...USMB Book Club ----....Lotsa new books on Don Trump ...

At this point it's abundantly clear who/what Trump is
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True that.
Yes, we all hope folks recognize the quality of Don Trump's character and competency.
But still, any one of us here can read numerous posts lauding him as a great president, an admirable human being, a worthy hero. I've long called those posters," T.D.S".....Trump Devoted Sycophants.

But the point ---and the value ---of these books is that they will be embedded in the historical record. Just like, say, a re-telling of a conversation by Nicholas Hay between Abe Lincoln and, say, Edwin Stanton, his Secretary of War, or some other personage.
They become part of the matrix of history. And add nuance, understanding, and transparency to matters that we common citizens normally have no access to....but for an account by witnesses or participants.

And so such will be this wave of books on Don Trump's presidency.

In fact, to that point, today's Politico had an interesting treatment on this oh-so-current development of books about Trump hitting the news and the shelves.

You can read the whole enchilada here: Trump rages over post-presidential books he did interviews for

But, as an assist, here is a taster I pulled from the long Politico article:




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"Trump rages over post-presidential books he did interviews for"

The avalanche of coming books has caused recriminations. And there is anxiety about what’s to come.
07/15/2021 04:30 AM EDT

"He knew it was coming. But former President Donald Trump still was not pleased.

Fear is mounting, about the tea-spilling to come. In particular, Trump officials are anxiously awaiting the books set to be published by actual colleagues, chief among them counselor to the president Kellyanne Conway and Jared Kushner, who plan to write their own accounts of the Trump presidency.

“I think it’s fraught right now as to who is telling the truth,” said a Trump adviser. “They’re all trying to go back in time and curate their own images.”

Privately, former administration officials and top campaign aides have shared concerns about Conway’s upcoming tell-all in particular. The ex-president’s loyal former counselor is expected to give a hold-no-punches account of her time in the White House and those she worked alongside. Conway herself sat down with Trump for her book at Mar-a-Lago.

According to an adviser, Trump, who is sensitive to how history will remember him, “said that I think if you can improve the book 3, 5, 10 percent [by participating], that matters.” But the publications have, instead, further muddied his reemergence on the political scene. After months of keeping a relatively low profile, the former president has hit the trail and done news interviews with friendly outlets in which he not only continued to falsely claim the election was stolen from him, but praised the insurrectionists who stormed the Capitol at his encouragement on Jan. 6.

Those who know Trump suspect that he is content to be at the center of conversation, no matter how unflattering the conversation may be, under the mantra that all press is good press.

“He thinks that, ‘Oh, they’re talking about me, me, me,’” said an adviser.

, Trump publicly bristled at another excerpt from Bender’s book, in which it was reported that he and former Vice President Mike Pence got into a heated argument over the hiring of political adviser Corey Lewandowski. Bender stood by his reporting, which he said came from multiple sources.

As the excerpts and subsequent recriminations have piled up, people in Trump’s inner circle have criticized Trump’s decision to cooperate with the book authors. Some recalled Trump giving access to Wolff and veteran reporter Bob Woodward during his time as president, only to then erupt over the material that they ended up publishing.

“I understand the rationale, but it was a strategic mistake to sit down with these folks — you’re giving them credibility. It’s hard to say, ‘I sat down with them and they got it wrong.’ So they’ve created a sense of credibility that makes it harder to critique,” said Sean Spicer, Trump’s former press secretary…”

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"There are a lot of people trying to cash in on partisan idiots .... "

Well, sure, we live in entrepreneurial times, so if one identifies a need or a want, it seems not wrong to monetize it, if legal.

But beyond whatever reward is realized by the author or publisher or bookseller.......there is the added societal benefit of gaining a bit more transparency into the machinations of our political dynamic, and the calculations and characters impacting it.

If these reporters didn't tell us......how would we know?

It's not like we ALL work in the White House or high in an agency and thus have privy to that level of decision making.
So, journalism does what journalism is supposed to do......inform.

I'm cool with that.
Except most of that list is made up of partisan drivel and lies.

IF there was honesty in them then sure. Wolff has already been shown to be a charlatan with his first book and there is the second sitting on the top of your list selling as though he released a hard hitting, factual account the last time. With an absolute dearth of reporting in the last several years, it is impossible to trust any of the bullshit coming from these guys.

