1. Hello,


    New users on the forum won't be able to send PM untill certain criteria are met (you need to have at least 6 posts in any sub forum).

    One more important message - Do not answer to people pretending to be from xnxx team or a member of the staff. If the email is not from forum@xnxx.com or the message on the forum is not from StanleyOG it's not an admin or member of the staff. Please be carefull who you give your information to.


    Best regards,

    StanleyOG.

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  2. Hello,


    You can now get verified on forum.

    The way it's gonna work is that you can send me a PM with a verification picture. The picture has to contain you and forum name on piece of paper or on your body and your username or my username instead of the website name, if you prefer that.

    I need to be able to recognize you in that picture. You need to have some pictures of your self in your gallery so I can compare that picture.

    Please note that verification is completely optional and it won't give you any extra features or access. You will have a check mark (as I have now, if you want to look) and verification will only mean that you are who you say you are.

    You may not use a fake pictures for verification. If you try to verify your account with a fake picture or someone else picture, or just spam me with fake pictures, you will get Banned!

    The pictures that you will send me for verification won't be public


    Best regards,

    StanleyOG.

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  1. silkythighs

    silkythighs Porn Star

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    370zxn.jpg
     
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  2. shootersa

    shootersa Frisky Feline

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    Demonize
    Divert
    Destroy

    Yes, its what crazy people do.
     
    • Agree Agree x 1
  3. silkythighs

    silkythighs Porn Star

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    And this from a Trump supporter, eh
     
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  4. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    Expert hired by Trump to prove voter fraud gives inside look at 'haphazard' effort

    David McAfee
    March 10, 2024 7:04PM ET


    [​IMG]
    Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images




    Donald Trump's bid to find voter fraud in order to cling to power in 2020 was not an organized one, according to a man who was hired to find examples of fraud but failed to do so.


    Ken Block, whose company Simpatico Software Systems was contracted by Trump in November 2020 to investigate assorted voter fraud claims, has a new book in which he recounts his story, according to The Washington Post.

    "The December 2020 claim of voter fraud was explosive, if true: More than 700,000 people had voted twice in Wisconsin, the tip alleged," the Post writes. "But when a highly paid expert for Donald Trump’s campaign began to study the claim at the behest of a Trump lawyer, he quickly realized that not only was it false, it had also traveled a surprisingly twisted path before landing in his inbox."

    ALSO READ: 'What a piece of work': Marjorie Greene's 'childish' SOTU response trashed by Senate Dems

    According to Block, the purported tip took a crazy route to his desk.

    "The expert, Ken Block, learned it had first appeared in a post on a website called TheDonald.win, where it was spotted by the owner of an IT company, who brought it to the attention of the general manager of Trump’s golf course in the Bronx," the outlet reported. "The golf executive forwarded the tip to the president’s son, Eric, who passed it along to the lawyer. At last, the lawyer, Alex Cannon, directed the wild Wisconsin claim to Block, a software engineer and former politician from Rhode Island who was hired by the campaign shortly after the 2020 election."


    Block reportedly said the "double-counted votes" were "nothing of the sort," and shot down the tip. But that's just one example of the strange mechanism Trump used to try to find fraud.

    "Block’s upcoming book provides an insider’s account of the desperate measures Trump’s campaign took to pursue allegations of voter fraud and of how quickly the campaign concluded internally that each one was invalid, even as the president continued to rile up his supporters by claiming the election was stolen," according to the report. "Block’s book explains how he found himself in the center of repeated and furtive efforts to overturn the election, a haphazard effort that often enlisted seemingly random people to find fraud before Biden took office."


    Read the full report here.


    https://www.rawstory.com/trump-2020-voter-fraud-inside-look/
     
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  5. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    John Kelly Shares His 'Theory' On Why Trump Likes Dictators So Much: New Book
    Josephine Harvey
    Mon, March 11, 2024 at 9:20 AM MDT·2 min read
    249











    John Kelly,Donald Trump’s former White House chief of staff, discussed the former president’s apparent dictatorial aspirations for a new book by CNN’im Sciutto.

