Just Before Announcing His Latest Legal Drama, Trump Turned To ‘Catturd2’

On Tuesday morning, former President Donald Trump used his “Truth Social” platform to reveal that he had received a target letter from Special Counsel Jack Smith as part of the federal investigation into the January 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol and attempts to overturn the 2020 election. In the hour before he broke that news, Trump went on a posting spree and shared six messages from the pseudonymous right-wing influencer “Catturd2” including some that suggested the Republican Party should work to remove Attorney General Merrick Garland for his efforts to investigate Trump.


This is a companion discussion topic for the original entry at https://talkingpointsmemo.com/?p=1463524
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“Turd 2? Please hold for Turd 1.”

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I’d like more extensive reporting on No Labels and their insidious funding and big name advocates.

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Might be scraping the bottom of the litter tray there.

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trump-potus

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In case anyone is interested, below is an article about the weather.

After officially beginning his presidential campaign, Ron DeSantis was asked about climate change. He brushed the issue aside: “I’ve always rejected the politicization of the weather.”

But we absolutely should politicize the weather. In practice, environmental policy probably won’t be a central issue in the 2024 campaign, which will mainly turn on the economy and social issues. Still, we’re living in a time of accelerating climate-related disasters, and the environmental extremism of the Republican Party — it is more hostile to climate action than any other major political party in the advanced world — would, in a more rational political debate, be the biggest election issue of them all.

First, the environmental background: We’re only halfway through 2023, yet we’ve already seen multiple weather events that would have been shocking not long ago. Globally, last month was the hottest June on record. Unprecedented heat waves have been striking one region of the world after another: South Asia and the Middle East experienced a life-threatening heat wave in May; Europe is now going through its second catastrophic heat wave in a short period of time; China is experiencing its highest temperatures on record; and much of the southern United States has been suffering from dangerous levels of heat for weeks, with no end in sight.

Residents of Florida might be tempted to take a cooling dip in the ocean — but ocean temperatures off South Florida have come close to 100 degrees, not much below the temperature in a hot tub.

And while the rest of America hasn’t gotten that hot, everyone in the Northeast remembers the way smoke from Canadian wildfires led to days of dangerously bad air quality and orange skies.

But extreme weather events have always been with us. Can we prove that climate change caused any particular disaster? Not exactly. But the burgeoning field of “extreme event attribution” comes close. Climate models say that certain kinds of extreme weather events become more likely on a warming planet — for example, what used to be a heat wave we’d experience on average only once every few decades becomes an almost annual occurrence. Event attribution compares the odds of experiencing an extreme event given global warming with the odds that the same event would have happened without climate change.

Incidentally, I’d argue that extreme event attribution gains credibility from the fact that it doesn’t always tell the same story, that sometimes it says that climate change wasn’t the culprit. For example, preliminary analyses suggest that climate change played a limited role in the extreme flooding that recently struck northeastern Italy.

That was, however, the exception that proves the rule. In general, attribution analysis shows that global warming made the disasters of recent years much more likely. We don’t yet have estimates for the latest, still ongoing series of disasters, but it seems safe to say that this global concatenation of extreme weather events would have been virtually impossible without climate change. And this is almost surely just the leading edge of the crisis, a small foretaste of the many disasters to come.

Which brings me back to the “politicization of the weather.” Worrying about the climate crisis shouldn’t be a partisan issue. But it is, at least in this country. As of last year, only 22 percent of Americans who considered themselves to be on the political right considered climate change a major threat; the left-right gap here was far larger than it was in other countries. And only in America do you see things like Texas Republicans actively trying to undermine their own state’s booming renewable energy sector.

The remarkable thing about climate denial is that the arguments haven’t changed at all over the years: Climate change isn’t happening; OK, it’s happening, but it’s not such a bad thing; besides, doing anything about it would be an economic disaster.

