Monday, June 10, 2024

This old Alabama honky sez, when Donald Trump and his legions say the 2020 presidential election was stolen, they mean it was stolen by blacks

Carlottesville, Virginia 
Confederate monuments removal protest
led to
    As I pondered some new sport to banish care, something that reminded me of the bunker buster movie, “The Brother From Another Planet", about which I was schooled by white street kids when I lived in Boulder, Colorado, showed up in my email from a white guy named Coleman, who did serious time in prison, and now he has his own Substack. 

    What Coleman and a deep thinking black dude tag teamer wrote about what calling someone a Nigga really means is really long. I provide the beginning and a link that can be opened to the whole thing. This is an interesting look at what being called a Nigga really means. Yet, I wonder if something much bigger and pressing was getting a free pass, and I addressed that in my second comment, which Coleman and his guest commentator and other readers did not touch, so far. 

A Convict’s Perspective   
Racist S#!t 
Coleman and Torrance Stephens, PhD 
When a PHD and a GED set out to make everyone Big Mad

Preface: (Yeah, I do those now)

I wanted to approach this topic with more than simply what I had to offer. That's why I hit up Torrance for a helping hand. From having read his work, I came to understand that we started out in a similar world. Here was a man who also lived that life and got out. What's even better is how he did it.
Torrance got out the right way. The cliche is that I, being the white kid, would've worked my way out and became a doctor while the black guy learned through prison. Yet we're the opposite of the narratives we're all told. 
He saw that life and made himself a better man in spite of it and clawed his way out. I, on the other hand, fully embraced it and survived through sheer luck. That gives us a pair of perspectives our respective races “aren't supposed to have” and I think that's absolutely fantastic for this topic.
The perspectives of a black PHD and a white GED
That said, let's discuss that which shall not be mentioned.
Let's roll dog. 

Gimme that mic, a honky is about to talk about racism. I've included the following evacuation procedures to assist any readers who believe I can't speak on this topic:

•Safely stop your work. Shut down equipment that could become unstable or present a hazard.....

Leave the building through the nearest door with an EXIT sign..…
•Go jump in front of a bus…..

I’m going to skip the fact that I spent many years around actual race gangs and save that for another time. For this I'm going to focus on how I grew up in the PJ's. I don't mean a poor neighborhood, I mean them streets. The kind of neighborhoods where you couldn't have a pizza delivered to your house. Where the police didn't patrol because they took random gunfire while at stop lights. Where the corner stores had bullet proof glass for the criminals and steel doors for the cops. The kind of neighborhood where was one of the few white kids.
So let's start with a hang-up a lot of people seem to have.
The first 30-odd years of my life I used and answered to “Nigga” just like everyone else did where we lived. Be mad, stay mad. People on the outside looking in never understood that word. I'm so tired of hearing uptight bougie talking-heads moaning, “if the N-word is so offensive, then why do they use it in their rap music and say it 50 times in every sentence?”. Because fuck you, that's why. If you can't tell the difference between there, their and they're, then you're in over your head.

Bill Beshlian
Bill’s Substack
Excellent gentlemen. I believe this is the explanation most could listen to.

Argo the Second
The Professional Amateur
Two guys in suits. Hard part of town. Throwing gang signs on camera.
The reactions would be peak entertainment.

An K.
As a white immigrant women, I learned that the undertones, the understanding or "weight" of words have a totally different meaning for people depending on where they came from, what they have been through.
The day we realize that we have fallen victim ( division by class, race and even religion ..) to a system that is not meant to work for human kind but to exploit it and that it is not just done with hard work but with kindness, understanding and tolerance will be the day that we will be truly free.
I cannot understand or even grasp what people have been through, I have not walked in their shoes.
I know that it's been hard for most, twisted by crazy sociatal unspoken and spoken rules, an inhumane system, causing unrealistic expectations, fear and hate.
Fear mongering and propaganda are a succesful trap.
Judgment and condemnation have got to stop. 
We should remember that most of us just want a peaceful existence.
It will be up to each one of us. Every day.
It's we the people not them people.
All we can do is stop passing it on, stop spreading the hate, arrogance and ignorance, try to help when possible and be the change.
Kill'em with kindness. 
Thank you!!

Sloan Bashinsky
Sloan’s Newsletter
I was born and raised in an affluent white family in the upscale white  Birmingham, Alabama suburb Mountain Book, which in time earned the nickname, The Tiny Kingdom, which is pretty much how I view it today. 
The day I was born,  a woman whose parents had been plantation slaves in Alabama came to my parents’ home looking for work, and she was hired, and her name was Charlotte Washington, but I could not pronounce Charlotte as a tot, and I called her “Cha”,  pronounced “Sha”, and that stuck, and that’s what everyone who came to our home called her, too. 
Her cooking was divine. She washed and ironed all of our clothes. She loved me as one of her own. In time, I came to see, if she had not been there when I was growing up, I would have been in really deep shit in many important ways.
Cha is the second person I memorialized in A Few Remarkable Alabama People I Have Known (2004), which I self-published and had reprinted several times, as I kept giving copies away. Today it's a free read at the internet library, archive.org. Her chapter is entitled, “She worked behind the scenes.” https://archive.org/details/a-few-remarkable-alabama-people-i-have-known_202210
We had other black servants who came “over the mounntain” from Birmingham to work in our home and take care of the yard. Cha cooked them lunch, which usually included turnip greens, sweet potato, black-eyed peas, cornbread and a meat. I never ate it, and one day when I was hungry and asked Cha to fix me something to eat, she said to try what she had fixed the servants, who were eating there in our kitchen. I said, “I don’t eat no nigger food.” When my mother heard about that, she gave me bloody hell. 
Today, I eats lots of sweet potato and collard greens dishes, which I prefer to white folks food. I speak southern English, redneck, and dialect, and sumtimes I mixes dems up. I went through a time of being  racist, but I grew out of it. I never once heard no white man be called a Nigga, until I read your exposition. Live and learn. 
 
