Trump's 'one last score'.

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
Sounds like it needs a look at by the senate intelligence and armed forces committees, but it might be a secret session. If Trump did this on his last day it should raise a lot of red flags. It could also be part of the Pentagon's plan to treat the internet as another "battle space" as Russian military intelligence is using it as one to attack America. Follow the money, who paid for all those addresses and who was behind the move, Trump wouldn't have a clue, so someone was working his hand when he signed off on it.
tbh I am still trying to even figure out what this means, it is above my head.

I get that Trump funnelled a bunch of something internet address related to a sock puppet business at the last second, but I really don't understand anything else about this.
 

CunningCanuk

Well-Known Member
tbh I am still trying to even figure out what this means, it is above my head.

I get that Trump funnelled a bunch of something internet address related to a sock puppet business at the last second, but I really don't understand anything else about this.
Same here. Sounds bad and if trump had anything to with it, it’s probably another grift.
 

HGCC

Well-Known Member
I always assumed parler was just a way to get a solid database of people to scam. Drivers licenses and all.

Fatal flaw, ain't nobody on that list having shit to do with Nigerians....cause you know.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
I don't get why they are renting a room there? Are there not other hotels that Trump does not own in the area that are actually reasonable for the tax payers to pay?

https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/trump-secret-service-charges/2021/07/07/7f88043a-df2e-11eb-b507-697762d090dd_story.html
Screen Shot 2021-07-08 at 11.43.53 AM.png
Former president Donald Trump’s golf club in Bedminster, N.J., charged the Secret Service nearly $10,200 for guest rooms used by his protective detail during Trump’s first month at the club this summer, newly released spending records show.

The records — released by the Secret Service in response to a public-records request — show that the ex-president has continued a habit he began in the first days of his presidency: charging rent to the agency that protects his life.

Since Trump left office in January, U.S. taxpayers have paid Trump’s businesses more than $50,000 for rooms used by Secret Service agents, records show.

The Washington Post reported previously that Trump’s Mar-a-Lago Club — where he lived from January, when he left the White House, to early May —charged the Secret Service more than $40,000 so that agents could use a room near Trump.

These newly released records provide the first proof that, when Trump moved north to Bedminster, the invoices kept coming.

The Secret Service released a bill it paid to Trump Bedminster in May, totaling $10,199.52. The agency redacted the nightly rate, but the dollar amount itself offered a clue: The bill was an exact multiple of what Trump Bedminster charged the Secret Service while Trump was still in office: $566.64 per night for a four-bedroom “cottage” on the property.

At that rate, the bill from May 2021 would have paid for 18 nights in the cottage. Trump arrived in Bedminster on May 9.

The bill from May is the only one that the Secret Service has released from Trump’s time at Bedminster this year.
But the agency released another document showing that charges probably continued after that: It released an internal document called a “hotel request” form, covering the period from May 28 to July 1. The form showed that agents planned to rent rooms at Bedminster through at least the start of July.

Separately, the Secret Service also released other bills showing $3,400 in charges from Trump Bedminster before Trump himself arrived. Those receipts — from January, February and early May — did not say why the Secret Service was at the club.

Neither Trump’s family business — the Trump Organization — nor Trump’s political operation responded to a request for comment.

A Secret Service spokeswoman declined to comment, saying the agency does not talk about protective operations.

Legal experts have said there are no laws to prohibit Trump’s company from charging the Secret Service rent at his properties, either during or after his presidency. The rate is effectively up to him: By law, the Secret Service can pay whatever it must to rent rooms near its protectees for use as command posts and meeting rooms.

“The service is more focused on the protective necessity, as opposed to, ‘How much is it going to cost after the fact?’ There’s nothing they can do” if rates are high, said Jonathan Wackrow, a longtime Secret Service agent who now works for the consulting firm Teneo. “It’s a question of not, ‘Can they do it?’ but ‘Should they be charging that much?’ ”

The scale of Trump’s charges appears to be unusual among recent presidents and vice presidents.

In recent history, The Post could find only one other protected person who had charged the Secret Service rent: Joe Biden. As vice president, Biden charged the Secret Service $2,200 per month to use a cottage on his property in Delaware. In total, Biden received $171,600 between 2011 and 2017.

Biden has not charged the Secret Service rent since becoming president in January, a White House spokesman said.

The charges from Trump’s company exceeded Biden’s lifetime total by March 2017, Trump’s third month in office, according to records obtained by The Post. Trump’s company charged the State Department to host summits with foreign leaders, the Secret Service for rooms while protecting Trump and his children, and the Defense Department for aides accompanying the president to Mar-a-Lago and to his Irish golf club.

In all, Trump’s company charged the government more than $2.5 million during his presidency, according to a Post analysis of federal spending records.