    “My theory on why he likes the dictators so much is that’s who he is,” Kelly said, according to an article published Monday about the forthcoming book by the CNN anchor and chief national security analyst.


    Kelly told Sciutto, “Every incoming president is shocked that they actually have so little power without going to the Congress, which is a good thing. It’s Civics 101, separation of powers, three equal branches of government.”

    “But in his case, he was shocked that he didn’t have dictatorial-type powers to send U.S. forces places or to move money around within the budget,” the quote continued. “And he looked at Putin and Xi and that nutcase in North Korea as people who were like him in terms of being a tough guy.”

    Kelly was one of several former Trump administration officials who spoke to Sciutto for his book, “The Return of Great Powers,” reportedly warning that Trump is ill-prepared to lead the country in the current global climate, and that “they believe that the root of his admiration for these figures is that he envies their power.”

    The book also revisits previously reported allegations that Trump praised Adolf Hitler, including Kelly’s claim that the former president lamented that his senior staff were not as loyal to him as the Nazi leader’s officers were.

    “He truly believed, when he brought us generals in, that we would be loyal — that we would do anything he wanted us to do,” Kelly told Sciutto.


    Reached for comment by Sciutto, Trump campaign spokesperson Steven Cheung did not address the allegations but slammed Kelly and John Bolton, Trump’s former national security adviser who also comments in the book, as “suffering from a severe case of Trump Derangement Syndrome.”

    In 2021, after Kelly recounted Trump’s praise for Hitler to a different journalist, a Trump spokesperson said the allegation was “totally false.”

    Trump’s increasingly authoritarian language has prompted alarm ahead of the 2024 election, with many experts and former allies among the chorus of voices warning about the risks a second Trump term poses to democracy.

    “The Return of Great Powers” examines “a new, more uncertain global order with reporting on the frontlines of power from existing wars to looming ones across the globe,” according to a synopsis. It’s out Tuesday.



    https://www.yahoo.com/news/john-kelly-shares-theory-why-152037988.html
     
  6. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    I wonder if he will confirm Trump shits his Depends and stinks.

    But I think confirmation Trump routinely calls Black people the N-word will help expose him as the racist he is. Trump's niece Mary and former employees have said that before but this will confirm it even more and it might even be on tape.




    'Apprentice' producer alleges appalling secrets about Trump after NDA expires

    Tom Boggioni
    May 30, 2024 9:11AM ET



    [​IMG]
    Donald Trump and Omarosa Manigault Newman. Image via Shutterstock




    According to one of the original producers of Donald Trump's "The Apprentice" reality show, the first two years starting back in 2008 exposed him to the now-former president where he stood back and watched Trump's causal racism, his demeaning treatment of women, and complaints that the former president was lousy at paying his debts.


    Writing for Slate, producer Bill Pruitt claimed his non-disclosure agreement (NDA) has expired and he is now free to divulge what he saw behind the scenes while working with Trump and , in some cases, it was shocking.

    According to Pruitt, "By carefully misleading viewers about Trump—his wealth, his stature, his character, and his intent—the competition reality show set about an American fraud that would balloon beyond its creators’ wildest imaginations."

    ALSO READ: 19 fabulously worthless things Trump will give you for your money

    Getting right to it, he detailed Trump's casual use of the N-word, explaining that the now-former president was worried viewers would not accept a Black winner on the show with, Pruitt recalling Trump off-handily stating, “'Yeah... but, I mean, would America buy a n----r winning?'"

    Pruit also reported on Trump's demeaning comments about women, writing, "While leering at a female camera assistant or assessing the physical attributes of a female contestant for whoever is listening, he orders a female camera operator off an elevator on which she is about to film him. 'She’s too heavy,” I hear him say. Another female camera operator, who happens to have blond hair and blue eyes, draws from Trump comparisons to his own Ivanka Trump. 'There’s a beautiful woman behind that camera,' he says toward a line of 10 different operators set up in the foyer of Trump Tower one day. 'That’s all I want to look at.'"