Sean’s Substack
Sloan Bashinsky, you have a fabulous name. You should be a character in a novel with so excellent a name!

Sloan Bashinsky
Sloan’s Newsletter
Thanks, that’s hilarious, actually :-) Perhaps my entire life is a novel, in which I have had many experiences that can be believed, and many experiences that maybe only a batshit crazy person might believe?
It turned out that I became a writer, after all else failed :-), and I came to wonder if my father ever wished he had not suggested that I take a typing course my freshman year in a Birmingham public high school? 
Bashinsky is the Englishized spelling of my Polish Jew great grandfather Leopold’s last name. He came to America in the late 1800s. Quite an interesting man I only met through handed down family stories. However, I did know his Southern Baptist wife somewhat. Her father was a former officer in the Confederate Army. She was a school teacher. She and Leopold decided to raise their children in the Baptist church, in Troy, Alabama, where they both had ended up and met. Their son Leo married a woman from Memphis, Tennessee, whose family had Sloan as last first names, which completes the loop of how I got my name. I memorialized Leopold in the “He was a nobel creation” chapter of A Few Remarkable Alabama People I Have Known. https://archive.org/details/a-few-remarkable-alabama-people-i-have-known_202210
Many of my books, three novels, the rest non-fiction bordering on stranger than fiction, are free reads at arcive.org. Enter Sloan Bashinsky in the search space and icon links for my books come up and can be opened by clicking on the icons. The free internet library specializes in out of print books and books by authors not seeking payment. The free library is funded and operated by American colleges. Thanks to modern technology, the free library’s books can be read in English and around 35 other languages.

Crixcyon
I am so glad I don't engage in this racist nonsense. You tend to see and think racism because you are taught to always think and see racism. You can hardly read anything in the news without the descriptors being used such as; race, color, creed, wealth or lack thereof, employment, living conditions, place of residence, past history, age, schooling...etc. Humans are humans and that's as far as it should go.

Kristin , MSN, RN, CCRN
Heal: The Intensive Care of You
Yo! Thank you from a white girl who grew up in a low income housing project, where I was one of many minorities. 
I got hit a lot, but only by the parents I love and who otherwise are great people. A lot of people need to be hit with the truth they don’t ever want to hear. 

Openly Fae
Hermetic Musings
I've also had the "privilege" to be in the crowd of white folk allowed to use that word, although since I no longer live around the areas I was granted that, I have since switched to "my ninja" unless I'm singing along to actual rap.
I too have been the "designated whitey" - especially driving. I can pull stunt driver level stuff and no one notices a whitey doing ten over unless they're reckless.
And like you said, we could carry anything anywhere. I didn't usually, but I had lots of white friends who were willing. I liked my hands clean as possible.
Now when people know me at all - and I mostly keep to myself - I can mask up most of my street time and come across as straight edge, mass-produced office fodder.
But just because I left the street don't mean it left me. People best not let me catch them exploiting or hurting people. Then the skills come back out, you know?

Yosef Hirsh
Searching for Solomon
Not sure why but I read this article in my head to a hip-hop beat.

Grand Moff Porkins
Years ago, in my mostly white city, I heard “Check yo self, nigga!” I looked up as the only black man on the street made a slight head turn, then the Colemanesque young white man repeated his request, and it was clear he was talking to another white man. I got what he meant. Maybe he was LARPING, but if so, he had it down. Gotta commit to the bit.

Sloan Bashinsky
Sloan’s Newsletter
I commented here previously, and it kept nagging me that I had not said it’s my impression, that when Trump and his MAGAs say the 2020 presidential election was stolen, they mean it was stolen by blacks. Wnen I see photos and film clips of the Charlottesville Confederate monument removal protest, Trump MAGA rallies, and the January 6 coup attemp, I see oceans of white people.

sloanbashinsky@yahoo.com

Friday, June 7, 2024

Will the Hunter Bidden prosecutors call Narcotics Anonymous old timers as expert witnesses?

 

    I read online this morning  that President Biden was asked in Paris yesterday if he will pardon Hunter if he is convicted by jury for answering No, on October 2, 2018, to: 

Alcohol Tax & Firearms (ATF) Form 4473

Section 3: Are you an unlawful user of, or addicted to, marijuana, or any depressant, stimulant or narcotic drug, or any other controlled substance?

    President Biden answered that he would not pardon Hunter if he is convicted, and when asked about Donald Trump being convicted in New York City, President Biden said Trump got a fair trial and the jury convicted him.

    I read online yesterday that Hunter bought the gun on October 2, 2018, after he came out of 11 days of drug rehab, and that’s why he answered No on the form. 

