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It's Been One Week — and This Convicted Felon Is Still On the Loose

 
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Manage episode 422173136 series 3540164
Conteúdo fornecido por Michael Moore. Todo o conteúdo do podcast, incluindo episódios, gráficos e descrições de podcast, é carregado e fornecido diretamente por Michael Moore ou por seu parceiro de plataforma de podcast. Se você acredita que alguém está usando seu trabalho protegido por direitos autorais sem sua permissão, siga o processo descrito aqui https://pt.player.fm/legal.

Friends,

It’s been nearly a week since the boss of the Trump Crime Family was convicted of 34 felonies. And yet, he still roams the streets of America, Fox News, and Wisconsin. Sentencing is scheduled for July 11th.

Fifty-one years ago, Donald Trump and his father, Fred Trump were charged with breaking the law by violating the Fair Housing Act and the Civil Rights Act of 1968 (which stated that even though you were a bigot, you still had to rent the apartments you owned to anyone regardless of their race, creed, color or national origin). The Trumps sought to try out a new legal theory of theirs that this particular law did not apply to them. The case, in U.S. federal district court, was The United States v. Fred C. Trump, Donald Trump, and Trump Management, Inc. The crimes that the Trump mob was accused of committing involved the Trumps refusing to rent any of their nearly 4,000 apartments that they owned in New York City to people who were Black or Puerto Rican. It turned out that over a period of decades, only seven Black families were allowed to rent any Trump apartments. To avoid any further prosecution or penalties, the Trumps signed a consent decree to stop discriminating against people of color. A few years later, the government accused father and son Trump of violating the agreement they had signed. It was one of many cases over the years where, no matter how often the Trump Organization was accused of civil rights violations, fraud, not paying contractors or employees, and other acts of illegal or immoral ineptitude and debauchery — acts too numerous to list here — they were repeatedly hauled in front of a judge to face justice, only to slip through the cracks in the law, while showing no remorse, receiving no punishment, and having zero impact on them, thus ensuring they would never become law-abiding and decent citizens.

On this episode of my podcast, I do a shallow dive into how the Trump Crime Family did not get away with it this time.

Please listen here to all my favorite takeaways from Trump’s conviction: how Juror #2, an investment banker, told the court he got most of his news from Trump’s Truth Social — and then voted to convict him; how the trial did turn out to be a “jury of his peers” as 8 of the 12 jurors had jobs that on average are in the upper 20 percent of income earners in America; how diverse the jury was of Americans from every part of the country (only 2 of the jurors were native New Yorkers); and in the end, considering how there had to have been at least one person on the jury who voted for Trump in the 2020 election, the evidence was so damning, there was no way he was going to walk this time.

— Mike


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A transcript for today’s episode can be found here.


Watch The Tonight Show's new anthem for Trump featured in today's episode:

https://x.com/FallonTonight/status/1796317728959295788


Music:

"⁠Ding Dong The Witch Is Dead⁠" — The Wizard of Oz


Photos by:

Timothy A. Clary/AFP and John Pedin/NY Daily News — via Getty Images


This week's episode is brought to you by Shopify. Sign up for a one-dollar-per-month trial period at ⁠https://www.shopify.com/rumble⁠ [all lowercase] and get full access to Shopify’s entire suite of features.


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Subscribe now

Leave a comment

** In order to have a troll-free, hate-free comments section — and because if there’s one thing I know about my crazy haters, they would rather spend an eternity in hell with Marjorie Taylor Greene than send me $5 if forced to become a paid subscriber — my Comments section here on my Substack is limited to paid subscribers. But, not to worry — anyone can send me their comments, opinions and thoughts by writing to me at mike@michaelmoore.com. I read every one of them, though obviously I can’t respond to all. The solution here is not optimal but it has worked and my Comments section has become a great meeting place for people wanting to discuss the ideas and issues I raise here. There is debate and disagreement, but it is refreshing to have it done with respect and civility, unfettered by the stench of bigotry and Q-anon insanity.

  continue reading

23 episódios

Artwork
iconCompartilhar
 
Manage episode 422173136 series 3540164
Conteúdo fornecido por Michael Moore. Todo o conteúdo do podcast, incluindo episódios, gráficos e descrições de podcast, é carregado e fornecido diretamente por Michael Moore ou por seu parceiro de plataforma de podcast. Se você acredita que alguém está usando seu trabalho protegido por direitos autorais sem sua permissão, siga o processo descrito aqui https://pt.player.fm/legal.

