Trump plans to issue membership cards to loyal supporters Those who voted by clicking on one of the four proposed designs were, naturally, redirected to a fundraising page. Those who voted by clicking on one of the four proposed designs were, naturally, redirected to a fundraising page. "We recently met with the President in his Florida office and showed him four designs," the email continued. "Originally we were planning on releasing just one design, but when President Trump saw the cards on his desk, he said, 'These are BEAUTIFUL. We should let the American People decide - they ALWAYS know best!'" the email said. Twice impeached one term former president Donald Trump's PAC revealed in an email that it plans to issue official "Trump cards" that MAGA supporters can carry to show their loyalty to their "dear leader." "We're about to launch our Official Trump Cards, which will be reserved for President Trump's STRONGEST supporters," the PAC wrote in the email, asking supporters to vote for their favorite of four proposed designs. Those who voted by clicking on one of the four proposed designs were, naturally, redirected to a fundraising page. "We recently met with the President in his Florida office and showed him four designs," the email continued. "Originally we were planning on releasing just one design, but when President Trump saw the cards on his desk, he said, 'These are BEAUTIFUL. We should let the American People decide - they ALWAYS know best!'" the email said.
'It's a sickness': WaPo reporters reveal what drives Trump's 'addiction' to media attention Donald Trump continues sitting for interviews with the authors of tell-all books about his presidency for one simple reason, according to a pair of journalists who just published one of those. "The former president is really being pretty aware of himself at that moment by saying, you know, 'I am addicted to your questions and your attention,'" Leonnig said. Trump blames his own failures on others, she said, and even ascribes some of his own weaknesses to them. "Mostly what he talked about was how often people around him failed him," Leonnig said. "He believes Bill Barr was addicted to the media and too weak to resist the criticism that he was facing, and that's why Bill Barr failed him. He argued that Mitch McConnell was stupid and lacked personality, and this was a huge yoke around his neck to have a Republican leader who was so fair to middling, I guess I would say. The next thing he argued was that [Mike] Pence, his vice president, was weak and could have done more to protect the Constitution if he had followed Donald Trump's words. A lot of people would disagree with the president about this, but I think it's interesting his narrative is basically he alone was the brilliant genius and everyone else was enemy or weak, paltry stand-in."
Trump is like a guy at a party who wants to be the centre of attention. At the end of the night when going home, everyone is exhausted and thinking to themselves, "it would have been a good night, only if that loud mouth had stfu".
You'd think so. Unfortunately, some clowns would be thinking to themselves, "I wish I could be as cool as that guy! He should be leader of the free world! "
Those two women are not funny. The two come off as so lifeless and dull... (they probably are) Now watch Alex Jones. Pay attention to his delivery... way better.
Trump complained on a radio show that the media spent 'all night' Sunday covering the devastation wrought by Hurricane Ida instead of his 'great agreement' with the Taliban https://www.businessinsider.com/trump-complained-media-spent-weekend-covering-hurricane-ida-2021-8