    I read online this morning that Hunter claimed he got clean in 2019, and has been clean ever since.

    Excerpts from a BBC News article yesterday:

Hallie Biden, who is also the widow of the defendant's late brother Beau, said she had discovered the revolver amid piles of clothes and litter in the glove compartment of Hunter Biden's truck. 
Ms Biden, 50, also told the court she was "embarrassed and ashamed" to have started smoking crack cocaine herself after Mr Biden, 54, introduced her to the drug.
In often emotional, detailed testimony, she spoke of the pair's "volatile" and "off-on" relationship, as well as their struggles with drug use and agonising battles to recover. 
Concerned after seeing Mr Biden looking "exhausted" and fearing he could have relapsed into crack use, Ms Biden told jurors she had searched his truck early on the morning of 23 October 2018 - something she had frequently done. 
There, among piles of clothes and garbage, she had found "remnants" of crack cocaine as well as drug paraphernalia. 
“Oh, and the gun, obviously," she added.
Almost instantly, she recalled, panic set in. 
"I didn't want him to hurt himself, and I didn't want my kids to find it and hurt themselves," the mother-of-two said. 
"I was afraid to kind of touch it. I didn't know it was loaded," Ms Biden added.
Fearful, she wrapped the .38 calibre Colt Cobra revolver into a leather pouch, stuffed it into a purple "little gift shopping bag" and drove to a nearby grocery store, where she threw it in a rubbish bin.
"I realise it was a stupid idea now," she said. "But I was panicking." 
Initially, she did not plan to tell Mr Biden about what she had done. But when he woke up that morning, he realised it was missing. 
"Did you take that from me Hallie," read one angry text shown to jurors. "You really need to help me think right now, Hallie. This is very serious." 
At his urging, she returned to the store to find the gun but was unable to. She then filed a police report. 
"I'll take the blame," she texted him from the scene. "I don't want to live like this." 
Ms Biden also told the court that she had not see Mr Biden use crack cocaine in the days leading up to him buying the gun and her disposing of it.
Ms Biden testified that she had stopped using the drug in August 2018, but that he had continued to use.
The prosecutor asked on Thursday about a text message Hunter Biden had sent to Ms Biden the day after he bought the gun, saying he was waiting for a dealer named Mookie.
She told the court that had meant "he was buying crack cocaine".
Two days after the gun purchase, he texted Ms Biden that he was "sleeping on a car smoking crack".
The series of texts also included several emotional messages from Ms Biden in which she pleaded with him to get sober. 
"I'm afraid you're going to die," one message read. 
The defendant's lawyers explained the texts by suggesting their client had been lying about drug use to avoid seeing Hallie Biden - noting that she had had no way of knowing what he was actually doing at the time. 
During cross-examination, Ms Biden confirmed she had not seen him using drugs around this time. 
Abbe Lowell, Mr Biden's attorney, asked her whether the request to "help me get sober" could have also referred to alcohol - to which she agreed. 
The prosecution's case, however, rests on convincing jurors that he was an addict. 
Ms Biden's testimony was followed by Millard Greer, a former Delaware State Police lieutenant who recovered the weapon, as well as Edward Banner, an 80-year-old pensioner who found the weapon while looking for recyclables in the grocery store's bins. 
The prosecution is expected to call two more witnesses, including an FBI expert and a DEA agent, before resting its case.

    After reading that, I wondered if Abbe Lowell ever had up close and personal dealings with drug addicts, for whom sober means not using drugs, just as for alcoholics, sober means not using alcohol? Or, was Lowell simply depraved?

    I will now tell how I got to know drug addicts up close and personal. 

    In 2003, I became infected with awful skin abscesses caused by Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSAflesh-eating bacteria, which was common in Key West. 

    I was homeless, living in a tent in the wetlands near the Key West airport. I knew I could no longer live that way and survive, and I entered a halfway program offered by Florida Keys Outreach Coalition (FKOC), which provided room and board to anyone in need who could pass an alcohol/drug pee screen.

    To get into FKOC, I had to pass an alcohol and narcotics urine screen. FKOC clients were given random alcohol and narcotics urine screens, and if they flunked a screen, they were booted out immediately, regardless of time of day or night or weather conditions. FKOC clients were required to attend 12 Step meetings daily, and to get the person running a meeting to sign an attendance sheet that we were there on such and such date and time.

    Anchors Away on Whitehead Street was the Alcoholics Anonymous chapter house, and a room was provided for Narcotics Anonymous meetings. I attended AA meetings, and learned that when people spoke, they said, “Hi, I’m So and So, I’m an alcoholic.” When I spoke, I said, "Hi, I’m Sloan.”

    When I started attending meetings at Anchors Away, the angels who had been hard on my case since early 1987, took me through the 12 Steps and it was no damn fun, and there was nothing I could do about it, and that is how I learned the 12 Steps are a true spiritual path for anyone, addict or not- if God, or an angel of God, gets involved. If that doesn’t happen, the alcoholic relies on himself and his sponsor and regularly attends AA meetings to try to stay sober. 

