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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region Forums'The walls are closing in': Trump reels from week of political setbacks
(Guardian UK) The last time Donald Trump heard such hammer blows, they were from renovations at Mar-a-Lago that displeased the former president. But not even that sound would have left his ears ringing like last weeks avalanche of bad news that some believe nudged a criminal indictment one step closer.
No single week in the year since Trump left the White House has been as dramatic, or for him as potentially catastrophic, as the one just passed.
It included a rebuke from the supreme court over documents related to the 6 January insurrection which Trump incited; news that the congressional committee investigating the riot was closing in on Trumps inner circle; evidence from New Yorks attorney general of alleged tax fraud; and, perhaps most damaging of all, a request from a Georgia prosecutor for a grand jury in her investigation of Trumps attempt to overturn the 2020 election.
The week ended with the leaking of a document showing that Trump at least pondered harnessing the military in his attempts to overturn Joe Bidens victory.
It all left the former president with plenty to ponder.
Hes Teflon Don, he said he could shoot somebody on Fifth Avenue and survive it, his supporters are going to support him no matter what, but Im starting to think more and more that the walls are closing in on this guy, said Kimberly Wehle, a respected legal analyst and professor of law at the University of Baltimore. ..............(more)
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2022/jan/22/the-walls-are-closing-in-trump-reels-from-week-of-political-setbacks

empedocles
(15,751 posts)padah513
(2,677 posts)Long overdue if you ask me. He damn near did irreparable harm to the country and we'll be living in his mess for years to come
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PatSeg
(49,847 posts)with his health declining rapidly. No friends, no family, and no sycophants anymore and perhaps surrounded by all the minorities that he looked down on his entire life. And divine justice would be for him to live that way for many, many years.
SergeStorms
(19,392 posts)Although I totally agree with your wishes, bankruptcy laws protect the wealthy much better than the average citizen of the U.S. He'll never be living in a refrigerator box, wearing rags, and dining from garbage cans.
Right now I'd settle for any sentence that confined him to a low-medium security prison, with absolutely no contact with anyone except legal and immediate family. He'll never have to do hard time, unfortunately.
There is no true justice for someone like him.
PatSeg
(49,847 posts)I agree about no contact with anyone except lawyers and family. No press whatsoever. Meanwhile, his family could abandon him, if he has nothing left to offer them.
I still think it is possible he could end up with close to nothing and even if he had a relatively decent place to live, for him it would feel like dire poverty to him.
tinrobot
(11,484 posts)All of his income garnished to pay back the people he harmed.
No cable TV, just over-the-air watched on a crappy TV pulled from a dumpster.
And not enough money to afford Big Macs for dinner.
PatSeg
(49,847 posts)I say he should have cable TV though, so he can sit there flipping channels desperately in the hope to hear his name or see his face again. Let him watch the world pass him by as if he'd never existed. I'd let him have his Big Macs and Diet Coke and maybe some Little Debbie cakes.
Just imagine what that mop of hair will look like after awhile.
MurrayDelph
(5,481 posts)Just books with big words and no pictures.
PatSeg
(49,847 posts)"Ain't go no ______", something will come to me.
AllaN01Bear
(23,864 posts)lagomorph777
(30,613 posts)He should not be at large; he is extremely dangerous.
jaxexpat
(7,794 posts)I'd much prefer he lay in poverty and his own waste as he contemplates, for years, the fact that no one visits him, ever.
PatSeg
(49,847 posts)As I really do want him to live as long as possible in the misery he has created himself. Of course, his health could decline, but not enough to kill him, just enough to make his suffering more acute.
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pandr32
(12,555 posts)He deserves worse.
Mr. Ected
(9,689 posts)The evangelicals sure whiffed on catching this one.
You take very possibly the most evil, least Christ-like man on the planet and allow him to steal the most powerful job in the world, and support him even though it's a 180 degree departure from reality...sorry....you're not Christians, you're fascists, and your gifts of discernment are pathetic and dangerous.
Lonestarblue
(12,215 posts)Think about all the wing nuts who pushed their religious agenda because it made them rich: Pat Robertson, Jim and Tammy Baker, Jerry Falwell Jr., etc. Right-wing Christian propagandists helped perpetuate the myth that religious persecution was happening in the US. Their hypocrisy has contributed to the lack of respect many people have for white evangelicals today, as they exhibit little more than hatred for their fellow man.
SergeStorms
(19,392 posts)I'd recommend more, but I don't want to appear..... pushy.
erronis
(17,680 posts)In fact they are usually the definition of sinners. And revel in their position. All their words and actions are just hokey-pokey - stuff to fool the rest of the dupes (the ones that tithe and sit in the pews.)
Quemado
(1,262 posts)I don't mean to be a wet blanket, but, despite all these stories we've heard over the past several years, Trump has never been indicted.
I've been a Democrat all my life. I would love to see Trump get indicted. The problem is: it hasn't happened.
I know some of his alleged crimes are complex issues that are defensible and would raise reasonable doubt. And, all it would take is one member of a jury refusing to vote guilty to prevent a conviction.
I don't keep a tally of all of his alleged crimes. But surely, there has to be at least one that stands a good chance of conviction.
So, why hasn't he been indicted?
Call me Rip Van Winkle. Wake me up when he's been indicted.
Demsrule86
(71,038 posts)Trump. And it would be beyond horrible if he was acquitted.
Solomon
(12,503 posts)Excuses, excuses, excuses. We're getting tired of hearing the same ole excuses.
Elessar Zappa
(16,295 posts)would have a high chance of conviction. Only 5% of DCers voted for Trump and 14% of Manhattanites.
PoindexterOglethorpe
(27,141 posts)All of this is meaningless until he's indicted, arrested, brought to trial, convicted, and sent to prison. Until then, well Happy Fitzmas to us all.
jmowreader
(51,830 posts)Hes committed a lot of financial crimes in NYC, and no one outside Staten Island likes him there.
ProudMNDemocrat
(19,424 posts)The whole family is going down.
paleotn
(19,861 posts)Evolve Dammit
(19,905 posts)Cha
(307,117 posts)live love laugh
(14,889 posts)Dark n Stormy Knight
(10,159 posts)well, I'm not religious, but let's say fate. However, for a mean, mendacious, traitorous, belligerently ignorant crook like TFG to feel the walls closing in and fear for his freedom, or at least his fortune, I just cannot summon any sympathy.
Lock him up!
, too.
Johnny2X2X
(22,241 posts)Day after day here and thread after thread for 5+ years now people have been waiting for Trump to face real consequences, they haven't and won't be coming.
It doesn't mean we shouldn't keep pursuing justice, but Dems need to concentrate on the political now and doing whatever it takes to avoid a blowout in November.
BlueWavePsych
(3,056 posts)