Mike Rothschild, an actor who ‘broke’ into disinformation by publishing a pro-Trump fashion article in the NYPost, clearly doesn’t understand the Don.
Having extensively studied and published a book on Trump along with the disinformation campaigns connected to him, has almost nothing to do with what Mike, who doesn’t have an extensive background in behavior, opines.
Trump took and kept specific documents apart from the boxes we have seen full of them that were turned over. One of those documents Trump allegedly showed to others, was implied by Trump’s own words, held to ruin the reputation of General Miley.
From CBS, June 9th:
Trump is self-destructive because for decades he had people enabling him instead of teaching him social skills, self-regulation and personal accountability. That began in Trump’s childhood.
Let’s ignore that he literally stoned a childhood neighbor, a toddler left outside in the fresh air in a playpen and other bone-headed choices in his early youth and fast forward to where things really turned.
When Don was exiled to NYMA, a military school known for dishing out serious abuse on its ‘cadets’ after Trump brought a switchblade pocket knife home while roaming his neighborhood with other young hooligans in a ‘gang,’ everything from that point forward made him into the uneducated, callous, and multiply indicted criminal man he is today. His sister did his schoolwork while a neighbor took his tests leaving Don, who can read but not well, with the education equivalent of a fourth grader, precisely the age he was kicked out of the family home.
At the school, Don appeared suffered immensely during the first year up until a certain point. Given that his dad paid a doctor to give his son ‘bone spurs’ so as to avoid Vietnam, I have a hunch that he had something to do with Donald’s treatment. Trump was mediocre, yet known as a ‘Lady’s Man’ due to Fred hauling off neighbor girls for periodic visits to the school compound. In the yearbook to commemorate that, a photo Op was set up to have Don seen with the school secretary.
Trump’s coach in High School was telling the most audacious whoppers of Trump’s skills including that he was being seen by professional scouts. This too was a promotion rather than anything having to do with fact. The only thing admirable about Trump during his school days was his one time helping another student whom he knew from his childhood neighborhood similarly shipped out, doing something to lessen the physical discipline. More of the stuff like his attempting to kill a classmate by ‘throwing them out the window’ Ala Putin style and stealing valor from the top student at the school were more the norm.
Speaking of that top student.
When Donald got ‘promoted’ to staff after the kids he was supposed to be supervising beat up another cadet, he was out there leading the parade down fifth avenue. The guy who was the top student and had that earned honor taken away to placate Trump’s dad, was still angry when journalists interviewed him back in 2016 or 2015.
Trump got into college, left little impression on most of his classmates, transferred to an Ivy League school and brags instead about the narrowly focused name of the Penn business school, Wharton College, and how only people with 180+ IQs got in.
Trump’s own IQ I estimate would be within the average range, somewhere between 87-92 if he ever sat down to take one considering his basic lack of knowledge only understanding things within his own severely restricted perseverated interests. While others got him into college, his transfer to Penn was largely helped by his interview along with a friend of his brother putting in a good word for him.
After college Trump went to work for his dad getting later roughed up by the FBI over racist rental practices. Fred and Don outlasted the FBI, kept discriminating against minority tenants with the younger Trump meeting up with mobster lawyer Roy Cohn connecting Don to his first accused pedophile friend. More such unsavory characters would flock to Trump, most of them in the 80s including Jeffery Epstein, Paul Manafort and Roger Stone. We’ll have to save more for later on Trump, as this post is getting long as it is.
Today’s arraignment, the second of four that I expect will come out of known open investigations centered on Trump, having gone relatively smoothly, gives me hope that the government can tamp all of this crazy stuff Trump’s enablers and handlers had planned.
So what’s next?
Without a court date set and having the same friendly judge that delayed the indictment by at least six months randomly assigned to the case, I think it very logical to believe this case will not go to trial until 2025. I believe Georgia will indict Trump by end of the summer over the fake elector scheme which will be the next big one until the January Sixth charges drop, perhaps not even getting those out during this calendar year.
They need to be.
At minimum, indict Trump’s well-heeled compatriots in plotting the insurrection.