    In an AA meeting, I told about how God was taking me throuugh the 12 Steps and it was no fun, and I told about a dream that had really shook me up. After the meeting, an old timer walked over to me and said he liked what I had said and there was going to be a meeting of old timers and would I like to attend? I said, yes. He asked who was my sponsor? I said, God. He gave me the look, and said I hadn’t learned anything in these walls. I said, actually, I had learned quite a lot, and I had read The Big Book, by Bob and Bill, and I had read all of the stuff on the walls, and there is nothing in any of it about having a human sponsor, and the Twelve Steps plainly say God is the sponsor. The old timer turned and walked away, and I did not get invited to the old timers meeting.

    I shifted to attending NA meetings, where people who spoke said, “Hi, I’m So and So, I’m an addict. After attending a few NA meetings, I felt the NA people were far more tuned in and rigorous about their predicament than were the AA people, who did not view themselves as addicts or alcohol as a drug. The NA people viewed alcohol as a drug and alcoholics as addicts.

Narcotics Anonymous Twelve Steps

We admitted that we were powerless over our addiction, that our lives had become unmanageable.
We came to believe that a Power greater than ourselves could restore us to sanity.
We made a decision to turn our will and our lives over to the care of God as we understood Him.
We made a searching and fearless moral inventory of ourselves.
We admitted to God, to ourselves, and to another human being the exact nature of our wrongs.
We were entirely ready to have God remove all these defects of character.
We humbly asked Him to remove our shortcomings.
We made a list of all persons we had harmed and became willing to make amends to them all.
We made direct amends to such people wherever possible, except when to do so would injure them or others.
We continued to take personal inventory and when we were wrong promptly admitted it.
We sought through prayer and meditation to improve our conscious contact with God as we understood Him, praying only for knowledge of His will for us and the power to carry that out.
Having had a spiritual awakening as a result of these steps, we tried to carry this message to addicts, and to practice these principles in all our affairs.

    I knew from when I lived in Boulder, Colorado,1987-1995, where I had friends who attended AA and NA meetings, that the relapse rate rate was 95 percent, and I although they did not want to admit it, I was able to get a few old timers at Anchors Away to say that was accurate. I learned that FKOC had a high relapse rate, and its graduates had a high relapse rate. That was not FKOC’s fault, but was the nature of the addiction beast.

   It is from that background that I observe the prosecution of Hunter Biden for answering “No” to this this question:

Alcohol Tax & Firearms (ATF) Form 4473 

Section 3: Are you an unlawful user of, or addicted to, marijuana, or any depressant, stimulant or narcotic drug, or any other controlled substance?

   I wonder if Hunter Biden’s defense team puts him on the witness stand to testify to his state of mind when he bought the gun and that he was not using illegal drugs at that point in time? 

    If Hunter testifies, the prosecution can ask if he learned in drug rehab that he is a drug addict for the rest of his life?

    The prosecution can ask Hunter if the rehab people told him to attend Narcotics Anonymous meetings daily after he got out of rehab? 

    The prosecution can ask Hunter if he attended NA meetings after he left rehab, before he bought the gun, and if so, how many NA meetings did he attend, and where did he attend those meetings?

    The prosecution can ask Hunter if he answered No on ATF form 4437 not knowing when he would start using again? 

    The prosecution can ask Hunter how long was it after he bought the gun that he started using again? 

    The prosecution can ask Hunter if he did not claim he got clean in 2019? 

    The prosecution can ask Hunter about texts to his girlfriend, Haile Biden, who was his deceased brother Beau's widow, in which he said he was going to see his drug dealer after he bought the gun.

    The prosecution can ask Hunter if he told the rehab people he was going to buy a gun after he left rehab? 

    The prosecution can put NA old timers on the witness stand, as expert witnesses, and ask them what getting sober means to them, and they will say not using drugs, including alcohol.

    The prosecution can ask NA old timers if drug users can be trusted to tell the truth, and it is a steep climb for recovering drug addicts to tell the truth, and the NA old timer experts will answer, Yes.

    The prosecution can ask NA old timers expert witnesses if addiction is a choice, and they will say, Yes, because any drug user can choose to seek help, go into rehab, get educated in rehab about what being an addict really is all about, and leave rehab determined to stay clean, be different, start a new life, and attend NA meetings, or go back to drugging.

    The prosecution can ask NA old timer witnesses what they think about Hunter buying a gun right after he got out of 11 days of rehab, and he didn’t tell anyone he bought the gun? I can imagine NA old timers saying that sends cold chills up and down their spines.

    If I were a juror, I would be freaked out that Hunter bought a gun right after he got out of rehab, and he didn’t tell anyone he bought the gun.

    If I were a juror, I would think President Biden and his family had moral and patriotic obligations to be good role models for all Americans, especially American children, and Hunter’s girlfriend  ditched the gun where even a child could find it, and the thought of voting to acquit Hunter sends cold chills up and down my spine.

    If the jury convicts Hunter, it falls on the presiding US District Court judge to impose sentence. 

    If this old lawyer who clerked for a US District Court judge, who presided over every criminal prosecution in Alabama, were the judge in Hunter's case, I would ask him if he agrees with the jury’s verdict? If he says, No, I give him a prison sentence in accord with the Federal Court Sentencing Guidelines.

    If Hunter says, Yes, I give him a suspended sentence and put him on probation and require he attend AA meetings every day for 3 years; he furnishes proof of that each month to his probation officer; he passes random drug screens for three years, the timing and place determined by his probation officer; and if he violates his probation, he goes to a federal prison for 3 years.