    As for Trump's oft-noted history of not paying people for their work, Pruitt recalled speaking with an architect who did work for Trump who lamented, "It’s bittersweet. I’m very proud of this place, but I wasn’t paid what was promised. Trump pays half upfront but he’ll stiff you for the rest once the project is completed.”

    “If I tried to sue, the legal bills would be more than what I was owed. He knew that. He basically said 'Take what I’m offering,'” the architect added.


    You can read more here.




    https://www.rawstory.com/trump-racist-2668422571/
     
  7. shootersa

    shootersa Frisky Feline

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    Lower, american hater.
    You can go lower.
    We're depending on you.
     
    • Like Like x 1
  8. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    Apprentice Producer Describes Shocked Cast Reactions to Trump Allegedly Calling Contestant N-Word

    Jennifer Bowers BahneyJun 1st, 2024, 10:51 am

    Bill Pruitt, a former producer on The Apprentice, told CNN’s Kaitlan Collins all about the disturbing scene surrounding Donald Trump’s alleged use of the n-word to describe a contestant for the reality show’s first season finale.


    Pruitt’s recollections included the shocked reaction of Carolyn Kepcher, the former chief operating officer for the Trump Golf Properties, and a judge on the show, as Trump was deciding on a winner between Bill Rancic, a white man, and Kwame Jackson, who was Black.

    “So, basically, we’re there — the producers, and Carolyn Kepcher and George Ross, who are the two advisors who worked for Trump at the Trump Organization, and they’re allowed a little bit more leeway because they worked for Trump, so they get to say things that we can’t say, necessarily, directly.” Pruitt continued:


    And one point, Carolyn Kepcher, who is the head of his hospitality unit and ran one of his golf clubs, sort of came outside herself and said, “Kwame Jackson oversaw Omarosa,” who was brought back onto the task and created all kinds of problems for herself and other people all along the season. But, it was great TV and she was kept around for whatever reason.

    And, for that, Carolyn Kepcher thought, “Well, Kwame deserves to be considered for how graceful he was in handling this.” And we all sort of agreed. But it was tilting things in a direction that we didn’t necessarily need it to go because we wanted to share an equitable story.

    And Trump seemed to have an issue with this idea all along. You could see him reacting and shaking his head, wobbling his head, grimacing, wincing, before he said, “Yeah, but would America buy a” — and he said the n-word — “winning?”

    And, I remember, I was looking right at Carolyn when this was spoken, and she is very pretty blonde woman whose skin went bright scarlet. And then I looked at Trump to see the reaction that he was giving, like it was some sort of joke, and he was still wincing and bobbing his head, and he was serious.


    Ultimately, Jackson was “fired” and Rancic became the winner of season one.

    Pruitt, whose non-disclosure agreement with the show just expired after 20 years, told Collins that video exists of Trump’s n-word comment.



    “In 2016 I tweeted to people to go and look for these tapes because I know that they existed, because we recorded those meetings, we recorded that moment there. It’s somewhere on a tape, on a file,” Pruitt said.

    Show creator Mark Burnett, who has not commented on Pruitt’s claim, has been credited with bolstering Trump’s image as a successful businessman on the show, leading to Trump becoming a household name and ultimately winning the presidency in 2016.


    Watch the clip above via CNN.


    https://www.mediaite.com/trump/appr...to-trump-allegedly-calling-contestant-n-word/


    upload_2024-6-2_13-10-0.png
     
  9. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    Scandal-laden Brazilian slaughterhouse billionaires tricked Trump into deadly policy: book

    Kathleen Culliton
    June 10, 2024 3:40PM ET



    [​IMG]
    Slaughterhouse (Shutterstock)




    A 60-year-old grandmother died without ever meeting her only grandchild after contracting COVID-19 in a slaughterhouse former President Donald Trump ordered to remain open at the behest of scandal-laden Brazilian billionaire backers who misled his administration, according to a new report.

