Donald Trump: Classic or Dud?

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (13496 of them)

^^"Russian Mob, are you listening?"

i was being kind of tongue-in-cheek about repeatedly joking/suggesting that trump would have no trouble paying the bonds because there's almost a limitless number of incredibly evil billionaires who want a president to owe them a favor. but...i just want to confirm - trump's bond was paid by some rich subprime auto loan guy who pretty much no one had ever heard of until this week, right?

i do compartmentalize my optimism and pessimism these days, and i am very optimistic about my life and what i'm doing. but all that pessimism has to go somewhere and yeah i don't think trump will ever suffer any sort of significant consequence, and neither will any of his dumbass children. he's responsible for hundreds of thousands of people dying that should not have died, and no one will even ask him about that ever again. he doesn't have to think about it.

since i'm doing classic pre-coffee i'm angry at trump rant, i'll add that i don't think this will end when he's dead. christian fascism is accelerating and they're not going to go back to how things were because they can't anymore

z_tbd, Wednesday, 3 April 2024 14:59 (one month ago) link

I can't stand that Trump!

scott seward, Wednesday, 3 April 2024 15:04 (one month ago) link

trump's bond was paid by some rich subprime auto loan guy who pretty much no one had ever heard of until this week, right?

It is and the fact that any number of actually-more-flush billionaires didn't -- and that it took a week instead of out of the gate -- is telling enough.

Ned Raggett, Wednesday, 3 April 2024 15:06 (one month ago) link

*sips coffee*

well perhaps this will end when he's dead!

z_tbd, Wednesday, 3 April 2024 15:07 (one month ago) link

xp ned but (and i'm cosplaying a rich person here, i don't know) maybe those more flush billionaires didn't post his bond because they knew that some lower-tier billionaire like the subprime auto loans guy would do it for them?

z_tbd, Wednesday, 3 April 2024 15:10 (one month ago) link

good morning, where's the consequences?

I painted my teeth (sleeve), Wednesday, 3 April 2024 15:12 (one month ago) link

xpost Which also says something. "Hmm, a guy who sues and stiffs just about everyone to avoid having to actually pay anything if he has to. Yeahhhhhh I'll let someone else be that stupid patsy." (Remember, if the appeals process changing nothing, this subprime dude coughs up, and if Trump tries to get out of making him whole from there...well, that'll be deeply hilarious.)

Ned Raggett, Wednesday, 3 April 2024 15:13 (one month ago) link

most billionaires prob like trump less than say biden or some more normal politician because hes unstable and doesnt really care about their carefully constructed system, he had to find a billionaire whos specifically into trump type stuff

lag∞n, Wednesday, 3 April 2024 15:16 (one month ago) link

I would actually very much agree!

Ned Raggett, Wednesday, 3 April 2024 15:17 (one month ago) link

wall st guys dont want someone who might cut off arms donations to ukraine pumping money into the defense industry is a core practice of the economy, some auto loan guy tho does he care he prob should but hes just into trump stuff he likes it

lag∞n, Wednesday, 3 April 2024 15:20 (one month ago) link

Mike Lindell has got to feel *red faced* here.

nashwan, Wednesday, 3 April 2024 15:21 (one month ago) link

The authoritarian/christian nationalist/proto-fascist wot have you movement won’t go away when Trump dies but it really galvanized around him in a way that will be hard to replicate. (Pre -existing celebrity, reputation as “successful” businessman,etc). Everyone else in those movements are charisma vacuums or too weird.

Slorg is not on the Slerf Team, you idiot, you moron (Boring, Maryland), Wednesday, 3 April 2024 15:23 (one month ago) link

I'm glad y'all mentioned it. From today's NYT:

Mr. Biden has also brought to office an economic philosophy that relies heavily on federal government intervention in private markets. That includes investments in infrastructure and industries, which business leaders generally support.

But it also includes environmental, financial and other regulations meant to reduce risks in the marketplace. Businesses oppose those efforts, along with the administration’s aggressive antitrust enforcement and other initiatives meant to stimulate competition.

As a result, Mr. Biden’s relationship with corporate America “is a complicated one,” said Neil Bradley, the executive vice president and chief policy officer at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, a large business lobbying group in Washington.

Mr. Biden and his economic team have been open and thorough in their outreach to business groups, Mr. Bradley said, but frustrating in their policy choices. Chamber officials calculate that federal agencies under Mr. Biden have issued about twice as many regulations considered “economically significant” — currently defined as carrying at least a $200 million annual effect on the economy — as they did under President Donald J. Trump.

It is a contrast with Mr. Trump, whose administration employed less consistent outreach and careened chaotically from crisis to crisis, business leaders say. Mr. Bradley said executives were torn on which combination they preferred.

