GREAT! You are supporting President Trump on this one! Congrats!
Seen the light? Realized he's MAGA!?!?!
Bravo Junior.
Maybe She would like to fly out to meet Trump in person?
oh, that's right, she hates to fly, won't fly, can't fly, except, you know, all the time..
She's a liar and so are the scummy Dems who used her.
One of the reasons beyond I look like him says my daughter, I used the image of Lewis Powell is that in his trial the defence given was he was such a fanatic that he was not really responsible for his actions.
Back in 1865 many of the simple farmboy trumpers here would be considered bordering insane. Times have changed but the nature of people has not all that much.
Notes from the trial.
"
Lewis Powell
Many trial observers found Lewis Powell, the handsome young defendant who maintained a posture of studied indifference to the proceedings, to be the most intriguing of the prisoners. The case against Powell was overwhelming. Even Lewis Powell's attorney,
William Doster, recognized his complicity in the plot was beyond question. Identified as Seward's attacker by Seward's servant, found with blood on his shirt and the initials of John Wilkes Booth in his boots, and identified by Louis Weichmann as the man who called himself "Wood" and who--claiming to be a Baptist preacher and wearing a large false mustache-- frequently called at Mary Surratt's home, where he would sometimes engage in two or three hour private conversations with Booth and John Surratt, Doster was left to argue that Powell's life should be spared because he suffered from a fanaticism that bordered on insanity. "I say he is the fanatic, and not the hired tool," Doster told the Commission. "He lives in that land of imagination where it seems to him legions of southern soldiers wait to crown him as their chief commander." Doster said that when he asked Powell why he did it, he replied, simply, "I believed it was my duty." Doster described Powell as an innocent farmboy turned assassin by circumstances beyond his control: "We know now that slavery made him immoral, that war made him a murderer, and that necessity, revenge, and delusion made him an assassin." Doster ended his remarkably
eloquent plea (but obviously hopeless) for Powell's life by asking the Commission to "Let him live, if not for his sake, for our own."
"
Anyway seemed somhow apt for a political forum.