    Tin Aye's death was one of hundreds the Trump administration "sacrificed" to protect meat monopolies pursuing billions in profits amid a global pandemic that claimed 7 million lives, author Peter S. Goodman argues in his new book "How the World Ran Out of Everything."

    "That so many ordinary workers found themselves in harm’s way in the midst of a pandemic was no mere misfortune," Goodman writes in an excerpt published Monday by Vanity Fair. "It was a direct outgrowth of the business plans pursued by their corporate bosses.

    "Worse, they manufactured fears of a meat shortage to gain the complicity of the American government."

    The corporate bosses in question were brothers Wesley and Joesley Batista of the Braxial conglomerate JBS Foods, the world's largest meat processing company, who served time in prison and are accused of bribing three presidential administrations, Goodman writes.

    By 2020, the Batistas had expanded into the U.S. and their business worth about $5 billion, Goodman writes.

    The same year, Coloradan San Twin's mother Aye was being paid $12 an hour to work in their Greeley slaughterhouse where COVID-19 ran rampant, Goodman writes. Aye was among the first of five workers who died from the disease.

    A total 59,000 U.S. meatpacking workers would contract COVID-19 in 2020 and 269 people would die, according to Goodman.

    Goodman reports that JBS Foods responded to mounting concerns by lobbying the Trump administration for support in keeping their facilities open and raising the specter of a meat shortage.

    Ten days after a doctor alerted JBS their workers in a Texas facility could get sick and die if they remained open, Trump signed an executive order to ensure it wouldn't close, Goodman writes.

    "This was not a coincidence," Goodman writes. "Top agribusiness executives had been meeting and corresponding regularly with senior Trump administration officials to plot strategy engineered to keep slaughterhouses open."

    Goodman then notes the food shortage specter raised by the meatpackers did not include a crucial fact: "The largest meatpackers in the United States had enough inventory to stock the shelves of every grocery store in the land."

    A year later, San Twin would tell Goodman about the last conversation she had with her dying mother, who had fled Myanmar to escape ethnic persecution and chosen to settle in the U.S. in hopes of finding work.

    The day after her son Felix was born, San Twin received a call from another hospital, Goodman writes.

    “She was calling to say goodbye,” Twin said. “She said, ‘I really want to see you, but I can’t see you anymore.’ She told me to work hard for Felix. Just believe in the positive view and help yourself and others. And then she dropped the phone, and I never talked to her again.”

    JBS brought in $22 billion on U.S. beef sales that year, Goodman notes, and sent Twin $6,000 to help pay for Aye's funeral.

    https://www.rawstory.com/trump-19/
     
  10. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    Trump hurled 'F-bombs' then cooed loving words to aide during stress rollercoaster: book

    Kathleen Culliton
    June 14, 2024 10:38AM ET



    [​IMG]
    Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images




    Former President Donald Trump boomeranged between hurling F-bombs and cooing loving words in conversations with his top medical adviser during the COVID-19 pandemic, Dr. Anthony Fauci reportedly reveals in his new book.

    Trump told Fauci he would win the 2020 election in a "f---ing landslide" no matter what "all these other f---ing people think." He added that Fauci had cost the U.S. economy “one trillion f---ing dollars," and that President Joe Biden was a "f---er" whose "a--" he was going to "kick," the Daily Beast's coverage on Fauci's new book reports.

    "He said he loved me, but the country was in trouble, and I was making it worse," Fauci reportedly writes.

    ALSO READ: How Donald Trump could run for president — and lead the nation — from prison

    Fauci details a career serving U.S. presidents as director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases from 1984 to 2022 and facing health crises such as the AIDS epidemic that exploded under President Ronald Reagan.

