Richard Wolffe - The threads of Trump Inc are fraying
We now live in a world where America’s truly worst president ever insists that cash is king.
The great unraveling has begun. Between the latest guilty plea by Donald Trump’s fixer and the breakdown of a guilty plea by his campaign chairman, the threads are fraying on the scheming enterprise that is Trump Inc. The man pulling at the many loose ends of this loosey-goosey business is working methodically in ways that are only clear in hindsight. Robert Mueller, the special counsel, is a strategic mastermind cornering a gang of simpletons watched by a peanut gallery of gawkers and hecklers. The spectacle is both fascinating to watch and essential to the rebuilding of the rule of law.
The great unraveling has begun. Between the latest guilty plea by Donald Trump’s fixer and the breakdown of a guilty plea by his campaign chairman, the threads are fraying on the scheming enterprise that is Trump Inc. The man pulling at the many loose ends of this loosey-goosey business is working methodically in ways that are only clear in hindsight. Robert Mueller, the special counsel, is a strategic mastermind cornering a gang of simpletons watched by a peanut gallery of gawkers and hecklers. The spectacle is both fascinating to watch and essential to the rebuilding of the rule of law.
The
United States urgently needs to resume its role as a global example of good
government. Especially when its own government is rotten to the core. Republicans in
Congress may refuse to
investigate the Trump administration, but Mueller and the courts are
reaffirming that it matters when people break election laws, tax laws, lobbying
laws, or lie under oath. It matters when foreign agents conspire to
attack the United States by hacking into the computers of one of its main
political parties. Meanwhile our
simpleton-in-chief can only sputter on the sidelines of Twitter about the many
ways Mueller is plainly driving him nuts.
“Did you ever see an
investigation more in search of a crime,” Trump tweetedwhile
he should have been prepping for another world summit. As a matter of fact,
investigations are supposed to search for crimes, but that’s beside the point
for the man who can fire and hire an attorney general. He would much prefer an
investigation into anyone else right now: the Grinch who stole Christmas,
Hillary Clinton, the man who broke the bank at Monte Carlo. Anyone will do.
“After wasting more
than $40,000,000 (is that possible?), it has proven only one thing – there was
NO Collusion with Russia,” he tweeted barely
an hour later, still stewing in his own resentment. “So Ridiculous!” To answer the
president’s questions: yes, it’s possible to spend a lot of federal dollars (see: corporate
tax cuts, Trump administration). No, Mueller hasn’t cost the taxpayer a dime
after all the property he
seized from Trump’s campaign chairman. The only Ridiculous Thing about this is
pretending that the Question of Collusion has been Answered. But since you
mentioned Collusion, Mr President, let’s yank a little more on this thread,
shall we? ... read more:
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/nov/29/michael-cohen-guilty-plea-trump-richard-wolffe