I want to plug my favorite tweeter, law professor Scott Shapiro, who, as revelations connected to Trump's casual home storage of classified documents became more stupefying, tweeted:
As a young boy, I was at a creepy circus when an old witch hobbled over to me and whispered in my ear: "Donald Trump is not entirely trustworthy."
I see now that was just yesterday, when he was on fire. For example:
A real shame that the FBI never raided Hillary Clinton's home for her emails, because Republicans would have been forced by their own principles to defend Hillary.
I've seen enough: I'm ready to call the 2020 race for Joe Biden.
Interesting thought experiment: what if a Democrat had sensitive government information in her basement?
A couple days ago, he tweeted:
Programming announcement: I'm officially undecided about DeSantis. I will be doing my own research on the Florida governor and presenting my findings on here. More to come.
A few hours later:
I think I found an instance of Ron DeSantis acting hypocritically. Checking my analysis, but this could be big.
Between those two, demonstrating his versatility:
The great economic innovation of NFTs is getting people to pay you for absolutely nothing in return.
A smattering from the past week or two:
It's unreasonable to demand coup leaders keep records secure during active rebellion.
When I was 10 years old, I was at the circus on a school trip. An old witch hobbled up to me and whispered in my ear: "The future is so bleak that Dick and Liz Cheney will be the voices of Reason."
Coup leaders warn of a second coup if DOJ prosecutes them for their first coup.
Finding it hard to believe that Trump would be careless or worse on matters of national security.
Trump had a standing order to repeal every law he broke.
I am losing faith in the Republican party to act responsibly.
He ruthlessly mocks "the Supreme Court of the Republican party" in an ongoing series of tweets along the line of, "SCOTUS rules 6-3 that Ted Cruz's wife actually is ugly." "Set to hear oral arguments on whether his dad killed Kennedy." "Cruz submits amicus brief arguing Trump is right, his dad really did it." I'm just making those up, in order to inject some semi-original content here, but you get the idea. Here's a real one:
Supreme Court rules 6-3 that Diabetes isn't a real disease because the word does not appear in the Constitution.
Shapiro tweeted out the above meme on the day Trump took the Fifth a couple hundred times in a deposition related to the New York attorney general's investigation of the Trump Organization's allegedly corrupt and unlawful business practices. Though unburdened by a legal education, I wonder whether there isn't a natural conclusion to be drawn—namely, that by answering truthfully Trump would declare his own guilt.
Anyhow, Shapiro has around 80k followers, which is probably not as many as would enjoy his tweet-sized commentary.
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