    Trump was unlike any of the other six presidents he had served, writes Fauci as he details "the brunt of the president’s rage.”

    He would “announce that he loved me and then scream at me on the phone," writes Fauci. “Let’s just say, I found this to be out of the ordinary."

    ALSO READ: The stunning reason Donald Trump thinks he’s going to win

    In comparison, Fauci describes Biden as “a no-nonsense person guided by integrity and empathy” who “clearly was in charge."

    Trump, Fauci writes, was frequently furious over the impact the COVID-19 pandemic was having on his political reputation ahead of the election he would lose to Biden then seek to discredit, the Daily Beast reports.

    In their last conversation on Nov. 1, 2020, Trump called Fauci at home from Air Force One, according to the Daily Beast.

    “What the f--- are you doing?" Trump reportedly said. "You really need to be positive. You constantly drop bombs on me.”

    Fauci's book, "On Call: A Doctor’s Journey in Public Service," will be available for purchase next week.



    https://www.rawstory.com/trump-f-bomb/
     
  11. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    'Rich and grim old lady': Brutal book review likens Trump to tragic Dickens character

    Sarah K. Burris
    June 14, 2024 4:41PM ET



    [​IMG]
    Former U.S. President Donald Trump walks to speak to the press at the end of the day during his trial for allegedly covering up hush money payments at Manhattan Criminal Court on May 7, 2024 in New York City. (Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images)




    In a new review of Ramin Setoodeh's book "Apprentice in Wonderland," Washington Post critic Ron Charles describes Trump as something of an old woman wandering about life reliving the glory days.

    Amid the old stories of seasons of "The Apprentice," perceived foes, great wins, and his own "genius," Trump is described as Miss Havisham from Charles Dickens' 1861 novel "Great Expectations."

    "I had heard of Miss Havisham up town — everybody for miles around, had heard of Miss Havisham up town — as an immensely rich and grim old lady who lived in a large and dismal house barricaded against robbers, and who led a life of seclusion," Dickens wrote.

    Setoodeh's tale is of a delusional, doddering, old fool in a skyscraper bearing his name, where his company can no longer legally operate, Charles wrote. Rather than wearing old wedding dresses, as Havisham does, Trump is clad in his own kind of uniform of the overly-long red tie and black or navy suit.

    Read Also: Donald Trump has unclaimed property and abandoned money in at least 16 states

    “Trump Tower,” Setoodeh writes in the book, “feels like Grey Gardens without the cats.”

    It's a reference to the bizarre life of Edith Beale and her daughter of the same name, who lived in a derelict mansion in The Hamptons. They became famous because they were the aunt and first cousin of former First Lady Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis. The documentary "Grey Gardens" shows them living in a flea-infested home with raccoons and cats scurrying about.

    Setoodeh describes Trump gazing longingly at a wall of framed papers that bear the Nielsen ratings of "The Apprentice." While Trump looks at them, he dare not touch them, for they are far too valuable, he writes.

    The pages are "something that seems to carry as much value to him as the U.S. Constitution, if not more," the book continues.

    "His wall of egotism," writes Setoodeh.

    "This is my whole life," Trump tells the author, ignoring the time in the White House.

    Trump goes on to "exaggerate the number of viewers as reflexively as he lies about his vote counts," the review says.

    The six interviews the writer did with Trump grow dull as Trump gushes and melts over his own video clips of his show, Charles writes.

    “He’s as entertained as a child discovering ‘Star Wars’ for the first time,” Setoodeh writes. “There is something about talking about ‘The Apprentice’ that soothes him, like a calming chest balm applied to a patient with pneumonia.”

    Once Setoodeh reaches the end, he explains that the experience is akin to the surrealist novel "Alice in Wonderland," which inspired the title.

    “We’ve gone down the rabbit hole with Trump,” Setoodeh concludes. “He’s eaten up everything, and grown massive in the process, all while we’ve shrunk into his playthings. And, unlike Alice, we can’t easily wake up from this nightmare.”