    It will be on a US Circuit Court of Appeals to agree or overrule me.

sloanbashinsky@yahoo.com


Thursday, June 6, 2024

America, no country for old men?

    My a friend Todd German down Key West way emailed me about yesterday’s post on Hunter Biden’s gun trial in federal court, in which I reported the gun was a .44 magnum and it was found by police officers in a trashcan in a poor neighborhood where Hunter had ditched it after he bought drugs from a drug dealer and he saw two cops show up, who wondered why he was in that neighborhood.

Hey Sloan, 
 
Wanted to reach out as some corrections are in order.  Not sure who your friend is but they aren’t looking at same facts as everyone else. 
 
The gun was .38-caliber Colt Cobra Special and Hunter didn’t throw it away, his girlfriend/sister-in-law did after she found it in his car.

There are countless articles confirming this as you note all over the news. 

I emailed him:

OMG!

Thanks. Todd

The gun caliber and how the gun was found were provided to me by someone who historically is reliable. 

Sloan

    My source mentioned both .38 calibre and .44 magnum made by Colt, and I thought my source meant Hunter’s gun was .44 magnum, and I said .44 magnum can stop a Peterbilt truck and a rhinoceros

    I took down the post and corrected it and its title, which had .44 magnum in it, and republished it as: Will President Biden pardon his son Hunter if he is convicted in federal court of fraudulently buying a.pistol?

    Over the years, I made factual mistakes in posts, which were my fault entirely, but nothing like the mistakes in yesterday’s post. 

    I was mortified. The internet and social media are full of spun and totally incorrect information. I wondered if it was time for me to set American politics aside? If American politics is no place for old men?

    No place for 81+ year old me.

    Joe Biden is 81.

    Donald Trump is 77.

    I see Joe Biden doing a lot of spinning and fact mangling in the news media.

    It’s gotten to where I don’t trust anything Trump says until proven otherwise.

    I can’t assign that to their advanced years, because I see the spinning and fact mangling happening on the right and on the left, on Facebook, in online forums, and in face to face conversations with people I know somewhat or even well.

    After receiving Todd’s email, I was glad the Angel of Death did not take me yet, because I really didn’t want to leave unattended the mess I had made.

    Todd and I ran many rivers together. I lived a good while in his home when I was homeless.

    He is a US Army Special Forces Combat Veteran. He is a Republican. He told me that he voted for Donald Trump in 2016. After the January 6, 2021 riot in the national Capitol, Todd told me that the rioters should have been shot dead, and I could quote him.

    Facebook terminated my Facebook account for posting that, and I opened a new Facebook account. Facebook rejected the messed up version of yesterday’s post, it violated their community standards - small favors:-).

    Yesterday, I saw news reports online that Trump said he never said Hillary should be locked up. In 2016, I saw a film clip of Trump at a MAGA rally, him and the MAGAs chanting, “Lock her up! Lock her up!” 

    In 2016, I said on my blog that Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton both should be locked up, in adjoining cells. I said Trump won because the Democrats ran the only candidate he could beat.

    In yesterday’s original and corrected post:

I heard that dirt Hillary Clintonshe had on the Bidens was how she got the Democrat nomination in 2016, before anyone knew about her dirt, and that, along with help from Julian Assange and Russian hackers and Vladimir Putin, is how Donald Trump got into the White House.

    I read several news reports yesterday of Trump saying if he wins in November his enemies will be prosecuted. 

    I read several news reports yesterday of witnesses for Trump in his various civil and criminal prosecutions against him being given raises or money.

    I view Trump as a cold-blooded predator, who preys on anything in front of him except his immediate family and current good friends.

    Alas, I have no use for Joe Biden, and I think Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. is wacko. and last night I renewed my selfish offer to God: my life for the lives of Donald Trump, Joe Biden and Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.

    Selfish, because I wake up each morning wishing the Lord had taken me in my sleep.

    Selfish, because I worry what it will be like for my children and their families if Trump gets back in the White House and his legions think they can do anything they want to do and he will pardon them.

    Selfish, because, I worry what it will be like for my children and their families if Trump loses in November and his enraged legions go gun-shooting ballistic crazy.

   Last night, my Birmingham area amiga Morticia texted me and we did another little jitterbug perfume waltz tango:

Morticia
If Hunter is found guilty and his daddy pardons him it will be bad. You know I can’t stand Trump and would like to see him get a long time at Rikers, but I think Hunter may have done as bad or actually worse! They both need to own up to their time.

Me
Hunter’s evil affects very few people, Trump is worse than Covid-19, he’s a plague. Lock them up in adjoining cells :-)

Morticia
Trump’s wanting the gag order lifted, I did not hear if a decision had been made. I hope the judge says no.

Me
I hope the judge gags Trump by incarcerating him.

Morticia
I am with you on that one. 
 
Morticia
Damnit, Georgia case paused indefinitely. I’m so sick of the Trump saga. Maybe the mother ship will come get all of us but them!

Me
The Georgia prosecutor screwed up that case all by her own pussy. 
Yes on mothership.

sloanbashinsky@yahoo.com

Tuesday, June 4, 2024

Will President Biden pardon his son Hunter if he is convicted in federal court of fraudulently buying a.pistol?