And none of these arguments are ever abandoned in the face of evidence. The next time there’s a cold spell somewhere in America, the usual suspects will once again assert that climate change is a hoax. Spectacular technological progress in renewable energy, which now makes the path to greatly reduced emissions look easier than even optimists imagined, hasn’t stopped claims that the costs of the Biden administration’s climate policy will be unsupportable.

So we shouldn’t expect record heat waves around the globe to end assertions that climate change, even if it’s happening, is no big deal. Nor should we expect Republicans to soften their opposition to climate action, no matter what is happening in the world.

What this means is that if the G.O.P. wins control of the White House and Congress next year, it will almost surely try to dismantle the array of green energy subsidies enacted by the Biden administration that experts believe will lead to a major reduction in emissions.

Like it or not, then, the weather is a political issue. And Americans should be aware that it’s one of the most important issues they’ll be voting on next November.

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Yes, it’s true. We have someone wielding influence over a former president who calls himself “catturd”. Honestly, I can’t hardly read or think about this stuff anymore. My brain sort of snapped when Joe Rogan challenged Peter Hotez to “debate” RFK Jr about vaccines. There are just way way too many mediocre people commanding scary levels of attention and the grand poobah of the entire mess is Trump. As someone who has been in the medical field for decades who really attaches importance to the notion of fact-based science, medicine and government, the importance of fact-based FACTS, I have been feeling a tremendous amorphous fear about what is coming our way with AI and the A-morality of the of the RW in our country. The stupidity that is overtaking us is like that horrible kind of pasty crap that you step in and no amount of scraping or digging will satisfactorily remove it from your shoes leaving you with the choice of a high pressure hose or just throwing them away.

Edited to correct my spelling of catturd - because spelling is also important

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Are we sure Catturd2 isn’t John Barron? We’ve never seen them in the same room together!

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Maybe “Catturd2” should start reposting “Defendant1.”

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Thought bubble contest if there ever was one…

“Heh, I just got high off my own fart.”

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We think our brains have snapped, but we are sadly wrong because they never stop snapping (until our heads perhaps fall off). And perhaps that pasty crap we’ve all stepped in is a … cat turd!

Also, because there is NEVER A FUCKING END IN SIGHT:

“stranded” … lol

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True story: @catturd and @catturd1 were both taken before @catturd2 joined Twitter.

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It used to be “hold my beer, watch this”…
Now it’s “hold my cat turd, Watch THIS!!”

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I find the daily Trump whines to be repetitive and boring. How does everyone else feel?

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Am I the only one willing to bet a MAGAt planted the cocaine in the White House?

Totally their style

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“The Republican Party must fight fire with fire, and right now, or it will be extinguished!!!” Trump wrote as he shared a lengthy post in which “Catturd2” blasted the GOP for being “too chicken shit to impeach” and described the FBI as “the secret police for the Dem party.”

The Republican Party = spineless, worthless, good-for-nothing cowards,” Catturd2 declared in the message shared by the former president.

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Impeachment equals political cap and it’s a reminder that Pelosi > McCarthy.

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Anyone else remember in a Republican debate for the nomination in 2012 when Ron Paul was asked what should happen to those who do not have the means to get health insurance, “should they just die”, the audience spontaneously broke into a universal applause.

35% of America, England, China, Russia, Iran, Australia, Nigeria, and every country on earth are wack jobs. That has always been true and will always be true. In a democracy it means if they all join together and get 15% from 35% who are uniformed you can end up with Bush 2 and Trump. Without democracy, the odds of having a wack job governing go way up.

But that is not a Trump or RFK junior or even where you do not have democracy a Putin or ayatollah problem but rather a human nature and world problem that has existed and will exist so long as humans exist.

I am not scared of the future and hope to be alive and healthy for as much of it as possible. But until we are dead, be it because of our religion, our race, our political views, our sexuality, our accents, we will always have to deal with the 35% who often just want us dead.

What needs to always be remembered about these deplorables, while they do not scare me, they want us dead because we scare them.

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Twice, no less!

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You cannot polish the end of a turd! Just sayin’…

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