    The book will be released on Tuesday and Raw Story will have full coverage.



    https://www.rawstory.com/apprentice-in-wonderland/
     
  12. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    Trump rails against 'nepo babies' in new Apprentice book

    Sarah K. Burris
    June 18, 2024 8:48AM ET



    [​IMG]
    Shutterstock.




    Many critics have accused Donald Trump of being a "nepo baby" in the Trump Organization given how much he inherited from his father.

    Yet, in a new book, Trump rails against the idea of children getting to where they are based on the success of their parents.

    More than halfway into "Apprentice in Wonderland," writer and reporter Ramin Setoodeh recalls the 2009 blowup after Trump fired Melissa Rivers from the show. Stories have surfaced about Trump pretending Rivers' mother, Joan, was somehow a Republican and a supporter of his. Trump even went so far as to say that she voted for him in 2016 from beyond the grave. Joan Rivers died in 2014.

    When Melissa was kicked off the show, Trump opted to keep a Playboy model and a professional poker player. Both individuals, her mother Joan felt, were below her daughter.

    ALSO READ: No, Donald Trump, fraud is not protected by the First Amendment

    “Joan was so angry,” Trump recalls with excitement, the book says. “I mean, I got the biggest stars to go on that show,” he says of the Rivers' face-off against the model and poker players. “It was so easy. You know, Joan Rivers wouldn’t do a show like that normally, right?”

    Setoodeh writes that "Rivers famously built her career on a willingness to appear anywhere there were cameras, including as a red-carpet host at awards ceremonies."

    Trump remembered: “She went crazy when I fired the daughter.”

    Setoodeh said that the drama on the show illustrated how much it had jumped the shark from its high-brow and aspirational intentions.

    Trump recalled Melissa Rivers unleashing mayhem in the outer office. “She was so nasty. I hear Melissa yelling outside. She was yelling at everybody!”

    At that point, Donald and Ivanka took cover in the boardroom. As he began to talk about Melissa again, he requested the reporter go off the record to "tell me what he really thinks of this volatile behavior."

    "In general, Trump looks upon nepo babies—except for his own children—as entitled brats," wrote Setoodeh.

    Trump crafts a more diplomatic portrayal of his thoughts when back on the record: “How about this? Joan loved Melissa more than anything she’s ever loved before. She thought Melissa was the end-all, and she went totally crazy in defense of her daughter. Oh, they were both yelling. It was great TV. But maybe Joan had more of a right to be yelling.”

    A 2018 report about Trump's finances revealed that Trump was given over $413 million by his father to become a "successful" businessman. Forbes said that if Trump didn't do anything with the money and instead invested it, he would have over $2.5 billion in cash.

    Donald Trump falsely claims he was given just $10 million and built it into a billion-dollar empire. CNBC reported that it was closer to over $60 million. He was also recently found guilty of artificially inflating the size of his assets to appear richer to investors or banks.

    Trump's eldest three heirs ultimately joined the company, with their father handing over projects they could run despite their lack of experience.

    Upon taking the White House, Trump's daughter and son-in-law both worked there, side-stepping anti-nepotism laws that were preventing relatives from being hired. They claimed that it was all above board because they weren't being paid a salary, although the couple disclosed up to $640 million in outside income while they worked at the White House.

    Read more about "Apprentice in Wonderland" here.



    https://www.rawstory.com/trump-nepotism-new-book/
     
  13. shootersa

    shootersa Frisky Feline

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    Lets remember that according to American hater "book reports" are not subject to fact checking by those who publish them.
     
  14. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    'Dagger to his heart': New book reveals celebrity crush Trump can't get over

    Travis Gettys
    June 18, 2024 12:33PM ET



    [​IMG]
    Donald Trump frowning (Mandel Ngan:AFP)




    Donald Trump is seemingly obsessed with Will & Grace star Debra Messing, a former NBC colleague turned high-profile critic.

