Hello it's the weekend. This is The Weekender ☕
Former President Trump has tried to turn indictment lemons into campaign cash lemonade.
On Thursday evening, news broke that a grand jury voted to indict him on charges brought by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg. Since then, Trump has sent at least five emails to supporters using the indictment to solicit donations to his re-election campaign.
"Please make a contribution of just $1 TONIGHT to cement your place in history and accept YOUR membership as a FOUNDING DEFENDER OF PRESIDENT DONALD J. TRUMP AGAINST THIS WITCH HUNT," the campaign said in an email that went out Friday afternoon.
Trump's indictment is unprecedented. He is the first president in American history to be charged with a crime. And one of his messages, which was attributed to him personally, featured a subject line for the ages: "Yes, I've been indicted, BUT"
"Now is our chance to PROVE that despite the Left's latest phony witch hunt out of Manhattan, our movement will not bend, we will not break, and today, we are STRONGER AND MORE UNITED THAN EVER BEFORE!" Trump wrote.
The highlight of Trump's efforts to monetize his legal woes was a $47 t-shirt emblazoned with the date of the indictment and the phrase, "I STAND WITH TRUMP." The email advertising this piece of indictment swag promised Trump supporters the campaign was "Holding a shirt just for YOU."
Trump actually gave the world a heads up on his impending indictment on March 18 when he announced that he expected to be arrested in conjunction with Bragg's investigation, which has focused on payments made during the 2016 election to women Trump allegedly had affairs with. The former president used his self-inflicted impending indictment drama to send multiple fundraising appeals.
These messages have attacked Bragg and attempted to paint him as a "puppet" of billionaire financier George Soros, who has been the focal point of far right conspiracy theories that can function as an anti-Semitic dog whistle. Trump's attacks are a wild exaggeration of the fact Soros has donated money to organizations that backed the campaigns of progressive prosecutors, including Bragg. Soros weighed in to the online publication Semafor.
"As for Alvin Bragg, as a matter of fact I did not contribute to his campaign and I don't know him," Soros said.
Trump isn't the only one involved in the historic indictment drama who is also selling merch. Stormy Daniels, the adult film star who is one of the women who allegedly was paid to keep quiet about a dalliance with Trump, tweeted on Thursday night that the items she sells on her website, which include t-shirts and autographed topless photos, were flying off the shelves.
"I have so many messages coming in that I can't respond," Daniels wrote. " #Teamstormy merch/autograph orders are pouring in, too! Thank you for that as well but allow a few extra days for shipment."
Corruption merch from presidents and their (alleged) paramours is truly a Late Capitalism landmark.
More on other news below. Let's dig in.
Share your views...
0 Respones to "The Weekender: Late Capitalism Landmark "
Post a Comment