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Good evening. It's Wednesday, May 29.
Tonight: Democrats have made no secret of their primary plan for winning the 2024 election under Joe Biden, namely, do everything possible to ensure that Donald Trump is criminally convicted and imprisoned prior to Election Day. That's not an exaggeration. Democratic pundits on CNN, NBC and elsewhere openly confess that their best real hope for getting Biden reelected is to get these guilty verdicts and sentences out as soon as possible. They become enraged at the mere prospect that any of these trials might be delayed until after Election Day.
As it turns out, it now seems that there will only be a verdict in one of the four separate criminal cases brought by a combination of the Biden Justice Department for two of the cases and Democratic Party prosecutors for the other two, namely, the verdict and what, by all accounts, is the weakest and most dubious of a set of very weak and dubious cases, namely, the one in Manhattan charging Donald Trump with 34 felony counts for what is at most a misdemeanor, namely, misclassifying payments to Michael Cohen to give hush money to Stormy Daniels as ”legal fees”, all just on internal Trump Organization records. That verdict may come as early as tomorrow.
We were all taught, and I certainly was taught when I was in Law School and before, to believe that whatever else is true, one of the core American rights is a right to a fair trial, which necessarily requires, before anything else, a fair, impartial and neutral judge. Without that, no fair trial is possible. Yet, for so many reasons — and this is the thing that probably led me to be disillusioned with the practice of law when I was a litigator before I was a journalist — is that judges can and so often do manipulate and interfere in jury trials to fabricate the verdict that they want. Liberals now speak of the judge presiding over this trial, a Manhattan judge, Judge Merchan, in the way they spoke of Robert Mueller and now speak of Jack Smith, the way they spoke of Michael Avenatti: as people to whom they harbor a deep emotional connection, even a sexualized sort of love. The reason is obvious because Merchan has continuously made his contempt for Donald Trump clear and made even clearer his desire for a guilty verdict. In this case, we'll examine how all of that works.
Then: One of the most bizarre spectacles to have, and I've watched over the last eight months, is how the very same people on the American right who most vocally heaped scorn on things like woke ideology and identity politics and victimhood narratives and safetyism — another victimhood-driven tactics long associated with the liberal left or with the woke left — are now the very same people who most vehemently defend and insist on these same concepts to convert American Jews into the main — really the only — real victim group in America, one that is endangered, systematically marginalized and discriminated against, and deeply endangered. You can't even go on the street and walk safely if you're a Jew, we're constantly told. Now we have extensively deconstructed and derided this attempt for months because what it ultimately is about is a demand that censorship and a limitation on free speech be imposed in the name of protecting Israel by claiming that we can't allow what's called “anti-Semitic speech,” namely, criticism of Israel, because there's an antisemitism crisis in the United States.
We've talked about this a lot, but last week, one of the best discussions of this entire subject came from a quite unlikely place, namely, the podcast of Howie Mandel, a Jewish comedian who was quite famous in the 1980s and 90s. He insisted that he and all the American Jews are endangered and discriminated against and victimized only for his guest, another Jewish comedian named Ari Shaffir, to mock him to his face relentlessly and very effectively for him and others trying to claim the mantle hood of victimhood. Ari Shaffir used anti-woke and anti-identity politics concepts and ideas to deny as a Jew that he was part of a victim group or was in any way endangered. It was really a fascinating conversation, in part because of the unexpected place from which it came. So, we'll show you how that went and analyze some of the implications.
Finally, one of the events I did last week when traveling to the United States was a sit-down interview with Nick Gillespie of Reason Magazine.
For now, welcome to a new episode of System Update, starting right now.