I have read the indictment against Trump. You should, too. You can find it here.

While I had already concluded he was the worst president in American history, his conviction of the charges will forever end any doubt that he was also the most dangerous. Should Trump be found guilty — and we have to wait on that — no citizen of this country should defend him, much less vote for him.

Defending a convicted Trump would mean a person is willfully blind to the threat he poses. It means they are unable to discern a threat to national security; no person thus impaired should hold any position in the government. Certainly no member of Congress who defends Trump should have any access to national intelligence or a national security clearance.

As for the predictable Republican defense of Trump you’re hearing right now — that the Department of Justice under President Biden has been “weaponized” against the former president — that is rubbish.

For as long as I can remember — and I covered my first federal corruption trial in 1976 — defendants and their sycophants have always cried foul that the feds were after them for political reasons. A Republican U.S. Attorney in Baltimore prosecuted numerous Democratic officials, including the governor of Maryland. As I recall, all defendants at some point claimed federal prosecutors were “conducting a witch hunt” or “a fishing expedition,” or they were “out to reverse the results of the last election.” All defendants protested their innocence.

I can only recall one high-profile case — that of the Democratic state’s attorney of Baltimore and a former congressman — in which the defendants were found not guilty. Federal prosecutors usually only bring charges they have a high likelihood of proving in court.
The state prosecutor in Maryland, a deep blue state, prosecuted officials of both parties over the years.
In my experience — and we have had many corruption cases in Maryland — the defendants who uttered the loudest protests usually learned to shut their mouths about the motives of prosecutors. It was counterproductive to arranging good plea deals to limit the amount of time they’d spend in prison. Defendants and their defenders became very quiet, even humble.
Only recently, in the Trump era, have we heard accusations of sinister prosecutorial motivations expressed loud and long.
But I can almost guarantee you this: At some point in the process, the unpredictable politics of the 2024 election year notwithstanding, Trump’s defenders are going to become very quiet. That’s not wishful thinking. That’s just human nature: Even fools eventually read the writing on the wall (or the indictment).
The only thing that would change my forecast would be Trump becoming president again. That would be a catastrophic development: A lawless president, a clear and present danger to the country.


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10 thoughts on “Trump’s defenders are willfully blind to the threat he poses

  1. When you go to traffic court for speeding, it is not a defense to say that someone else was speeding too, and going faster than you. Yet, the Trump defenders, rather than defend him directly, say that other Presidents have had secret documents in their possession. First, this is not a defense. Secondly, when these other people have been asked to return the documents they did so.
    Why do they not defend him directly? Because there is no defense.
    Ex- President Trump has no shame, no integrity, no honesty. I, like you, hope the “ex” is perpetually attached to his title.

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  2. I totally agree with your analysis. The issues receiving insufficient media coverage, however, are: What were Trump’s motives for taking and refusing to relinquish such sensitive material? Ego and arrogance alone do not explain them. What is the connection between Trump’s taking these sensitive documents and his obsequious behavior to Putin and his campaign’s ties to Russia? What is the connection to the enormous financial gains he and the Kushners received from the Saudis up through the LIV/PGA merger?

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      1. Agreed. But from a political perspective those questions are critical if Trump is to be “tried” in the court of public and electoral opinion.

        Liked by 1 person

    1. My husband said the same thing. But Trump’s first routine is to deflect any criticism to someone else (Hunter Biden, Joe Biden). I call it his “I know you are, but what am I.” He has a series of bobs and weaves he does in anything that threatens his fiefdom.

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  3. Agree with you wholeheartedly Dan. I am still finding it hard to believe/witness other citizens of the United States who are still supporting this crazed individual as, yet again, a realistic candidate for President. I cannot believe that our education system has failed us so miserably in teaching critical thinking skills.

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