It is unclear how the Trump Organization set the rates that it charges the Secret Service at Mar-a-Lago or Bedminster. Before The Post revealed the extent of the charges, Trump’s son Eric said in 2019 that the rate was “like 50 bucks” per night.

The Post has now examined charges for more than 3,600 nights at Trump properties and found no rates that low. Instead, at Mar-a-Lago, rates ranged from $396.15 to $650 per room. At Bedminster, the rate for the four-room “Sarazen Cottage” was $566.64.

As former president, Trump is entitled to a government pension of $219,000 per year; the General Services Administration said he had received $99,323 of it as of this week.

Jordan Libowitz, of the group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, said that — in light of Trump’s other assets and income — he should consider allowing the Secret Service to stay at his properties free.

“He obviously should have Secret Service protection,” Libowitz said. However, Libowitz said, “there’s no reason that his company should not do the patriotic thing, and just comp the government for the security it is providing him.”
 

printer

Well-Known Member
The SS should say, "Fuck it, if you want protection I will be in your rooms with you. Excuse me but I need to take a dump on your gold toilet. You going to eat the rest of that cheeseburger?"
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/trump-secret-service-children-cost-mnuchin/2021/09/16/b9aa6348-156a-11ec-a5e5-ceecb895922f_story.htmlScreen Shot 2021-09-17 at 9.41.42 AM.png
In June, former Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin visited Israel to scout investments for his new company, then flew to Qatar for a conference. At the time, Mnuchin had been out of office for five months.

But, because of an order given by President Donald Trump, he was still entitled to protection by Secret Service agents.

As agents followed Mnuchin across the Middle East, the U.S. government paid up to $3,000 each for their plane tickets, and $11,000 for rooms at Qatar’s luxe St. Regis Doha, according to government spending records.

In all, the records show U.S. taxpayers spent more than $52,000 to guard a multimillionaire on a business trip.

These payments were among $1.7 million in additional government spending triggered by Trump’s highly unusual order — which awarded six extra months of Secret Service protection for his four adult children and three top administration officials — according to a Washington Post analysis of new spending documents.

That $1.7 million in extra spending is still tiny in comparison to the Secret Service’s $2.4 billion budget.

Screen Shot 2021-09-17 at 9.48.41 AM.png

By law, the Secret Service is supposed to protect ex-presidents and their spouses for life, and their children until they turn 16. In recent years, former presidents Bill Clinton, Barack Obama and George W. Bush have also ordered agents to protect slightly older, college-aged children for a short time after leaving office.

Trump went far beyond that.

He extended six months of extra protection to his children Trump Jr., 43; Ivanka, 39; Eric, 37; Tiffany, 27; and their spouses — as well as to Mnuchin, Meadows and former national security adviser Robert C. O’Brien.

Trump did not publish any public order announcing the decision at the time, or explaining his rationale.

To estimate the cost of Trump’s decision, The Post requested Secret Service records detailing the cost of protecting all seven people. For five of them, The Post received records covering the full six months, showing the costs of buying airplane tickets, renting cars and booking hotel rooms for agents on protective duty. For the other two — Tiffany Trump and O’Brien — The Post examined records covering the first four months, which had previously been obtained by the watchdog group Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington.

The records began on Jan. 20, in the first hours after Trump left office.

Among the first payments the Secret Service made was to Trump’s own company.

That day, the records showed, Ivanka Trump and her family left Washington for Trump’s golf club in Bedminster, N.J. — where Ivanka Trump has a cottage on the grounds. Secret Service agents came along, and Trump’s club charged them for the rooms they used.

The bill was $708.30 for one night, the records showed. The rate appeared to be $141.66 per room, the same rate that the club charged the Secret Service while Trump was still president.

In the next six months, the Secret Service spent about $347,000 on airfare, hotels and rental cars while protecting Ivanka Trump and her husband, former White House adviser Jared Kushner, the records show. The receipts showed the pair visiting resort destinations: Hawaii, Utah ski country, an upscale Wyoming ranch and Kiawah Island, S.C.

Agents also followed Kushner — now a private businessman — to the United Arab Emirates in May, paying $9,000 for hotel rooms, according to federal spending data posted online. The Secret Service did not say what the airfare costs were for this Kushner trip. The Daily Beast reported that the hotel was the Ritz Carlton in Abu Dhabi, citing a government spending document that said the hotel was Kushner’s choice.

Spokespeople for Ivanka Trump and Kushner did not respond to requests for comment this week.

Ivanka Trump’s adult siblings were, according to the records, less expensive to protect. Tiffany Trump, a recently married law school graduate, appeared to cost the least to guard. The partial records showed that, as of May, the Secret Service had spent $56,000 on airfare, rental cars and hotels while protecting her.

