Stormy Daniels finally has her Trump porn story told under oath. "A real man would also testify under oath...."
Stormy was working blue, and the judge was seeing red.
Echo opinion published by Maureen Dowd in The New York Times:
Justice Juan Merchan chided Donald Trumpâs lawyer Susan Necheles, saying he didnât understand why she hadnât objected to seamy details about the President and the Porn Star spilling out.
âWhy on earth she wouldnât object to the mention of a condom I donât understand,â Merchan complained about Necheles.
But I wanted to hear about the condom â or lack thereof. The New York trial involves an abstruse legal strategy and illusory crime. Itâs the weakest of the cases against Trump. Itâs certainly not putting him on trial for the attempted coup dâĂ©tat he incited or for treating top secret documents as dinner conversation fodder at his golf clubs. But it now seems almost certain that none of the other cases will be resolved before the election.
So weâre left with a two-bit case that has devolved into dirty bits, filled with salacious details â a spanking, a missionary position and ping-ponging insults like âhorsefaceâ and âorange turd.â
Yet, even if it plays like a cheesy old Cinemax âAfter Darkâ show, itâs still illuminating. The case doesnât hinge on Stormy Danielsâs story about her liaison with Trump, or even if the former president is lying when he says they didnât have sex. (He would say that, wouldnât he?)
Itâs instructive about the moral values â or lack thereof â of our once and perhaps future president.
We know that Trump is a louche operator. But, given that he is leading in crucial swing states, it doesnât hurt to be reminded of just how louche (IOW Trump is a sordid creatuređș).
To paraphrase Mary McCarthy on Lillian Hellman, every word Trump utters is a lie, including âandâ and âthe.â
Trumpâs legal team seems to be hoping that Hope Hicks and Madeleine Westerhout, his former aides who tearily testified for the prosecution, gave the impression that he didnât want the Stormy story to come out on the eve of the 2016, election because he was tenderly concerned about how it would affect Melania, rather than selfishly concerned about his presidential aspirations.
Asked about Trumpâs intentions, Stormy offered a shrug to the jury, saying, âI wouldnât know what he wanted to protect.â
In her telling, Trump wasnât concerned about his wife, with a new baby at home. He told Stormy not to worry about Melania.
Stormy said he was more focused on her resemblance to Ivanka and a possible threesome with another blond porn star, Alana Evans, of âItâs Okay! Sheâs My Mother in Law 13â and âDirty Little Sex Brats 9.â
When Necheles tried to make Stormy seem tawdry on cross-examination, the mistress of exotica flipped the script. Sure, she was an opportunist and a finagler and a marketer of tacky products, she conceded in essence, but if it was OK for a man who ascended to the highest office in the land, wasnât it OK for her?
Stormy made mincemeat of Nechelesâs tone-deaf attempt to paint her as a shabby self-promoter with one response: âNot unlike Mr. Trump.â
As The Times noted, Stormy and Donnie were like twins: âHe wrote more than a dozen self-aggrandizing books; she wrote a tell-all memoir. He mocked her appearance on social media; she fired back with a scatological insult. He peddled a $59.99 Bible; she hawked a $40 âStormy, saint of indictmentsâ candle, that carried her image draped in a Christlike robe.â
Trump may have undermined his own case, falling prey to his own capacious and quivering ego. He clearly wanted his lawyers to push his unconvincing tale that â even though he paid $130,000 to keep Stormy from talking and even though she described whatâs in his dopp kit and the details of his anatomy â the 2006 Lake Tahoe rendezvous was a figment of her imagination.
Necheles doggedly pursued this fruitless tack with Stormy, to her own and Trumpâs detriment.
âYou made all this up, right?â the lawyer pressed.
âNo,â Stormy replied.
When Necheles kept pecking, noting that the actress, director and producer had starred in porn films with âphony stories about sex,â Stormy leveled her by slyly replying that if she had made up the story about her encounter with Trump, âI would have written it to be a lot better.â She also schooled Trumpâs lawyer on the fact that âThe sex is very real. Thatâs why itâs pornography and not a B movie.â
Trump came across as a loser in her account â a narcissist, cheater, sad Hugh Hefner wannabe, trading his satin pajamas for a dress shirt and trousers (and, later, boxers) as soon as Stormy mocked him. The man who was the likely source of the âBest Sex I Ever Hadâ tabloid headline, attributed to Marla Maples at the time, no doubt loathes Stormy for having described their batrachian grappling, as Aldous Huxley called sex, as âtextbook generic.â
Like a legal dominatrix, Stormy continued to emasculate the former president after her testimony, tweeting: âReal men respond to testimony by being sworn in and taking the stand in court. Oh ⊠wait. Nevermind.â
The compelling part of this case is not whether Trump did something wrong with business papers. The compelling part is how it shows, in a vivid way, that heâs the wrong man for the job.
