New Yorker (June 10)
Now that a New York jury has convicted former President Trump of thirty-four felony counts, “the American people will decide to what extent they care.” But the verdict is hardly the only key to understanding the impact of a second Trump term. “Even the most summary assessment of Trump’s rhetoric, actions, and intentions makes clear that the election in November is a matter of emergency. To return an unstable and malevolent authoritarian to the White House risks wounding American democracy in ways that would likely take decades to repair.”
Tags: Actions, Authoritarian, Convicted, Election, Emergency, Felony counts, Intentions, Jury, Malevolent, New York, President, Rhetoric, Trump, U.S., Verdict, White House
Wall Street Journal (May 30)
“Donald Trump became the first former president ever convicted of a crime, with a Manhattan jury finding him guilty Thursday of 34 felonies for falsifying records to cover up hush money paid to a porn star. The historic verdict… could threaten his 2024 bid to return to the White House.”
Tags: 34 felonies, Convicted, Cover up, Crime, Falsifying records, Guilty, Historic, Hush money, Jury, Manhattan, Porn star, President, Trump, Verdict
The Guardian (November 11)
Sam Bankman-Fried, the convicted cryptocurrency fraudster, “talked a lot of venture capitalists into pouring millions of dollars into his business. Maybe they should be more careful next time. Despite protestations of improving VC due diligence, little is likely to change due to the fear of missing out (FOMO). So-called reforms are instead likely to amount to “stable door securely locked… until next time.”
Tags: Bankman-Fried, Careful, Convicted, Cryptocurrency, Dollars, Due diligence, FOMO, Fraudster, Improving, Protestations, Venture capitalists
New York Times (January 7)
“It wasn’t hard to see, when it began, that it would end exactly the way it has. Donald Trump is America’s willful arsonist, the man who lit the match under the fabric of our constitutional republic.” He should be immediately impeached and convicted. “Trump is too dangerous to leave in office for even another minute.”