Who cares. The more money democrats spend buying porn, the less they will have to donate to their cult.
Because they vote based on that porn.
 
I don't need to tell anyone here that there is beginning to be a wave of 'insider accounts' contained in a whole handful of new books chronicling the Trump presidency.

Here are several that have been in the news within the last week. (plus, at the end of this list I include a quote (from 'I alone') from William Barr that seems to encapsulate a fairly common sentiment that I myself have heard from my uber-Conservative or even my GOP friends..
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  • LANDSLIDE
    The Final Days of the Trump White House

    By Michael Wolff

“The strength of Landslide comes less from these stories and more from a coherent argument that Wolff, in partnership with his sources, makes about how we should understand the period between Nov. 3 and Jan. 20. Most quickly produced books about political events don’t do that.”
Nicholas Lemann, The New York Times

Michael Wolff on Donald Trump’s Last Days (for Now)
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".....behind-the-scenes story of Trump's final year in office, by Phil Rucker and Carol Leonnig, the Pulitzer-Prize winning reporters and authors of the #1 New York Times bestseller, A Very Stable Genius

The true story of what took place in Donald Trump’s White House during a disastrous 2020 has never before been told in full. What was really going on around the president, as the government failed to contain the coronavirus and over half a million Americans perished? Who was influencing Trump after he refused to concede an election he had clearly lost and spread lies about election fraud? To answer these questions, Phil Rucker and Carol Leonnig reveal a dysfunctional and bumbling presidency’s inner workings in unprecedented, stunning detail.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



  • “Frankly, We Did Win This Election: The Inside Story of How Trump Lost “
    by Michael C. Bender (Author)

One Amazon review:
"I wanted to like this book. Bender did so many interviews for it – 150 with Trump and those connected to the campaign or administration. It's so difficult to organize all that into a smoothly flowing narrative, which he does. Also, it gets better when he gets to 2020, particularly with regard to George Floyd protests and Trump's disproportionate reaction to them. Maybe its more interesting because he's describing people around Trump who are more interesting and smarter than the campaign types. (Milley speaks for many when he tells Stephen Miller to "Shut the f- up.")"
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Amazon Reviewer: " Front Row is filled with stories about the Trump Administration that I had heard about but never with this detail. The author is objective in his storytelling. Not afraid to compliment the President where appropriate or criticize him when deserved.

For readers looking for an objective evaluation of this President, it's almost impossible to find—but this book pulls it off. For people looking for the inside scoop, this book is perfect. From the infamous trip down the escalator to the crazy events in the White House briefing room, you hear the president's own voice as told by the best reporter on TV today.

I've never written an Amazon review before, but this book was worth it. The book arrived Wednesday morning and I finished it an hour ago. Couldn't put it down.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


And then the quoted conversation that, in my narrow world, confirmed what I have heard from friends, neighbors, and acquaintances.
To wit:


"Barr counsels him that “I feel like you are going to lose the election… I feel like you are actually losing touch with your own base…


“I have yet to meet anybody who supports you who hasn’t said to me, ‘We love the president, but would you please tell him to turn it back a bit?’… You are going to lose because there’s going to be enough people who otherwise would vote for you who are just tired of the acrimony, the pettiness, the punching down and picking a fight at every moment, and the apparent chaos, and they’re just going to say, ‘We’re tired of this shit.’…

“I think that if you wanted to you could walk into a second term, COVID and all. You could go down in history as an amazing president, and it’s yours for the taking. But it’s about you, and you’re turning off enough people to lose the election.”

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What William Barr is reported to have told Don Trump tracks closely with what Trump's own pollster, Tony Fabrizio, told him AFTER he had lost. To wit: people think you are untrustworthy, and incompetent.*

This has been linked-to, and discussed on this venue several times.
I'm not reading them, but a fantastic thread. I salute you.
 
TDS sells.

Besides, keep the people's eyes and ears on all the mean stuff Trump tweeted, and nobody will notice how badly Biden is fucking up.
It's like the Titanic captain blaming the collision with an ice berg on the music the band was playing.

