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Confidence Man review: Maggie Haberman takes down Trump

  
Via:  Vic Eldred  •  2 years ago  •  6 comments

By:   Lloyd Green

Confidence Man review: Maggie Haberman takes down Trump
The New York Times reporter presents a forensic account of the damage he has done to America

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Maggie Haberman, the New York Times' Trump whisperer, delivers. Her latest book is much more than 600 pages of context, scoop and drama. It is a political epic, tracing Donald Trump's journey from the streets of Queens to Manhattan's Upper East Side, from the White House to Mar-a-Lago, his Elba. There, the 45th president holds court - and broods and plots his return.

Kushner camping tale one of many bizarre scenes in latest Trump book Read more

Haberman gives Trump and those close to him plenty of voice - and rope. The result is a cacophonous symphony. Confidence Man informs and entertains but is simultaneously absolutely not funny. Trumpworld presents a reptilian tableau - reality TV does Lord of the Flies.

For just one example, Mark Meadows, Trump's last White House chief of staff, is depicted as erratic and detestable. Then there's the family. Haberman reports how, after the 2016 election, Melania Trump won a renegotiated pre-nuptial agreement. Haberman also describes Trump repeatedly dumping on his son-in-law, Jared Kushner. If only he looked like Tom Brady and spoke in a deeper register. If only Ivanka had not converted to Judaism.

The abuse gets absurd - even a kind of baroque. According to Haberman, at one 2020 campaign strategy meeting Trump implied Kushner might be brutally attacked, even raped, if he ever went camping: "Can you imagine Jared and his skinny ass camping? It'd be like something out of Deliverance."

The reader, however, should not weep for Jared. In Haberman's telling, he is the kid who was born on third base and mistakes his good fortune with hitting a triple. For his part, Kushner is shown trashing Steve Bannon, the far-right ideologue who was campaign chair and chief White House strategist but was forced out within months.

Haberman catches Kushner gleefully asking a White House visitor: "Did you see I cut Bannon's balls off?"

To quote Peter Navarro, like Bannon now a former Trump official under indictment, "nepotism and excrement roll downhill".

As it happens, Bannon's testicles grew back. Like Charlie Kushner, Jared's father, he received a Trump pardon. Bannon also helped propagate the big lie that Trump won the election, stoking the Capitol attack.

These days, Bannon awaits sentencing, convicted of contempt of Congress. He also faces felony fraud charges arising from an alleged border-wall charity scam. In Trump's universe, there is always a grift.

For Confidence Man, Haberman interviewed Trump three times. He confesses that he is drawn to her, like a moth to a flame.

"I love being with her," he says. "She's like my psychiatrist".

The daughter of Clyde Haberman, a legendary New York Times reporter, is not flattered or amused. She sees through her subject.

"The reality is that he treats everyone like they are his psychiatrists," Haberman writes. "All present a chance for him to vent or test reactions or gauge how his statements are playing or discover how he is feeling."

Also, Trump and Haberman have not always had a rapport. When he was president, she would interview him and he would attack her. In April 2018, Trump tweeted that Haberman was a Clinton "flunkie" he didn't know or speak with, a "third-rate reporter" at that. He called her "Maggot Haberman" and even contemplated obtaining her phone records to identify her sources.

Trump is 76 but he remains the envious boy from a New York outer borough, face pressed against the Midtown glass. Haberman is not the only Manhattan reporter he has courted and attacked. In 2018, he threatened Michael Wolff for writing Fire and Fury, the Trump book that started it all. Later, he welcomed Wolff to Mar-a-Lago.

Haberman vividly captures Trump's lack of couth. For just one example, according to Haberman the president chose to enrich his first meeting with a foreign leader, Theresa May, by asking the British prime minister to "imagine if some animals with tattoos raped your daughter and she got pregnant".

Each of Trump's three supreme court justices voted to overturn Roe v Wade. One might wonder how the young woman in Trump's hypothetical would feel about that.

Haberman also pierces Trump's refusal to release his tax returns. All that talk about an "audit" was a simple dodge, birthed on a campaign plane.

In the run-up to Super Tuesday, the crucial day of primaries in March 2016, aides confronted Trump about his taxes. The candidate, Haberman writes, "thought for a second about how to 'get myself out of this', as he said. He leaned back, before snapping up to a sudden thought.

01:13 Trump sued by NY attorney general for fraud - video

"'Well, you know my taxes are under audit. I always get audited … So what I mean is, well I could just say, 'I'll release them when I'm no longer under audit. 'Cause I'll never not be under audit.'"

These days, the Trump Organization faces criminal tax fraud charges. Together with Ivanka, Don Jr and Eric, his children from his first marriage, Trump is also being sued for fraud by Letitia James, the New York attorney general.

As a younger reporter, Haberman did two stints at the New York Post, Rupert Murdoch's flagship US tabloid. Murdoch's succession plans - it's Lachlan, he told Trump - appear in Confidence Man. So does Tucker Carlson, the headline-making Fox News host and kindred spirit to Vladimir Putin.