    Variety co-editor in chief Ramin Setoodeh interviewed the former president extensively in 2021 and 2023 for his book "Apprentice in Wonderland," and he said Trump frequently mentioned the actress and Democratic activist, according to excerpts published by The Daily Beast.

    “Trump brings up Messing again,” Setoodeh wrote. “He confirms something that he’d only dropped hints about in our last meeting. During the early years of The Apprentice, Trump even had a crush on Will & Grace’s leading lady. Maybe that’s why he can’t quite shake the bitterness that now exists between them."

    “A former president who can’t win over a star almost sounds like the premise of a corny romantic comedy, but for Trump, Messing’s rejection is still a sharp dagger to his heart," Seteoodeh added. "‘This Debra Messing, who I always thought was quite attractive — not that it matters, of course...’ Their squabbles on social media continue to live rent-free in his mind. ‘Debra Messing was so thankful,’ he says. ‘And then I watch her today, and it’s like she’s a raving mess.’”

    ALSO READ: ‘They could have killed me’: Spycraft, ballots and a Trumped-up plot gone haywire

    Trump insulted fellow reality TV stars Caitlyn Jenner, who's now a supporter and Mar-a-Lago regular, and Khloe Kardashian, and claimed that his "macho swagger" reminded others of Clint Eastwood, and Setoodeh recounted a a "disturbing" encounter between the Apprentice star and a younger contestant.

    “After a task with the Home Depot — during which the contestants were supposed to create a customized experience for shoppers — the Apprentice house was abuzz about what Trump had supposedly said to Erin Elmore, a 26-year-old attorney from Philadelphia, in the boardroom," Setoodeh wrote. “On the episode, she’s seen flirting with Trump, even winking at him before she gets the boot. But at some point, Trump allegedly boasted to her, ‘I’ll show you my nine-inch power tool,’ as she pleaded ignorance about her knowledge of home repair."

    “Trump didn’t get in trouble for it," the author added. "Indeed, since the moment didn’t make it to air, it might as well never have happened. ‘There’s no truth to it,’ says Elmore, a Republican strategist who worked as a surrogate for Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign. ‘It’s kind of hearsay.’”



    https://www.rawstory.com/debra-messing-trump/
     
  15. shootersa

    shootersa Frisky Feline

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    Lets remember that according to American hater "book reports" are not subject to fact checking by those who publish them.
     
  16. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

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    Trump seemed to think he still had presidential powers — even after election loss: author

    M.L. Nestel
    June 18, 2024 11:41PM ET



    [​IMG]
    (Photo by Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)




    After he lost the 2020 election, a defeated Donald Trump still acted as if he was president.

    That's according to Variety co-editor-in-chief Ramin Setoodeh, who appeared on CNN's "The Source with Kaitlan Collins" on Tuesday night, claiming that in at least one of his conversations with the 45th president — post-2020 election defeat at Trump Tower in New York City — he curiously acted as if he was still doing the job during the interview. Setoodeh was pluggin his book Apprentice in Wonderland: How Donald Trump and Mark Burnett Took America Through the Looking Glass.

    "We watched clips of the show together," Setoodeh explained of one interview he conducted where they watched episodes of Trump's hit TV show "The Apprentice." "We watched the theme song, he really lit up. He watched firing — the first firing of Omarosa [Manigault Newman]."

    Trump, he said, became crestfallen when the subject of the presidency came up.

    "And then he would talk about what he did at the White House and he would become gloomy and resentful and unhappy and refer to Afghanistan and Joe Biden," he said.

    Setoodeh said Trump then appeared to believe he was still in power — despite being relegated to a civilian.

    ALSO READ: EXCLUSIVE: House Republicans subpoena ex-Capitol Police intel head for Jan. 6 inquiry

    "He also seemed to think that he still had some foreign policy powers," said Setoodeh. "And there's one day where he told me he needed to go upstairs to deal with 'the Afghanistan' – even though he clearly didn't."

    Collins was stunned.

