for the past 50 years and he's still at it, even today. It's quite a legacy for the guy who has Richard Nixon's face tattooed on his back. It's lucky he left his chest clear for his last great cause, Donald Trump. Stone's work on Trump's behalf provides the perfect coda to a legendary career as a political dirty trickster and world-class black-ops conspiracy-monger.

Stone has had his fingerprints on every nefarious deed the Republicans have pulled in the last half-century, starting when he was a kid working on Nixon's re-election campaign in 1972, and given the job of spying on rival campaigns and finding devious ways to embarrass them in the press. He has said that during the day he was a scheduler but at night, he was "trafficking in the black arts."

I decided I didn't have anything to say by way of a comment to this column, so I simply posted this:


 I wonder what the other inmates will think of it in the group showers. He looks here to be a muscle muscle-bound hombre so 
he may be safer than a diminutive felon, although if an Never-Trumper and bigger badder inmate decided he didn't like the full-of-himself Stone and wanted to Trump in the eye and express his anger...

better not go there!

We know which prison gang he'd join up with. For his sake he'd better hope they'd accept him because its better to have friends in prison and not be a loner.


If a member of the Aryan Brotherhood was going to have a tattoo of any world leader on his back it wouldn't be Nixon or Trump.


Criminal information
Criminal statusPardoned, following commutation.
Criminal chargeFelony counts of:
Penalty40 months in federal prison (Stone served no time as President Donald Trump commuted his sentence, then pardoned him.)
Inmates learning about this might not appreciate that they are serving time while Stone avoided this through a pardon.
Criminal information
Criminal statusPardoned, following commutation.
Criminal chargeFelony counts of:
Penalty40 months in federal prison (Stone served no time as President Donald Trump commuted his sentence, then pardoned him.)

Stories that piqued my interest:



My illustrated comment: 

While I'd have liked to she her testify on live TV I think there is a benefit to her do so virtually. By this I assume it would be by Zoom or some other way so she'd be in her home or someplace where she felt comfortable. This would be likely to give her a false sense of security and she might be less guarded in how she responded to questions. Of course she might take the Fifth to every question she's asked. I think much depends of how much of a true believer she is when it comes to considering Trump a deity with a God given right to rule, and that her husband is functioning like God's right hand.




It look like Fall is here (click photos to enlarge,  from Aurora, Oregon). 




Lunch at Old Colony Pub:





We wondered if this man picking up a take-out order might be the local funeral director.

September 27, 2022

Digby posits three reasons Trump stole the documents, I have a fourth

 

A psychological reason Trump might have stolen the top secret documents 

By Hal Brown 

Scroll down for articles that piqued my interest today





In Heather "Digby" Parton's Salon column she speculates on the following:

Why did he steal the documents? Maggie Haberman's book may hold the answer

Let's review: He's a pack rat; he hoped to sell them; he meant to use them for blackmail. Yes, yes and yes

Of course none of the reasons are mutually exclusive, but I propose a fourth possible reason:

There’’s plenty of speculation as to why Trump wanted to bring top secret documents home to Mar a Lago. I have yet to hear one that isn’t nefarious.  These include his wanting to sell them to foreign adversaries or curry favor with them, but I am posing a different reason just as consistent with his personality. If he wanted to use them to benefit himself in the former way it speaks to his being a traitorous sociopath. I suggest another possiblity. It is based on another aspect of his psychology. This is that he may have wanted to use them as trophies, either to enjoy by himself or to show off to select mucky-mucks who he wanted to impress. This speaks to his over-the-top pathological grandiose narcissism.


If he didn’t take them for evil reasons I lean towards his wanting to show them off because I don’t see Trump as the kind of wealthy person who is like the collector of illegally obtained fine art which he keeps in a vault where he enjoys just sitting by himself enjoying the work of the masters only he is able to look at.


Trump most likely knew he wasn’t allowed to take home gifts from foreign leaders to show off to his pals but figured that showing these off was no big deal (see From chess sets to model jets, foreign leaders lavish gifts on Trump White House) compared to flashing a document labeled Top Secret with the locations of our nuclear submarines on it. For example Chinese President Xi Jinping gave Trump a paper panel with five columns of calligraphy, valued at $14,400, that’s a big ho-hum.


Of course I may be totally wrong here, but then again sometimes a simple explanation is the right one. Both reasons are consistent with who we know Trump is.


My possible, emphasis on the word possible, reason is not as newsworthy as those being suggested. It doesn’t paint him as an evil traitor. In fact while it might be embarrassing to him to offer this as a defense should the case end up in court, it might be offered to exculpate him. It would be a kind of “not guilty by reason of pathological narcissism.”


On a personal note, I was friends with Biggie Munn’s daughter Jane when he was the athletic director of Michigan State University. She showed me the trophy room he had in his beautifully furnished basement. The walls of the room were lined with shelves and displays of fancy trophies which he or his teams had won dating back to when he was an All-American at the University of Minnesota through his coaching career, to when he eventually became athletic director at MSU. In one way or another he earned each and every one of them. None of them were stolen.


Articles that piqued my interest today

This article makes it sound like Bandy Lee was isolated among the community of mental health professionals. Of course there was a concerted effort to marginalized her in some quarters, but not enough media attention was given to those who agreed with her, and there were lots of us.
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As members of the Duty to Warn society like me know, this is not true. There were thousands of therapists saying in various ways the same thing. Some made a diagnosis (John D Gartner , myself, and others, a malignant narcissist, Lance Dodes, MD, a sociopath) and some not, but all saying he was dangerous.
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I viewed the reluctance to go public with an actual diagnosis was for some therapists as a way to avoid being accused of breaking the Goldwater Rule or subject to the criticism that one couldn't make a diagnosis without a clinical interview. It seems to be common sense that we have much more information about Trump's psychopathology than we would after a typical clinical assessment interview.
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We also have the observations of a family member the way we might when we interview a family member in some kinds of therapy, and in Trump's case this family member, Mary Trump, is a clinical psychologist.




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