Friends,

It’s been nearly a week since the boss of the Trump Crime Family was convicted of 34 felonies. And yet, he still roams the streets of America, Fox News, and Wisconsin. Sentencing is scheduled for July 11th.

Fifty-one years ago, Donald Trump and his father, Fred Trump were charged with breaking the law by violating the Fair Housing Act and the Civil Rights Act of 1968 (which stated that even though you were a bigot, you still had to rent the apartments you owned to anyone regardless of their race, creed, color or national origin). The Trumps sought to try out a new legal theory of theirs that this particular law did not apply to them. The case, in U.S. federal district court, was The United States v. Fred C. Trump, Donald Trump, and Trump Management, Inc. The crimes that the Trump mob was accused of committing involved the Trumps refusing to rent any of their nearly 4,000 apartments that they owned in New York City to people who were Black or Puerto Rican. It turned out that over a period of decades, only seven Black families were allowed to rent any Trump apartments. To avoid any further prosecution or penalties, the Trumps signed a consent decree to stop discriminating against people of color. A few years later, the government accused father and son Trump of violating the agreement they had signed. It was one of many cases over the years where, no matter how often the Trump Organization was accused of civil rights violations, fraud, not paying contractors or employees, and other acts of illegal or immoral ineptitude and debauchery — acts too numerous to list here — they were repeatedly hauled in front of a judge to face justice, only to slip through the cracks in the law, while showing no remorse, receiving no punishment, and having zero impact on them, thus ensuring they would never become law-abiding and decent citizens.

On this episode of my podcast, I do a shallow dive into how the Trump Crime Family did not get away with it this time.

Please listen here to all my favorite takeaways from Trump’s conviction: how Juror #2, an investment banker, told the court he got most of his news from Trump’s Truth Social — and then voted to convict him; how the trial did turn out to be a “jury of his peers” as 8 of the 12 jurors had jobs that on average are in the upper 20 percent of income earners in America; how diverse the jury was of Americans from every part of the country (only 2 of the jurors were native New Yorkers); and in the end, considering how there had to have been at least one person on the jury who voted for Trump in the 2020 election, the evidence was so damning, there was no way he was going to walk this time.

— Mike


Share


A transcript for today’s episode can be found here.


Watch The Tonight Show's new anthem for Trump featured in today's episode:

https://x.com/FallonTonight/status/1796317728959295788


Music:

"⁠Ding Dong The Witch Is Dead⁠" — The Wizard of Oz


Photos by:

Timothy A. Clary/AFP and John Pedin/NY Daily News — via Getty Images


This week's episode is brought to you by Shopify. Sign up for a one-dollar-per-month trial period at ⁠https://www.shopify.com/rumble⁠ [all lowercase] and get full access to Shopify’s entire suite of features.


Share

Subscribe now

Leave a comment

** In order to have a troll-free, hate-free comments section — and because if there’s one thing I know about my crazy haters, they would rather spend an eternity in hell with Marjorie Taylor Greene than send me $5 if forced to become a paid subscriber — my Comments section here on my Substack is limited to paid subscribers. But, not to worry — anyone can send me their comments, opinions and thoughts by writing to me at mike@michaelmoore.com. I read every one of them, though obviously I can’t respond to all. The solution here is not optimal but it has worked and my Comments section has become a great meeting place for people wanting to discuss the ideas and issues I raise here. There is debate and disagreement, but it is refreshing to have it done with respect and civility, unfettered by the stench of bigotry and Q-anon insanity.

  continue reading

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