    "He told you that ... while you were interviewing him at Trump Tower, he told you he needed to go upstairs to deal with Afghanistan," she asked, as if to make sure she correctly heard what he said.

    "With quote, 'the Afghanistan' is how we referred to it," Setoodeh replied.

    Setoodeh chatted with the former president at length in 2021 and 2023 for his book.

    The book has already drawn scorn from the Trump campaign.

    "President Trump was aware of who this individual was throughout the interview process, but this ‘writer’ is a nobody and insignificant so of course he never made an impression," Trump 2024 communications director Steven Cheung stated. "After recognizing the importance of The Apprentice and its significant cultural impact on a global scale, this ‘writer’ has now chosen to allow Trump Derangement Syndrome to rot his brain like so many other losers whose entire existence revolves around President Trump."

    Watch the clip below or at this link.




    https://www.rawstory.com/donald-trump-2668543310/
     
  17. shootersa

    shootersa Frisky Feline

    Joined:
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    Trump seemed to think he still had presidential powers — even after election loss: author

    M.L. Nestel
    June 18, 2024 11:41PM ET

    https://www.rawstory.com/donald-trump-2668543310/

     
  18. shootersa

    shootersa Frisky Feline

    Joined:
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  19. stumbler

    stumbler Porn Star

    Joined:
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    I don't know about any of you but I do have to literally laugh at the amount of desperation red panic we are seeing above.

    Anyway here's another source.

    [​IMG]
    Trump appeared to believe he still had ‘foreign policy powers’ after leaving White House: Author
    Lauren Sforza
    Wed, June 19, 2024 at 7:59 AM MDT·2 min read
    2.7k











    Former President Trump appeared to believe he still had “foreign policy powers” after leaving the White House, according to author Ramin Setoodeh, who interviewed the former president at length for a new book.

    Setoodeh described on CNN’s “The Source” what it was like sitting down with the former president to interview him, telling host Kaitlan Collins that Trump was the “happiest” when he was talking about “The Apprentice.” He said Trump’s mood would shift when he began talking about the White House.

    “And then he would talk about what he did at the White House, and he would become gloomy, and resentful, and unhappy, and refer to Afghanistan and ">Joe Biden. But he also seemed to think that he still had some foreign policy powers,” he said Tuesday.

    “And there was one day, where he told me he needed to go upstairs to deal with Afghanistan, even though he clearly didn’t,” he said.

    The author also noted that Trump referred to it as “the Afghanistan.”

    Setoodeh, the co-editor-in-chief for Variety, interviewed Trump six times for his book, “Apprentice in Wonderland: How Donald Trump and Mark Burnett Took America Through the Looking Glass,” which was released Tuesday.

    Earlier in his CNN appearance, Setoodeh described Trump as appearing “deflated” and “conflicted” during the half-dozen interviews, which he said took place starting in May 2021.

    Trump left office at the end of January 2021, after spending months baselessly claiming the 2020 presidential election was stolen from him.

    “He was angry about the way in which the press had treated him. He still believed that he won the election. And he was happiest, when he talked to me about hosting ‘The Apprentice,’” Setoodeh said.

    “It was the thing that brought him the most joy. We watched clips of the show, together. We watched the theme song. And he really lit up,” he added.

    Steven Cheung, communications director for Trump’s campaign, criticized Setoodeh’s recent comments in a statement to The Hill.

    “After recognizing the importance of The Apprentice, its significant cultural impact on a global scale, and President Trump’s remarkable role in forever changing the landscape of entertainment, this ‘writer’ has now chosen to allow Trump Derangement Syndrome to rot his brain like so many other losers whose entire existence revolves around President Trump,” Cheung said.

    https://www.yahoo.com/news/trump-appeared-believe-still-had-135931325.html
     
  20. shootersa

    shootersa Frisky Feline

    Joined:
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    Slow "news" day?

    2nd time this bit of propaganda has been pushed by you.