“You can look at a Trump administration with a lot more uncertainty, but directionally, the regulatory effort was moving to lighten the regulatory costs,” he said. “Here in the Biden administration, we have a pretty good idea where they’re going to go — it’s just how crushing is it going to be in terms of the regulatory level? And so, interestingly, there’s a lot of people saying, ‘The chaos is better.’”

poppers fueled buttsex crescendo (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 3 April 2024 15:24 (one month ago) link

the administration’s aggressive antitrust enforcement

haaa (i dont doubt corporations believe it they are very sensitive)

lag∞n, Wednesday, 3 April 2024 15:30 (one month ago) link

Hey they’ve stopped a couple potential mergers, Spirit and Jet Blue for one.

Slorg is not on the Slerf Team, you idiot, you moron (Boring, Maryland), Wednesday, 3 April 2024 15:30 (one month ago) link

Spirit-Jeb Blue?

poppers fueled buttsex crescendo (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 3 April 2024 15:31 (one month ago) link

ha, jinx

poppers fueled buttsex crescendo (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 3 April 2024 15:31 (one month ago) link

yeah i guess doing anything at all does qualify as aggressive these days

lag∞n, Wednesday, 3 April 2024 15:32 (one month ago) link

And so, interestingly, there’s a lot of people saying, ‘The chaos is better.’”

"interestingly" -- fuck you

poppers fueled buttsex crescendo (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Wednesday, 3 April 2024 15:34 (one month ago) link

Jeb I’m sure is blue

Slorg is not on the Slerf Team, you idiot, you moron (Boring, Maryland), Wednesday, 3 April 2024 15:34 (one month ago) link

Compared to even the Obama administration Biden’s is practically Teddy Roosevelt reincarnated.

Slorg is not on the Slerf Team, you idiot, you moron (Boring, Maryland), Wednesday, 3 April 2024 15:36 (one month ago) link

reading the tea leaves of quotes from one lobbyist saying we might actually like the chaos better is an indication that they do not in fact like the chaos, which also stands to reason as chaos is by nature bad for established entities

lag∞n, Wednesday, 3 April 2024 15:36 (one month ago) link

Yeah, if chaos were good it would not be chaos.

Josh in Chicago, Wednesday, 3 April 2024 15:48 (one month ago) link

I hear it's a ladder

President Keyes, Wednesday, 3 April 2024 15:50 (one month ago) link

there could be a situation where the level of regulation was so high under biden that it was actually worse for big biz than the chaos and low regulation of trump, but obvs were not nearly there, however its important consider that corporate executives are huge babies who are likely to throw a tantrum if anyone tells them they cant do exactly what they want all the time

lag∞n, Wednesday, 3 April 2024 15:53 (one month ago) link

It's always wild to me that you can just call yourself the US Chamber of Commerce.

Andrew Farrell, Wednesday, 3 April 2024 16:03 (one month ago) link

Chaos is good and fine, there’s this little thing called the invisible hand

brimstead, Wednesday, 3 April 2024 16:03 (one month ago) link

It's always wild to me that you can just call yourself the US Chamber of Commerce.

i'm always fruitlessly searching for polls that ask people if they think the US Chamber of Commerce is a government entity. it must be at least 33%

z_tbd, Wednesday, 3 April 2024 16:10 (one month ago) link

US Chamber of Commerce is the name of my dog

CEO Greedwagon (Neanderthal), Wednesday, 3 April 2024 16:28 (one month ago) link

"And I know you hate me, and you got the right to kill me now
And I wouldn't blame you if you do
But you ought to thank me, before I die
For the gravel in ya gut and the spit in ya eye
'Cause I'm the son of a bitch that named you the US Chamber of Commerce."

President Keyes, Wednesday, 3 April 2024 16:32 (one month ago) link

if chaos were good it would not be chaos.

Don't we have chaotic good / chaotic neutral / chaotic evil in our cosmology here? I thought we were supposed to be nerds.

alpaca lips now (Ye Mad Puffin), Wednesday, 3 April 2024 22:56 (one month ago) link

Radios appear

CEO Greedwagon (Neanderthal), Thursday, 4 April 2024 00:12 (four weeks ago) link

Whoopsie:

When former President Donald Trump posted a $175 million bond in New York on Monday, it appeared that he had evaded a financial crisis. He had paused enforcement of the more than $460 million judgment against him following a civil fraud trial, while his appeal is pending.

But the surety bond was missing vital information typically included in those filings, experts say. These standard elements include documents related to power of attorney for the bond provider, Knight Specialty Insurance Company, a financial statement from the company and a certificate of solvency from the Department of Financial Services....