    Yesterday began the federal court trial of Hunter Biden for not disclosing on a federal form when he purchased a .38 Colt Cobra Special pistol that he was an active drug addict. He got caught when his girlfriend/sister-in-law she found the gun in his car and reported it to law enforcement.

    Someone texted me:

In the texts on his cell phone, Hunter texts his drug dealer for 2&2 (2=crack cocaine and heroin, &2 means enough for Hunter and someone else). He has to clarify he wants east coast powder heroin and not Mexican black tar. There is no question that his phone was used to solicit and purchase drugs.

    I texted back:

No worries, his Daddy will pardon him if he’s convicted, straight out of Donald Trump’s play book? Daddy already should have said on national TV that he will not pardon Hunter if he is convicted. So, Daddy lays low until after the November election to pardon Hunter?     

    I was emailed this BBC article, which says nothing about Hunter’s texts to the drug dealer.

Jury seated in Hunter Biden's federal gun trial 

June 3, 2024
Bernd Debusmann Jr,
BBC News, Washington
Hunter Biden faces up to 25 years in prison if convicted of the federal charges in Delaware.
With the strike of a judge's gavel in Delaware, Hunter Biden, the son of Joe Biden, became the first child of a sitting president to be a criminal defendant. 
Prosecutors allege the younger Biden, 54, lied about his drug use on application forms when he purchased a handgun in 2018. 
Mr Biden has pleaded not guilty to the charges.
Opening statements in the case are expected to begin Tuesday, after 12 jurors and four alternates were sworn in on Monday. 
If the jury finds him guilty of all three federal counts, Mr Biden could face up to 25 years in prison.
The trial - which comes as his father campaigns for re-election - is likely to see prosecutors delve into graphic details of Mr Biden's crack cocaine addiction, potentially providing fodder for the president's political foes.
President Biden has repeatedly declined to comment on the court case, but he said in a statement on the morning of the trial's start that he has "boundless love" and "confidence" in his son. 
"Hunter's resilience in the face of adversity and the strength he has brought to his recovery are inspiring to us," the elder Biden said. 
Here's what we know about the case. 
What are the charges? 
Mr Biden is facing three federal charges in the case: two counts of making false statements and one count of illegal gun possession. 
The charges all relate to his purchase of a revolver at a Delaware gun store in October 2018, which he kept for about 11 days. 
By Mr Biden's own admission, he was deep in the throes of a "full blown addiction" to crack cocaine at the time.
The two false statement charges stem from allegations that he lied about his drug use on a federally-mandated form when he purchased the weapon. 
Specifically, prosecutors allege that he falsely claimed that he was "not an unlawful user of and addicted to any stimulant narcotic drug" when he purchased a Colt Cobra Special revolver. 
The third count is related to his possession of a firearm while alleged to have been a drug user. 
The gun was discarded and discovered at a grocery store in Greenville, Delaware, prompting an investigation that ultimately led investigators back to the forms. 
How strong is the evidence? 
To convict Mr Biden, prosecutors will have to convince jurors that he knowingly made false statements on the form in a bid to deceive the store that sold him the pistol. 
Additionally, they will have to prove that Mr Biden was a drug user or addicted to drugs, and took possession of the gun despite knowing as much. 
US District Judge Maryellen Noreika has already ruled that defence lawyers cannot argue that the prosecution can only get a guilty verdict by proving Mr Biden was using drugs on the day he bought the weapon.
Instead, in a pre-trial hearing, the judge agreed with prosecutors' argument that they need only prove that "unlawful use (had) occurred recently enough to indicate that the individual (was) actively engaged in such conduct". 
In court filings made ahead of the trial's start, prosecutors suggested that they would rely, in part, on deeply personal text messages and other communications made while Mr Biden was in the throes of addiction. 
In one such text message cited in court documents, Mr Biden refers to himself as a "liar and a thief and a blame and a user and I'm delusional and an addict unlike beyond and above all other addicts that you know". 
The prosecution is also expected to rely on the testimonies of witnesses including ex-wife Kathleen Buhle and Mr Biden's ex-partner Hallie Biden - who is also the widow of Mr Biden's brother Beau.
Prosecutors will also be able to point to Mr Biden's own 2021 memoir, in which he detailed his experiences as a drug user who was "up twenty-four hours a day, smoking every 15 minutes, seven days a week".
"All my energy revolved around smoking drugs and making arrangements to buy drugs - feeding the beast," he wrote in the book. 
Hunter Biden has repeatedly accused Republicans of using his addiction and recovery to "embarrass" and attack his father
While Mr Biden has himself been quiet about the trial, legal documents filed by his lawyers suggest that they will focus on how much Mr Biden was aware of his addiction at the end of the purchase, and on the quality of the evidence itself. 
His primary attorney, Abbe Lowell, unsuccessfully sought permission from the court to call upon an expert witness who can testify about an addict's understanding of their substance abuse issues. 
In an interview with the BBC after Mr Biden's not guilty plea, South Texas College of Law Professor Dru Stevenson said that charges for illegal gun possession usually result in a "slam dunk case". 
"I don't think there's any question that [Mr Biden] will be convicted."
The third charge, regarding Mr Biden's alleged possession of a firearm while a drug user, is considered unusual, as it can be hard to prove someone is a drug user and has a gun. 
"It's just really rare that they would go after someone and prosecute them for this," Prof Stevenson said. "But this is a high-profile person and there's been members of Congress demanding he be prosecuted."
Among the most prominent pieces of evidence at the trial is likely to be the information on Mr Biden's infamous laptop, which has been the focus of intense media speculation and focus from conservative news outlets. 
The laptop has also been at the centre of unproven theories linking Mr Biden and his father to corruption, which they both deny. 
Mr Biden's own lawyers have argued that the computer was tampered with before it fell into the hands of investigators. 
The special counsel appointed to oversee the probes into Hunter Biden, David Weiss, has said that the tampering argument is a "conspiracy theory" with "no supporting evidence." 
In a May filing, prosecutors wrote that the laptop contained "significant evidence" of Mr Biden's guilt.
Could he go to prison if convicted? 
The two false statement charges each carry a maximum sentence of up to 10 years, while the third count is punishable by up to five years - meaning that Mr Biden could face up to 25 years in prison if convicted. 
Actual sentences for federal crimes, however, are typically less than the maximum penalties specified by law. 
If Mr Biden is convicted, the judge in the case will ultimately determine the sentence after considering sentencing guidelines and a variety of other legal factors. 
Hunter Biden's other charges
In addition to the gun charges in Delaware, Mr Biden is facing separate federal charges in California over allegations that he evaded a tax assessment, failed to properly file and pay taxes and filed a fraudulent tax return. Several months after the spectacular collapse of a plea deal that would address both sets of charges last year, Mr Biden also pleaded not guilty to the tax charges.

