'Organizer of Trump boat parades in Florida facing charge of threatening neighbor
[...] The neighbor, Paul Edenbaum, told Jupiter Police that he was eating with his wife at the Marina Cafe last month when Gavidia pointed at him and approached their table.
Edenbaum said his neighbor threw his hands in the air and allegedly said "f--- you, you f------ little Jew," before calling his wife a misogynistic slur and leaving.
According to Edenbaum, he received a text full of explicit language from Gavidia several minutes later.
"You f----- with the wrong guy I'm coming for you," the message read in part, according to the police report. "I've got nothing to lose but you have plenty like your life, you have no idea who I am I want to get your little f------ friends flicking me off calling me names while we're at the f------ Marina Cafe."
Another text message from Gavidia reportedly read: "Dude are we no longer friends because I support the president??? I come up say hello and you act like a dick."
[...] Gavidia said he had three verbal altercations with Edenbaum in August and admitted to law enforcement that he sent the text messages.'
https://thehill.com/...LBvYxhqCCpeqm14
'Trump is chaos, and chaos is Donald Trump. We were told this before a single vote was cast in 2016, when Jeb Bush, in perhaps his finest (only?) rhetorical sally warned America from the debate stage, "He's a chaos candidate, and he'd be a chaos president."
A few days ago, Kellyanne Conway confirmed that this prediction had come to pass when she said, "The more chaos and anarchy and vandalism and violence reigns, the better it is for the very clear choice on who's best on public safety and law and order."
[...] chaos is Trump's brand; that is how he governs, to the extent that he governs at all. It is undeniable that Donald Trump sows chaos, but it is less clear that he reaps it.
In fact there is ample evidence Donald Trump doesn't truly harvest the chaos or in any way affirmatively use it to create wins for himself or his agenda. It actually seems that the more things spin out of control, the more they hurt Trump's standing with party stalwarts and Republican voters.
In Charlottesville, Virginia, chaos rained down, and Trump weighed in—to poor effect. He was hurt by those statements; advisers quit and the public soured on him.
https://www.washingt...39f5_story.html
When cops pepper-sprayed protesters outside Lafayette Square in Trump's quest for a photo-op, it was his own image that took a beating.
https://www.vanityfa...d-cost-him-2020
[...] Perhaps you can argue that in generating a miasma of distraction, the public finds it difficult to attend to any individual failure—but failures they all are. Perhaps you can argue that chaos is a way for Trump to manage the defeats or distract from the collapses. But remember the claim about Trump and chaos isn't that he uses it to limit his downside exposure; it's that he cunningly wields it, or, as I said before, that he reaps it.
Is chaos a tool for Trump, or an aftereffect of the fact that he just lies so much and sues so much and fights so much, and hires the likes of Michael Cohen to fix so much? Let's take Cohen, sometimes a bumbler, sometimes a goon, but sometimes a fixer who has lived up to that name. Cohen, over the years, did fix problems by making them go away, but not by blowing them up and drawing attention to them. That would have fit the notion of Trump as Neptune and chaos as his swirling ocean, but it's not what Cohen did.
'
https://slate.com/ne...ot-benefit.html
This post has been edited by Azath Vitr (D'ivers: 03 September 2020 - 05:49 PM