The costs of protecting Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr. were similar: $241,000 for Eric and $213,000 for Trump Jr.

The records showed that the brothers mainly shuttled between their homes in New York and South Florida, with an occasional side trip. Trump Jr. went fishing in Montana. Eric Trump — who has become the most visible leader of the Trump Organization — visited Trump hotels in Washington and Chicago.

When he did, just as when his sister visited the Bedminster club, the Trump Organization charged agents who stayed in the former president’s properties: $350 for rooms in Washington, $1,415 in Chicago.

Jordan Libowitz, a spokesman for Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, said these charges — though small — represented a moral choice for the Trump family. If they wanted to reduce the burden of their extended protection on taxpayers, here was an easy chance to do it. Just don’t bill for rooms at Trump properties.

“The patriotic thing would obviously be not charging the government to stay at your properties and not profiting or profiteering off the government. It is just so easy for them to write off the rooms,” Libowitz said. “And we’re not seeing that.”

In that way, Trump’s children were following an example set by their father. Since he left office, he has lived full-time at his own properties — and charged the Secret Service for rooms every night. The total bill is now more than $72,000. It is almost certain to grow: Trump, unlike his children, has protection for life.

In examining expenses among the three White House officials who received an six extra months of protection, The Post could find little data on the cost of guarding O’Brien, the former national security adviser. The Secret Service spent $17,000 on rental cars while guarding him, but other expenses were not released.

Meadows, the former chief of staff, accounted for $342,000 in protection costs, the records showed. The Secret Service
released few details, beyond a list of car rentals that showed visits to Washington, Florida and Meadows’s home state of North Carolina.

The most expensive of the seven to protect, it appears, was Mnuchin — an investment banker and Hollywood producer who served all four years of Trump’s term. In all, the Secret Service reported spending $479,000 while protecting him.

The receipts showed that agents spent $114,000 over the six months to rent rooms at a W Hotel in Los Angeles, where Mnuchin has a home.

They also followed Mnuchin on three trips to the Middle East, where Mnuchin is reportedly seeking to raise money from sovereign wealth funds for a new venture called Liberty Strategic Capital.

On one of those visits, Mnuchin told the Jerusalem Post that he was hoping to capitalize on the Trump administration’s efforts to build ties between Israel and some majority-Muslim neighbors — which culminated with the “Abraham Accords,” normalizing relations between Israel, the UAE and several other nations.

“Given our relationships here, the opportunity to bridge the economic transactions between different Abraham Accords member states is also a tremendous opportunity for us,” Mnuchin said in Tel Aviv in June. The Secret Service spent $23,000 on hotel rooms in Israel related to Mnuchin’s travel, records show.

Mnuchin’s travels with the Secret Service weren’t all business, however. Over the six months, the records show three separate trips to Cabo San Lucas — the Mexican resort, where Mnuchin had also vacationed during Trump’s presidency.

To guard Mnuchin during those three trips, the records show, the Secret Service paid $56,000 for hotel rooms and $2,000 to rent golf carts.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
https://www.rawstory.com/trump-org-fleeced-america-for-1-7-billion-while-in-office-david-cay-johnston/Screen Shot 2021-11-30 at 10.16.15 AM.png
Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative journalist David Cay Johnston has calculated how much money flowed through Donald Trump's businesses while serving as president — and has reached a startling total figure.

CNN's Brianna Keilar interviewed Johnston about his new book, The Big Cheat: How Donald Trump Fleeced America and Enriched Himself and His Family.

"A new book is pulling back the curtain on how much former President Trump enriched himself and his family while he was in office, finding that nearly $1.7 billion in revenue flowed through him and his organizations during his four years as commander-in-chief," Keilar reported.

She described the book as "the most complete picture we've seen of this."

"Tell us how much Donald Trump profited — and how you were able to get to this number," Keilar asked.

"Well, Donald Trump had to disclose his finances as president, all top federal officials do," Johnston replied. "Now, several of them filed very incomplete and misleading forms. Donald, in fact, asked through his lawyers if he could file financial disclosures without signing under penalty of perjury. He was told, no, you have to sign under penalty of perjury."

He explained that of the more than $1.7 billion in question, much of it came from taxpayers.

"Donald did everything he could to make sure the taxpayers were putting money into his businesses," he noted. "Hundreds of millions of dollars."

In addition to his business interests making money, Trump has also received large amounts of donations.

"You know, you also talk about it, just before the 2020 election and on his way out the door with stop the steal fundraising, he rakes in $500 million," Keilar noted. "He spends less than $9 million on lawyers, the rest of that money, he can use how?"

"Oh, he can spend it on himself," Johnston replied.

