Victor Davis Hanson
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
There's also another strain I think that's really important is that they're angry about him, not for the sentiment. They agree with the sentiment. They deep down decide they don't care whether the jury or the judge or whatever the actual terminology was that he was. They hate Donald Trump.
So they're not saying to George Stephanopoulos, how dare you accuse somebody falsely of raping when after a lengthy trial and civil suit, it was showed that he didn't. They don't care about that because they probably would do the same thing privately with their aunt. The only
So they're not saying to George Stephanopoulos, how dare you accuse somebody falsely of raping when after a lengthy trial and civil suit, it was showed that he didn't. They don't care about that because they probably would do the same thing privately with their aunt. The only
So they're not saying to George Stephanopoulos, how dare you accuse somebody falsely of raping when after a lengthy trial and civil suit, it was showed that he didn't. They don't care about that because they probably would do the same thing privately with their aunt. The only
animus they have is we kind of warned you that there was legal exposure in your efforts to destroy this guy that we also like you to, we would like you to destroy, but we just disagreed with your tactics. So we're going to kind of slap you on the hand and be more discreet, George, but don't change your attitude about Trump because that's coming from the top.
animus they have is we kind of warned you that there was legal exposure in your efforts to destroy this guy that we also like you to, we would like you to destroy, but we just disagreed with your tactics. So we're going to kind of slap you on the hand and be more discreet, George, but don't change your attitude about Trump because that's coming from the top.
animus they have is we kind of warned you that there was legal exposure in your efforts to destroy this guy that we also like you to, we would like you to destroy, but we just disagreed with your tactics. So we're going to kind of slap you on the hand and be more discreet, George, but don't change your attitude about Trump because that's coming from the top.
We despise him and we want you, we want you people, whether you're moderating debates or whether you're presenting the news to We want you to be prejudicial. That's who are that what our brand do. And then the other thing is we'll just throw money at this problem. Yeah.
We despise him and we want you, we want you people, whether you're moderating debates or whether you're presenting the news to We want you to be prejudicial. That's who are that what our brand do. And then the other thing is we'll just throw money at this problem. Yeah.
We despise him and we want you, we want you people, whether you're moderating debates or whether you're presenting the news to We want you to be prejudicial. That's who are that what our brand do. And then the other thing is we'll just throw money at this problem. Yeah.
When you look at the E. Jean Carroll case, that was of all the five criminal, I think, and civil suits was the most egregious because she came. She had to get a special sympathetic New York legislature to. pass a law that suspended for one year the statute of limitations on supposed sexual assault. Then she refiled it. And then when she refiled it, she was asked, what year did it take place?
When you look at the E. Jean Carroll case, that was of all the five criminal, I think, and civil suits was the most egregious because she came. She had to get a special sympathetic New York legislature to. pass a law that suspended for one year the statute of limitations on supposed sexual assault. Then she refiled it. And then when she refiled it, she was asked, what year did it take place?
When you look at the E. Jean Carroll case, that was of all the five criminal, I think, and civil suits was the most egregious because she came. She had to get a special sympathetic New York legislature to. pass a law that suspended for one year the statute of limitations on supposed sexual assault. Then she refiled it. And then when she refiled it, she was asked, what year did it take place?
She didn't know the year. Then she tried to adjudicate the year by saying, I had this designer dress. Then people came out and said that dress was not in existence when you cited that. Then she gave these weird details And by the way, she had said in text messages that Donald Trump and the apprentice that that was a celebrity that she liked.
She didn't know the year. Then she tried to adjudicate the year by saying, I had this designer dress. Then people came out and said that dress was not in existence when you cited that. Then she gave these weird details And by the way, she had said in text messages that Donald Trump and the apprentice that that was a celebrity that she liked.
She didn't know the year. Then she tried to adjudicate the year by saying, I had this designer dress. Then people came out and said that dress was not in existence when you cited that. Then she gave these weird details And by the way, she had said in text messages that Donald Trump and the apprentice that that was a celebrity that she liked.
But she gave details that she said she couldn't remember. But they were they were eerily very similar to a Law and Order episode in which one of the people in that episode. And I watched it is in the same department store and then invites a celebrity into the dressing room. And he said she said transpire. And then she's in a courtroom up against the celebrity.
But she gave details that she said she couldn't remember. But they were they were eerily very similar to a Law and Order episode in which one of the people in that episode. And I watched it is in the same department store and then invites a celebrity into the dressing room. And he said she said transpire. And then she's in a courtroom up against the celebrity.
But she gave details that she said she couldn't remember. But they were they were eerily very similar to a Law and Order episode in which one of the people in that episode. And I watched it is in the same department store and then invites a celebrity into the dressing room. And he said she said transpire. And then she's in a courtroom up against the celebrity.
And I'm not suggesting that she just made it all up, but there's she might have had embroidered a lot of those details. So and then the judge himself. And I think this is one of the reasons that Stephanopoulos was emboldened about the cases. You remember, he said he mentioned the word rape once and somebody corrected him. And they said, no, it's a matter of sexual assault.