    This old lawyer, who once clerked for a US District Judge that presided over every federal prosecution in north Alabama, wonders why Hunter did not make a plea deal in the gun case? I found this BBC article on the federal tax evasion case, which perhaps explains why no plea deal was offered to Hunter in the federal gun case? The same US District Judge presides over both federal cases.

Hunter Biden's plea deal collapsed. What happens now?
27 July 2023
By Anthony Zurcher,
North America correspondent, 
@awzurcher
Reuters
Hunter Biden's deal with prosecutors to plead guilty to two misdemeanour tax evasion charges and defer punishment for lying on a gun license application collapsed in dramatic fashion in a Delaware federal courtroom on Wednesday.
As a room full of reporters watched, the presiding judge, Maryellen Noreika, questioned the assembled lawyers about details of the agreement, revealing that the federal team led by David Weiss, the Donald Trump-appointed US attorney in Delaware who is in charge of the Biden investigation, and Mr Biden's lawyers, had very different views on what it contained.
Eventually, Mr Biden's side agreed to the prosecution's view - but that proved to be just the first stumbling block. The judge then questioned the gun deal - in which no charges would be filed if Mr Biden stayed out of legal trouble and did not attempt to purchase firearms for two years. 
The agreement made Ms Noreika, rather than the justice department, the arbiter of whether Mr Biden was keeping his end of the agreement, a provision she found to be of questionable legality. 
After she told the lawyers she could not decide the matter without further review, Mr Biden pleaded not guilty to the two tax charges and the judge told the sides they would have 30 days to reach a new agreement that addressed her concerns.
"You are all saying, 'Just rubber stamp the agreement'," Ms Noreika told the lawyers. "I'm not in a position to accept or reject it. I need to defer."
In the meantime, there are more questions than there are answers.
What did the prosecution and defence lawyers disagree about?
At the heart of Wednesday's dispute was exactly how much immunity from future prosecution the plea deal will give Hunter Biden. Defence attorneys said they understood that the agreement would protect their client from any future indictments by federal prosecutors over his business dealings.
Federal prosecutors disagreed, telling the judge the plea agreement only covered tax crimes and Mr Biden's false claim he was not a drug addict when he applied for a 2018 gun license.
It's typical for defence attorneys to press for the broadest level of protection for their clients when entering plea negotiations. Prosecutors, on the other hand, tend to want to keep their options open. These details are usually hammered out well ahead of a courtroom appearance, however.
The Biden team has a particular interest in limiting the justice department's range of future options, both in new prosecutions and determining violations of the gun agreement, to prevent a Republican president from reopening the inquiry in 2025.
In the end, the two sides agreed that Mr Biden would be protected from further tax and gun charges stemming from activities that took place between 2014 and 2019.
When asked by congressional investigators, Mr Weiss and federal prosecutors have said that their investigations are "ongoing" despite the plea deal. 
During their Wednesday court appearance, Judge Noreika specifically asked the prosecution team about whether the plea deal would prevent a prosecution for violation of the Foreign Agents Registration Act (Fara) - a federal law that requires individuals who are engaging in political advocacy on behalf of foreign governments, businesses or nationals to inform the federal government of their activities.
The prosecutors said it did not. 
There has been widespread speculation that Mr Weiss's team has been looking into possible Fara violations, given that Mr Biden had frequent contacts with Chinese and Ukrainian individuals and businesses as part of his international business dealings.
While the prosecutors did not confirm this was an ongoing area of investigation, the judge's questions will further fuel speculation.
Fara prosecutions were rare until recent years and typically come through plea deals and not trials.
Former Trump campaign chair Paul Manafort pleaded guilty to a Fara charge in 2019, as did former Republican fundraiser Elliott Broidy in 2020. Both were subsequently pardoned by Mr Trump.
What happens next in the case?
The clock is ticking on the 30-day deadline for prosecutors and Mr Biden's lawyers to reach a plea agreement that won't collapse when it reaches the courtroom. 
If they can't, the judge could set a trial date for the two misdemeanour tax violations the presidential son is already facing - and prosecutors could add more serious criminal violations to the charge sheet.
If a new deal is reached, Judge Noreika will have to approve it - and then issue a sentence. While the prosecutors had recommended parole and no jail time as part of the previous deal, the judge will make her own determination as to the appropriate punishment.
Meanwhile, congressional Republicans, who are conducting their own investigation of Mr Biden's business activities will continue their inquiries. 
They had actively opposed the previous plea agreement, which they considered too lenient for Mr Biden.
House Oversight Committee Chair James Comer has said that committee Republicans believe that President Biden may be more closely tied to Hunter Biden's businesses than was previously disclosed.
Mr Weiss had promised to testify to Congress sometime after August to explain the plea deal and his prosecutorial decisions, but that becomes less likely if his office takes Mr Biden to trial on tax charges or is actively investigating other possible criminal violations.
  