âWhy on earth she wouldnât object to the mention of a condom I donât understand,â Merchan complained about Necheles.
But I wanted to hear about the condom â or lack thereof. The New York trial involves an abstruse legal strategy and illusory crime. Itâs the weakest of the cases against Trump. Itâs certainly not putting him on trial for the attempted coup dâĂ©tat he incited or for treating top secret documents as dinner conversation fodder at his golf clubs. But it now seems almost certain that none of the other cases will be resolved before the election.
So weâre left with a two-bit case that has devolved into dirty bits, filled with salacious details â a spanking, a missionary position and ping-ponging insults like âhorsefaceâ and âorange turd.â
Yet, even if it plays like a cheesy old Cinemax âAfter Darkâ show, itâs still illuminating. The case doesnât hinge on Stormy Danielsâs story about her liaison with Trump, or even if the former president is lying when he says they didnât have sex. (He would say that, wouldnât he?)
Itâs instructive about the moral values â or lack thereof â of our once and perhaps future president.
We know that Trump is a louche operator. But, given that he is leading in crucial swing states, it doesnât hurt to be reminded of just how louche (IOW Trump is a sordid creatuređș).
To paraphrase Mary McCarthy on Lillian Hellman, every word Trump utters is a lie, including âandâ and âthe.â
Trumpâs legal team seems to be hoping that Hope Hicks and Madeleine Westerhout, his former aides who tearily testified for the prosecution, gave the impression that he didnât want the Stormy story to come out on the eve of the 2016, election because he was tenderly concerned about how it would affect Melania, rather than selfishly concerned about his presidential aspirations.
Asked about Trumpâs intentions, Stormy offered a shrug to the jury, saying, âI wouldnât know what he wanted to protect.â
In her telling, Trump wasnât concerned about his wife, with a new baby at home. He told Stormy not to worry about Melania.
Stormy said he was more focused on her resemblance to Ivanka and a possible threesome with another blond porn star, Alana Evans, of âItâs Okay! Sheâs My Mother in Law 13â and âDirty Little Sex Brats 9.â
When Necheles tried to make Stormy seem tawdry on cross-examination, the mistress of exotica flipped the script. Sure, she was an opportunist and a finagler and a marketer of tacky products, she conceded in essence, but if it was OK for a man who ascended to the highest office in the land, wasnât it OK for her?
Stormy made mincemeat of Nechelesâs tone-deaf attempt to paint her as a shabby self-promoter with one response: âNot unlike Mr. Trump.â
As The Times noted, Stormy and Donnie were like twins: âHe wrote more than a dozen self-aggrandizing books; she wrote a tell-all memoir. He mocked her appearance on social media; she fired back with a scatological insult. He peddled a $59.99 Bible; she hawked a $40 âStormy, saint of indictmentsâ candle, that carried her image draped in a Christlike robe.â
Trump may have undermined his own case, falling prey to his own capacious and quivering ego. He clearly wanted his lawyers to push his unconvincing tale that â even though he paid $130,000 to keep Stormy from talking and even though she described whatâs in his dopp kit and the details of his anatomy â the 2006 Lake Tahoe rendezvous was a figment of her imagination.
Necheles doggedly pursued this fruitless tack with Stormy, to her own and Trumpâs detriment.
âYou made all this up, right?â the lawyer pressed.
âNo,â Stormy replied.
When Necheles kept pecking, noting that the actress, director and producer had starred in porn films with âphony stories about sex,â Stormy leveled her by slyly replying that if she had made up the story about her encounter with Trump, âI would have written it to be a lot better.â She also schooled Trumpâs lawyer on the fact that âThe sex is very real. Thatâs why itâs pornography and not a B movie.â
Trump came across as a loser in her account â a narcissist, cheater, sad Hugh Hefner wannabe, trading his satin pajamas for a dress shirt and trousers (and, later, boxers) as soon as Stormy mocked him. The man who was the likely source of the âBest Sex I Ever Hadâ tabloid headline, attributed to Marla Maples at the time, no doubt loathes Stormy for having described their batrachian grappling, as Aldous Huxley called sex, as âtextbook generic.â
Like a legal dominatrix, Stormy continued to emasculate the former president after her testimony, tweeting: âReal men respond to testimony by being sworn in and taking the stand in court. Oh ⊠wait. Nevermind.â
The compelling part of this case is not whether Trump did something wrong with business papers. The compelling part is how it shows, in a vivid way, that heâs the wrong man for the job.
Labels: Justice Juan Merchan, Maureen Dowd, Susan Necheles, The New York Times
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