A Perfectly Reasonable Amount of Schadenfreude about Things Happening to Trump & His Enablers (Part 2)

Ah, gotcha. Nope, I don’t do that, I pronounce them the same.

Ah, the Midwest pronunciation.

Back on topic "At one point, his probing questions directed at one of Clark’s attorneys led Trump attorney Steve Sadow, who was in the courtroom, to whisper, “This is not good.”

https://www.cnn.com/2023/09/18/politics/jeffrey-clark-georgia-election-hearing/index.html

So it’s just just that you pronounce “just”, whereas you pronounce just “just”?

I guess the main thing I would say about that article is, Ed Meese is still alive?

He’s 11 years older than Joe Biden but still breathing.

Jesus, these guys just don’t get it, do they?

At Monday’s hearing, Clark attorney Harry MacDougald argued that “not even an iota of (Clark’s) actions would be possible if he wasn’t a federal official.”

Yes, exactly, that’s why it was a corrupt abuse of power. Working for the government, you’re required to put the good of the country before the good of one person, or one political party. If you use your position to unlawfully bias a government procedure, that’s corruption, even if it’s the fucking president telling you to do it.

And this asshole went well past just obeying an illegal order. He took an active, willing, and enthusiastic role in trying to subvert the election results.

Although it’s not unalloyed good news, I think this belongs in the schadenfreude thread. (NYT gift link.)

Trump’s Resilience Leaves Anxious G.O.P. Donors in Despair and Denial

On Labor Day, Eric Levine, a New York lawyer and Republican fund-raiser, sent an email to roughly 1,500 donors, politicians and friends.

“I refuse to accept the proposition that Donald Trump is the ‘inevitable’ Republican nominee for President,” he wrote. “His nomination would be a disaster for our party and our country.”

Many of the Republican Party’s wealthiest donors share that view, and the growing sense of urgency about the state of the G.O.P. presidential primary race. Mr. Trump’s grip on the party’s voters is as powerful as ever, with polls in Iowa and New Hampshire last month putting him at least 25 percentage points above his nearest rivals.

That has left major Republican donors — whose desires have increasingly diverged from those of conservative voters — grappling with the reality that the tens of millions of dollars they have spent to try to stop the former president, fearing he poses a mortal threat to their party and the country, may already be a sunk cost.

I’m from Michigan. I pronounce them the same as in rhymes with bust.

Well, I suppose that says something about the popular refrain here that politicians are just bought and sold by powerful lobbies and donors.

Sometimes, they’re pushed over the top by the general public - and that seems to be even worse.

My American accent is somewhat vague, but I think it’s actually South Jersey.

Speaking as a born and bred South Jerseyite, no, I have never heard anybody there using semantically differentiated pronunciations for the word “just”.

(It’s true that we tend to pronounce “water” more like “wood-er”, though.)

Then maybe it really is jest me.

Well, it’s stereotypically a marker of an American “backwoods” rural accent, as in “I was jest sayin’ to Aunt Keziah that I’m fixin’ to mosey down the road a piece and pay a call on Betty Sue.”

We South Jersey “pineys” are a bit backwoods, but not that backwoods.

Then I guess this link fits here:

Can a mod step in and stop the “just deserts” derailment?

No, you’re not

You’re in The Pit. It’s what we do here.

I know. It was a “Stop the world, I want to get off” plead.

Sorry. The restraint bar will remain in the down and locked position until the ride comes to an end.