"I expect that once he is indicted in Manhattan and perhaps other jurisdictions, a lot of that money will go to criminal defense lawyers," he explained.

"Really fascinating," Keilar said.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
https://www.rawstory.com/news/trump-selling-debate-anyplace-t-shirt-terms/
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Donald Trump is currently selling a shirt that says "Anybody Anytime Anyplace" despite his ongoing efforts to renegotiate terms of a debate after President Joe Biden dropped out of the presidential race.

Trump over the weekend said he wouldn't attend a previously agreed upon debate on ABC, and instead said he would insist it be on Fox News. He also suggested he would change other debate terms, including adding an in-room audience, citing a new nominee on the side of the Democratic party.

A conservative was cornered on the debate issue on Saturday, and he insisted that the new Democratic candidate warranted a new negotiation.

ALSO READ: We asked 10 Republican senators: ‘Is Kamala Harris Black?’ Things got weird fast.

But that would seem to go against the "anybody" line on his campaign site's t-shirt.

Writer Hunter Schwarz flagged the shirt on social media.

"Despite backing out of the pre-scheduled presidential debate, Trump's campaign is *still* selling a $38 'Anybody Anytime Anyplace' tee," Schwarz wrote.

 

Nugnewbie

Well-Known Member

hanimmal

Well-Known Member

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
I never looked at it in that light.
I really have issues, sorry about putting that there.


But for real, how would that be as a propaganda ad campaign, something like #dickinthedonScreen Shot 2024-08-31 at 11.46.51 AM.png

I just figure, ignoring everything else about Trump, how can you regard him as a serious politician, when he's grifting sneakers, bibles, etc, and now this. If you are of sound mind, you can't. He's a joke.
No you are spot on. It is just non-stop tacky shit too.

Makes me think about all those micro sales and how much money he must be washing with this shit.
 

hanimmal

Well-Known Member
https://www.rawstory.com/trump-truth-social-2669245733/Screen Shot 2024-09-21 at 4.30.13 AM.png
Former President Donald Trump can now start selling his Truth Social stock after a 6-month "lock-up" period has finally expired. But there's one problem: His shares are effectively worthless compared to six months ago.

When Trump Media and Technology Group (TMTG) — trading as Trump's initials, $DJT, on the Nasdaq Composite — launched its initial public offering (IPO) in late March, one share would set an investor back by almost $71. But as of September 20, the stock's price is in the gutter, trading at just $13.72 per share.

MarketWatch is reporting that the former president is now able to start liquidating some of his stake in his social media company, in accordance with the agreement he signed with the special purpose acquisition company (SPAC) TMTG merged with ahead of its IPO. But his majority stake, which amounts to roughly 57% of all total shares, has been on a precipitous slide since late July, when Vice President Kamala Harrisemerged as the surprise Democratic presidential nominee.

ALSO READ: Inside Trump's new front in the Haitian hysteria push: Charleroi

According to MarketWatch, the company itself has also been steadily losing money. The publication reported that in the second quarter of 2024, Truth Social posted a net loss of $16.37 million on $837,000 in revenue. And between the second quarter of 2023 to Q2 of this year, the company has experienced $22.8 million in losses on just $1.19 million in revenue.

Trump's 114.75 million shares in TMTG, which is the parent company of his Truth Social platform, were worth roughly $8.1 billion after the IPO this spring. But given the rapid decline in $DJT stock, those shares are now worth just $1.57 billion. This means the former president's net worth has dropped by more than $6.5 billion in just the last six months.

The ex-president may have been eyeing the liquidation of some of his stock given that he still owes the State of New York more than $454 million from the civil judgment handed down by Judge Arthur Engoron earlier this year. He also still owes more than $88 million to writer E. Jean Carroll, who won two civil judgments against Trump in 2023 (for sexual abuse) and 2024 (for defamation). But under TMTG's current share price, that would mean selling off nearly half of his entire stake.

And of course, Trump is still running a nationwide presidential campaign, and is losing badly in the money race to Harris after she broke numerous campaign fundraising records in just a matter of months. If he hopes to beat back Harris' bombardment of the airwaves in competitive battleground states like Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, selling some of his shares and putting the money into various super PACs could provide a welcome jolt in the final stretch of the campaign cycle.

Should Trump make such a significant sale of his own stock as the majority owner, it could trigger a massive sell-off by investors who could interpret the former president's move as a signal that the stock itself is an unreliable asset.

CBS reported Friday that Trump is firmly stating he has "absolutely no intention of selling" any TMTG stock. However, it's unclear whether other major investors — which include former Apprentice contestants and TMTG executives — are looking to cash in and bail on the stock.

Click here to read MarketWatch's report in its entirety.
 
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