The Trump re election campaign is acting as as terrorist organization through weaponization of the Cornavirus; the Week shows another sabotage ahead
Trump is preparing to use his re election campaign to spread the Cornavirus in a last ditched version of gottermandung i.e. the fall of NAZI Germany when Hitler ordered the destruction of as much as German installations, civilian and military facilities as possible, which was only at great risk to Albert Speer countermanded. Let us say that in the last weeks of the Trump empire, his rallies, starting off with Tulsa were/are to spread maybe up to a million Conavirus deaths in the Trump version of gottermandung with Steve Bannon and Blackwater mercenaries preparing on top of that smearing either Middle Eastern people or now Trumps new target of hate, Chinese people, with the ultimate smear job of a Blackwater operation conducted false flag terror style to kill another million more. While this fun is being prepared by the Kremlin and also the Russian Federation embassy in DC, we have yet another sabotage operation to consider, which is what happens when Trump finally LOSES.
THE EXECUTIVE summary is all this is possible. Only by hospitalizing Donald Trump this week and shutting his criminal WH organization down can all this collateral damage be avoided.
https://theweek.com/articles/921381/what-trump-just-gives
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What if Trump just gives up?
Even if you didn't know that President Trump's Saturday night rally in Tulsa was sparsely attended, a wordless video clip that circulated through Twitter on Sunday morning told the whole story: The president returned to the White House late at night and departed Marine One with his tie loose around his neck, a crumpled MAGA hat in his hand, with a bearing that was dejected, desultory, and defeated.
The Hill
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@thehill
MOMENTS AGO: President Trump arrives at the White House from Joint Base Andrews. He is holding a 'Make America Great Again' hat.
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Internet wags dubbed it a "walk of shame." Trump usually appears immune to shame, though, so let us consider another possibility: that the president on Saturday night realized he can no longer deny that the end of his presidency is probably near, and that he is, for all intents and purposes, already a lame duck. As this sinks in, what will he do?
The term "lame duck" usually applies to presidents whose successors have already been chosen by the voters, and who are just waiting out the remainder of their tenure before vacating their post. We're not there yet, obviously. The general election is still nearly six months away, and Democrats who were confident that Hillary Clinton would win in 2016 are terrified that history will repeat itself — so talk that Trump may already be on the ropes is verboten in most left-of-center circles. No liberals want to put a jinx on this year's election, or get complacent.
But the odds do not appear to be in Trump's favor. A national Ipsos/Reuters poll last week gave his opponent, former Vice President Joe Biden, a whopping 13-point lead — the biggest gap between the two candidates so far. Battleground states are turning against the president, too — and there are signs he is losing his edge with elderly and evangelical voters. Trump has outperformed expectations in the past, but as my colleague David Faris wrote last week, this time may be different. Trump himself has departed from his usual bravado in recent weeks to acknowledge that he could lose the election. And that was before this weekend's under-attended rally. In the past, even when polls have been bad, the president had his rally crowds. Not anymore, it seems.
Many observers naturally expect this election season to be highly irregular. Biden has openly expressed concern Trump's allies will steal the election through voter suppression and fraud. Others are afraid he will refuse to leave the Oval Office in the event of an election loss. Either scenario would threaten the peaceful transition of power that makes a democracy a democracy.
But the president's weekend walk of shame raises another possibility: What if he just gives up?
The Constitution mandates a two-and-a-half month gap between the election and Inauguration Day. For a self-absorbed man like Trump, that's a long time to wallow in one's defeat. He might decide he has little to lose by making mischief with his remaining tenure — and little to gain by ensuring a smooth and peaceful transition to a new president. There is a reason he has earned the nickname "Toddler in Chief." And toddlers often react to losses in less-than-constructive ways.
Trump might respond to defeat by abandoning the critical duties of governance. He might try to cover up any wrongdoing he and his surrogates engaged in since arriving in the White House. And he might spend his remaining days in office indulging in conspiracy theories that the election was rigged against him.
Indeed, such scandalous traits already define this administration. Trump has given up on tackling the COVID-19 pandemic — the most critical health and economic challenge facing the country — claiming victory even though case counts are rising across the country. Attorney General William Barr over the weekend purged the U.S. attorney who was overseeing many of the remaining criminal cases against the president and his cronies. And the president continues to undermine American confidence in the election, baselessly claiming that mail-in voting is rife with fraud.
If Trump lost the election, these trends would probably be amplified in the remaining months of his presidency. Indeed, they might be accelerated sooner by the mere likelihood of a loss — which, after Saturday night, is a prospect with which the president now surely grapples.
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We need to stop normalizing Trump. He runs a terrorist organization, his re election campaign, and he will stop at NOTHING to wound the USA. Get him out of office, the POTUS, and in a psychiatric ward, without delay
Andrew Beckwith, PhD