Last week, for better or worse, the Stormy Daniels
testimony dominated the news. From what I read in the transcripts, Stormy put
forth a compelling story and breezily swatted away the Defense Counsel’s many
attempts to brand her as a greedy and vengeful liar.
After the first day of testimony, I started jotting down
notes for this post, but by the end of the second day, the notes were
rendered irrelevant.
The original angle was that her testimony was mostly unnecessary; everything she said in court was already in the public record by way of her 2018 book, “Full Disclosure.” I ordered it (from a discount book website) a couple years ago and read it in about a day or two.
“Your Honor, I’d
like to admit this document as Exhibit 1.”
But by the second day, TFG’s defense attorney was trying to infer that because there were facts she told the book that she didn’t mention in other interviews, or in court, and the other way around, the story had to be a lie.
This is a ridiculous assertion when you think about it. I mean, just from a
storyteller’s perspective, when you tell a story multiple times, you rarely
tell it the same way twice.
First, you have to consider your audience. Not every fact
about the story is necessary, so you include the ones that are
crucial to the structure, advance the story, or are the most interesting and
entertaining. A different audience (like an interview in a fluff magazine
versus court testimony) requires a different eye for details.
Further, the more you tell a story, the more you self-edit,
keeping the material that works and discarding things that didn’t or were found
to be unnecessary. But that doesn’t necessarily change the truth of your story
(unless you’re changing critical details, like who you slept with or where it
happened, which was not an issue here.)
So the defense is claiming that (and this is a
made-up example) “because you said the
bedspread was blue in the interview and you didn’t mention a bedspread during
our testimony, you must be lying.”
Verbal flimflammery like this is what they have to rely
on because they can’t defend the truth. It’s the nature of legal defense to
throw a bunch of crap at the wall to see what sticks, as well as the nature of
Republicans to use misdirection and logical fallacy when they can’t support (or
refute) an inconvenient fact.
And as far as that goes, TFG’s legal team also suggested that because the witness is a porn star, she cannot be trusted to tell the truth.
It really IS like the 1920s again on the right side of
the aisle. Such an assertion is so off-base it’s like inferring that
eliminating child marriage promotes abortion. And who would ever say… Wait
a minute…
Everything
leads back to abortion with these guys… women voting, having jobs, getting an
education, even pockets in women’s
clothes, it all leads to more
abortions and must be stopped, according to the religious wingnuts currently
running loose in the Republican party.
But I digress…
It’s all so silly because if competent, unrestricted
attorneys were running the defense, Stormy would never have had to tell the
story on the stand. The crime is in how the payments were made, not that there WERE
payments. So whether he had extra-marital porn star sex or not would not be
relevant. But because he complained that it never happened, it opened the door
for the prosecution to show that it did, and hence, we have the salacious
testimony out in public that he was so desperate to squelch.
TFG is also chaffing under the bond of his gag order,
which prevents him from attacking witnesses, jurors, and court personnel. It’s
like, when you take away his ability to smear people, you’ve cut Samson’s hair and silenced the jawbone of an ass.
He has no other weapons if he can’t threaten and malign. When do you ever hear
him attack an argument? It’s always a personal attack on an opponent. The guy
hasn’t left the playground in 70 years.
The obvious solution, if he’s upset about how mean old
Stormy is talking about him in court, is to take the stand himself and smear
away. But I’m sure his attorneys will tie him to the chair before they allow
him to testify. They could have a perjury counter, right there in the courtroom,
and it would be lighting up like a pinball machine until smoke would pour out.
Former Fix-it lawyer Michael Cohen is testifying today,
which I’m sure will send TFG into apoplectic fits. This is a guy who knows
where the metaphorical bodies are buried. The Defendant also complained about
Cohen’s tweets about him last week, again asserting that he can’t defend
himself. In a rare show of decency for anyone involved in this fiasco, Cohen
agreed to stop tweeting about him until after he testifies and once again
becomes fair, non-gag-able, game.
I’m sure we’ll get plenty of this sort of thing over the
next few days:
Lawyer told to lie for defendant.
Lawyer lies for defendant.
Lawyer gets caught, does time, flips on defendant.
Defendant says, “Hey,
how can you believe a convict and a liar.”
However much a shit-show this case is, at least there’s a trial happening. It doesn’t look like any of the others are going to be
adjudicated any time soon. That’s another Republican truism… when you can’t win
on facts, attack the process. Work the system. Call in favors from judges you
placed there and the reason for that placement.
This may be the only case to see the inside of a courtroom, so I hope they get it right.
I almost spit my drink. Someone seriously thinks TFG is coming out of prison with muscle bod? Please tell Jesse Watters that it’s not the prison that gives you the bod, it’s the hard physical work you do while inside. Can anyone even picture this doughboy working out? Or lifting anything heavier than a Big Mac? Spare me. If anything, he’ll come out of prison looking like a cross between Golum and Jabba the Hutt.
1 comment:
My fingers are crossed. They have to get this right!
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