Trump made up audit excuse for not releasing tax returns on the fly, new book says Read more

According to Haberman, Carlson met Kushner and demanded Trump commute Roger Stone's conviction for perjury.

"What happened to Roger Stone should never happen to anyone in this country of any political party," Carlson reportedly thundered, threatening to go public.

Stone has since emerged as a central figure in the January 6 insurrection. Apparently, he has a thing for violence. For some Republicans, a commitment to "law and order" is elastic.

When it comes to the attempt to overturn the election and the Capitol attack it fueled, Trump's fate rests with prosecutors in Washington DC and Fulton county, Georgia.

That old campaign chant from 2016, "Lock her up"? It carries its own irony.


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Vic Eldred
Professor Principal
1  seeder  Vic Eldred    2 years ago

mabermanmaggie_102517getty.jpg?w=2000&ssl=1
Maggie Haberman


The Book goes on sale tomorrow


For those with short memeories, this is what Maggie Haberman was saying about the Clinton campaign and her fellow "journalists" during the years of media lies:

"The New York Times senior White House correspondent Maggie Haberman and reporter Kenneth Vogel are slamming  Hillary Clinton’s  campaign and the Democratic National Committee (DNC), saying they lied about funding for the so-called Trump dossier.

“When I tried to report this story, Clinton campaign lawyer @marceelias pushed back vigorously, saying ‘You (or your sources) are wrong,’ ” Vogel tweeted, referring to Clinton campaign lawyer Marc Elias.

When I tried to report this story, Clinton campaign lawyer  @marceelias  pushed back vigorously, saying “You (or your sources) are wrong.”  — Kenneth P. Vogel (@kenvogel)  October 24, 2017

{mosads}The Washington Post in a bombshell  report  late Tuesday said that Elias’s legal firm hired Fusion GPS, a private research firm based in Washington, D.C., to provide opposition research on candidate Donald Trump.

Fusion GPS hired former British MI6 intelligence officer Christopher Steele to lead research, eventually resulting in a 35-page document that included claims against the Trump campaign and its alleged ties to Russia along with scandalous accusations about the candidate himself.

The dossier was shopped around to numerous media outlets for months before being published by BuzzFeed last January.

“Folks involved in funding this lied about it, and with sanctimony, for a year,” Haberman tweeted to her more than 650,000 followers on Tuesday.

Folks involved in funding this lied about it, and with sanctimony, for a year  — Maggie Haberman (@maggieNYT)  October 24, 2017"



 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
1.1  JohnRussell  replied to  Vic Eldred @1    2 years ago

Not sure what your point is. 

But dont worry Vic, MAGA will not be influenced by this latest attempt to reveal the backstage truth about Donald Trump. She is part of the deep state so it means she is persecuting the poor guy. 

There have been at least a half dozen books written about the dysfunction in Trump's inner circle, and his ridiculous vanity, self-absorption, serial lying, misogyny, racism and well, stupidity. One of the first such books revealed that Trump's first Secretary Of State called him a fucking moron after he left the room.  Gee, I wonder how many other presidents have had that happen to them? 

Trump lives in a world where he is always right. There is an aspect of mental disease where the afflicted believes that things are true or false depending on what the sick person believes about them. That is Trump, he thinks things are so because he believes they are so. He is a magical figure in his own mind. 

There is no sign that Trumps true believers will be affected by Haberman's book, or any book, but I'm sure it is entertaining. 

 
 
 
Vic Eldred
Professor Principal
1.1.1  seeder  Vic Eldred  replied to  JohnRussell @1.1    2 years ago
Not sure what your point is. 

My point is that major press organizations either knew that the dossier had been funded by the Clintons or they didn't care, yet they still wrote stories about it as if the dossier was a credible intelligence report. Looking back on it now, we can see why it went on for so long.


There have been at least a half dozen books written 

At least that on Trump alone. I can think of only one book on Biden. Didn't Biden get 80 Million votes?  That's rather odd, isn't it?


Trump lives in a world where he is always right.

More often than not, he is.


There is no sign that Trumps true believers will be affected by Haberman's book

The purpose of this site is to let everyone have their say. It's the same with the Book Group that Bob left to us.

 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
1.1.2  JohnRussell  replied to  Vic Eldred @1.1.1    2 years ago
Trump lives in a world where he is always right.

More often than not, he is.

Not only did Trump lie to the public 30,000 times , while in office, the newspapers Washington Post and Toronto Globe and Mail kept a detailed record of them. 

By definition , when you lie you are not "right". 

There is no point in even dialoguing with people who think lying 30,000 times is compatible with being right. 

 
 
 
Vic Eldred
Professor Principal
1.1.3  seeder  Vic Eldred  replied to  JohnRussell @1.1.2    2 years ago
the newspapers Washington Post and Toronto Globe and Mail kept a detailed record of them. 

We've already debunked much of what the Post listed as lies, remember?

 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
1.1.4  JohnRussell  replied to  Vic Eldred @1.1.3    2 years ago

You are living in a dream world. 

 
 

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