So Tom Arnold did the rounds of the news networks that would have him and he did PR for his Vice network program The Hunt for the Trump Tapes show.
The latest interview might yield a few insights perhaps about the possibility that Michael Cohen will flip. But probably not, and it’s best to wait until the actual arrest, the actual revelations of evidence from the raid(s), and the inevitable pathetic attempt of Trump to distract from that eventuality.
What is clear is via Tom Arnold’s appearances and this selfie, is that Cohen is sending messages to Trump, and whether it’s a game of Chicken will be clearer eventually. Like “collusion” with the Russians, cooperating with the FBI and federal prosecutors has some interpretive range.
After all, the kayfabe North Korean denuclearzation was timed to offset #TrumpRussia, as is our current immigration crisis of kidnapping arising from Trump’s original racist pseudo-crisis.
“The irony is Donald Trump is an illegitimate president. He did not win the election without help from Russia. You will see this, and he knows he's illegitimate. Every time you mention it, he freaks out and that's karma.”
On Thursday evening, actor Tom Arnold tweeted a photo of himself with longtime Donald Trump fixer Michael Cohen and the message, “I love New York.” By Friday morning, he was claiming that he and Cohen would be “taking Trump down together,” adding: “This dude has all the tapes.”
www.thedailybeast.com/...
Considering the quality of Cohen’s statements to date, Trump has a lot (more) to worry about. But there’s a lot more media space to expend.
Forty-two percent of Americans think President Trump should be impeached and removed from office, according to a new CNN poll.
The survey found that support for impeaching Trump is divided along party lines, with backing from 77 percent of Democrats and just 9 percent of Republicans.
Overall support for impeaching Trump is at a level similar to the public's view of President Nixon in 1974. CNN notes that support for impeaching Nixon reached 73 percent in March 1974. But that survey, conducted by Harris Poll, took place after many crucial points in the Watergate scandal, including after the Senate Watergate hearings, after the "Saturday Night Massacre" and after it became known that Nixon bugged the Oval Office.
Nixon resigned in August 1974 before any impeachment vote came up.
thehill.com/…