Biden is giving the Chinese spies and agents in America cart blanche to rob us blind
while the left fixates on Trump manners and hair.

You can't drive forward with eyes fixed on the rear view mirror. The leftists are a curse
and an anchor hung around America's neck.
 
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I don't need to tell anyone here that there is beginning to be a wave of 'insider accounts' contained in a whole handful of new books chronicling the Trump presidency.

Here are several that have been in the news within the last week. (plus, at the end of this list I include a quote (from 'I alone') from William Barr that seems to encapsulate a fairly common sentiment that I myself have heard from my uber-Conservative or even my GOP friends..
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


  • LANDSLIDE
    The Final Days of the Trump White House

    By Michael Wolff

“The strength of Landslide comes less from these stories and more from a coherent argument that Wolff, in partnership with his sources, makes about how we should understand the period between Nov. 3 and Jan. 20. Most quickly produced books about political events don’t do that.”
Nicholas Lemann, The New York Times

Michael Wolff on Donald Trump’s Last Days (for Now)
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



".....behind-the-scenes story of Trump's final year in office, by Phil Rucker and Carol Leonnig, the Pulitzer-Prize winning reporters and authors of the #1 New York Times bestseller, A Very Stable Genius

The true story of what took place in Donald Trump’s White House during a disastrous 2020 has never before been told in full. What was really going on around the president, as the government failed to contain the coronavirus and over half a million Americans perished? Who was influencing Trump after he refused to concede an election he had clearly lost and spread lies about election fraud? To answer these questions, Phil Rucker and Carol Leonnig reveal a dysfunctional and bumbling presidency’s inner workings in unprecedented, stunning detail.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



  • “Frankly, We Did Win This Election: The Inside Story of How Trump Lost “
    by Michael C. Bender (Author)

One Amazon review:
"I wanted to like this book. Bender did so many interviews for it – 150 with Trump and those connected to the campaign or administration. It's so difficult to organize all that into a smoothly flowing narrative, which he does. Also, it gets better when he gets to 2020, particularly with regard to George Floyd protests and Trump's disproportionate reaction to them. Maybe its more interesting because he's describing people around Trump who are more interesting and smarter than the campaign types. (Milley speaks for many when he tells Stephen Miller to "Shut the f- up.")"
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Amazon Reviewer: " Front Row is filled with stories about the Trump Administration that I had heard about but never with this detail. The author is objective in his storytelling. Not afraid to compliment the President where appropriate or criticize him when deserved.

For readers looking for an objective evaluation of this President, it's almost impossible to find—but this book pulls it off. For people looking for the inside scoop, this book is perfect. From the infamous trip down the escalator to the crazy events in the White House briefing room, you hear the president's own voice as told by the best reporter on TV today.

I've never written an Amazon review before, but this book was worth it. The book arrived Wednesday morning and I finished it an hour ago. Couldn't put it down.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


And then the quoted conversation that, in my narrow world, confirmed what I have heard from friends, neighbors, and acquaintances.
To wit:


"Barr counsels him that “I feel like you are going to lose the election… I feel like you are actually losing touch with your own base…


“I have yet to meet anybody who supports you who hasn’t said to me, ‘We love the president, but would you please tell him to turn it back a bit?’… You are going to lose because there’s going to be enough people who otherwise would vote for you who are just tired of the acrimony, the pettiness, the punching down and picking a fight at every moment, and the apparent chaos, and they’re just going to say, ‘We’re tired of this shit.’…

“I think that if you wanted to you could walk into a second term, COVID and all. You could go down in history as an amazing president, and it’s yours for the taking. But it’s about you, and you’re turning off enough people to lose the election.”

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


What William Barr is reported to have told Don Trump tracks closely with what Trump's own pollster, Tony Fabrizio, told him AFTER he had lost. To wit: people think you are untrustworthy, and incompetent.*

This has been linked-to, and discussed on this venue several times.

LOL
1627404522168.png
 
TDS sells.

Besides, keep the people's eyes and ears on all the mean stuff Trump tweeted, and nobody will notice how badly Biden is fucking up.

View attachment 512879

Exactly.

Leftists love story time because it gives them time to ignore everything, which they champion. Look at O'bama for instance, he's worth 100 million because leftists picked up his book.
 

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