On Wednesday, the New York Supreme Court clerk's office returned to Trump's attorneys the bond filing "for correction." There was no reason publicly specified in the request for correction.

Adam Pollock, a former assistant attorney general in New York, said, "This bond is deficient for a number of reasons."

"Including that the company doesn't appear to be licensed in New York and doesn't appear to have enough capital to make this undertaking," Pollock said."....

Knight's compliance officer, Mike Pepitone, said that there are a number of insurance companies that do not hold a license in every state, but a company is able to write a bond in other states where they are not licensed on what he said is called "an excess and surplus lines basis."

"For court bonds, as regulated by the CPLR, the law is clear about in-state license requirement," said Pollock, who noted that there are surety bonds used in other industries like construction that would not be subject to that rule.

Shah initially said that the company had in fact submitted a financial statement with the bond. However, during a conversation the following day, Pepitone said the financial statement was not supposed to be a part of the filing and was "not willing" to share it with CBS.

The whole thing is very amusing and if the NY Supreme Court is already going "Yeah, about that," well well.

Ned Raggett, Thursday, 4 April 2024 15:38 (four weeks ago) link

😬

Marten Broadcloak, mild-mannered GOP congressman (Raymond Cummings), Thursday, 4 April 2024 15:40 (four weeks ago) link

The company also does not appear to meet a restriction under New York insurance law barring companies from putting more than 10% of their capital at risky.

why do plain ol’ typos make me lol

epistantophus, Thursday, 4 April 2024 15:47 (four weeks ago) link

*wriggle*

citation needed (Steve Shasta), Thursday, 4 April 2024 15:56 (four weeks ago) link

the little known king of subprime car loans going out of business cause he made trump a loan which he immediately defaulted on would be another perfect trump story

lag∞n, Thursday, 4 April 2024 16:12 (four weeks ago) link

Really would!

Ned Raggett, Thursday, 4 April 2024 16:22 (four weeks ago) link

the court is asking for a correction. when the correction is made that will be the end of it. all the quotes are from people not involved in the case.

𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Thursday, 4 April 2024 16:25 (four weeks ago) link

Yay oh wait. (I recall something similar happened with the Carroll bond, like the initial paperwork was not so great.) Still, those Knight guys quoted are involved in the case to a degree, surely. :-D

Ned Raggett, Thursday, 4 April 2024 16:31 (four weeks ago) link

sigh

I painted my teeth (sleeve), Thursday, 4 April 2024 16:34 (four weeks ago) link

I just looked at CPLR Section 2502 and the relevant language is the bond must be issued by "an insurance company authorized to execute the undertaking within the state". That language seems to directly contradict the bond company's argument that they can write the bond on an excess and surplus lines basis (i.e. without the license).

Whenever I have to get bonds for employees or our companies, the bond has a page which contains a little balance sheet showing the bond company's assets and liabilities.

il lavoro mi rovina la giornata (PBKR), Thursday, 4 April 2024 16:36 (four weeks ago) link

whats going on here seems weird

Hankey said that Trump used "cash" as collateral for the bond, a total of $175 million.

"First he furnished about $120 million worth of bonds that we OK'd, so we assumed it would be investment-grade bonds and cash. But as it turned out, it was all cash," he told CBS News in a brief phone call on Tuesday.

But Trump retained that $175 million cash collateral, according to Shah. He said the money is in an account that is "pledged" to the company. He would not specify the type of account. Trump paid a premium to the company that Shah declined to disclose.

lag∞n, Thursday, 4 April 2024 16:38 (four weeks ago) link

It should be obvious that Trump will keep trying to pull a fast one to give the appearance of compliance without any substance behind it, because he understands that compliance would be very painful and difficult and he's used to easily sidestepping such obligations by throwing up a smokescreen of lies and half-truth. At the very least, he can keep this up long enough to delay the resolution of his appeal and seizure of his assets, so he has nothing to lose by doing this shit. iow, typical Trump maneuvering.

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Thursday, 4 April 2024 16:45 (four weeks ago) link

CPLR 2502 (a) permits only two types of sureties: "1. an insurance company authorized to execute the undertaking within the state" or an individual. Without doubt, even though the bonds here may be valid and binding and insure against the risk specified, Athens is not "authorized to execute [the bonds] * * * within the state". Therefore, as plaintiff contends, the bonds at issue here are invalid.

New York City v. Britestarr Homes, 150 Misc. 2d 820, 827 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1991)

il lavoro mi rovina la giornata (PBKR), Thursday, 4 April 2024 16:49 (four weeks ago) link

believe it when i see it

https://bsky.app/profile/toobigtofail.bsky.social/post/3kpd2judhsl2n

𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Thursday, 4 April 2024 16:55 (four weeks ago) link


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.