    The presiding federal judge was appointed by President Donald Trump and is being considered for appointment to a US Circuit Court of Appeals by President Joe Biden. 

    From Wikipedia:








 

Maryellen Noreika (born July 12, 1966) is an American lawyer and jurist serving since 2018 as a U.S. district judge of the United States District Court for the District of Delaware.
Biography
Noreika was born in 1966 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. She received a Bachelor of Science from Lehigh University in 1988 and a Master of Arts in biology from Columbia University in 1990. She then attended the University of Pittsburgh School of Law, where she was a member of the University of Pittsburgh Law Review. She graduated in 1993 with a Juris Doctor, magna cum laude, and Order of the Coif membership.[1]
After law school, Noreika entered private practice at the Wilmington, Delaware law firm Morris, Nichols, Arsht & Tunnell. During her 25 years at Morris Nichols, Noreika served as counsel in more than 500 cases, while specializing in patent law, and representing parties in cases involving biotechnology, chemistry, consumer products, computer science, medical devices, and pharmaceuticals.[2] Noreika worked at Morris, Nichols, Arsht & Tunnell until she became a judge.
Before becoming a judge, she made campaign donations to both Republican and Democratic candidates, but mostly to Republicans.[3][4]
Federal judicial service
On December 20, 2017, President Donald Trump nominated Noreika to serve as a United States District Judge of the United States District Court for the District of Delaware, to the seat vacated by Judge Gregory M. Sleet, who assumed senior status on May 1, 2017. Her nomination was part of a bipartisan package of nominees which included Colm Connolly.[5] On February 14, 2018, a hearing on her nomination was held before the Senate Judiciary Committee[6] On March 15, 2018, her nomination was reported out of committee by a voice vote.[7] On August 1, 2018, her nomination was confirmed by a voice vote.[8] She received her judicial commission on August 9, 2018.[9] Maryellen Noreika has been considered a potential nominee for a federal judgeship in the Federal Circuit by President Joe Biden.[10]

    I wonder if it is being argued that violating the federal Gun Control Act of 1968, by lying on a Form 4473, is 5 years of federal time per charge, and per Federal Sentencing Guidelines, Hunter can not receive a 5 year concurrent sentence, he will receive 5 year CONSECUTIVE sentences? In the Federal Prison System, there is no parole. Parole for federal prisoners was abolished in the 1980's.

  However, federal judges routinely put first offenders who show remorse on probation, when no one was injured and nobody got rich. So, I wonder why Hunter was not offered a probation plea deal? Unlike Donald Trump in the hush money and other criminal prosecutions against him, President Biden and Hunter have not railed against the US Attorney, ATF and Judge Noreika. So I wonder again, why there is no probation plea deal, or if there was, why Hunter didn’t take it?

    All this fuss over one gun a drug addict seems bought and he didn’t shoot anybody with it, he didn’t go into a school and shoot children and their teachers, but he didn’t disclose when he bought the gun that he was an active drug addict. Yet his Daddy is helping Israel kill and maim a lot of unarmed civilians in Gaza, and Donald Trump may never be tried for trying to overthrow the national government.

    I heard that dirt Hillary Clinton had on the Bidens was how she got the Democrat nomination in 2016, before anyone knew about her dirt, and that, along with help from Julian Assange and Russian hackers and Vladimir Putin, is how Donald Trump got into the White House. So what the heck, perhaps the Democrats should stand up and take a bow? 

  Without his father’s influence as Barack Obama’s vice president, I don’t see how Hunter could have made a fortune off Ukraine. 

    If I were hired today to represent Hunter, I would ask Judge Noreika for a recess of the trial, and out of the jury’s presence, I would advise Hunter to take the witness stand, be sworn in, tell Judge Noreika that he lied on the gun application form, he was an active drug addict at the time, he had no self control, which is how it is with addicts, and say he’s sorry he didn’t do this sooner, and he isn’t an addict any more, and he won’t accept a pardon from his president father. If Hunter does that, I put into evidence recent pee drug screens administered by a government approved agency, which Hunter had passed, and I  ask Judge Noreika to dismiss the jury and put Hunter on probation.

    If Hunter doesn’t do what I advise him to do, I ask Judge Noreika to allow me to withdraw from the case.

sloanbashinsky@yahoo.com