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| #Post#: 20759-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Incident At Mar a Lago | |
| By: HOLLAND Date: December 2, 2018, 5:25 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| TOP SECRET | |
| CONTROLLED PROGRAM INFORMATION --ACCESS LIST D | |
| ENCODED GLYPHSCRIPT ONLY | |
| THIS REPORT CANNOT BE PUT INTO ANY OTHER MEDIA FORM WITHOUT | |
| CENTRAL ACCESS PERMISSION. | |
| SCI/SCIF-POTOMAC | |
| SCI/SCIF-PARKHAM | |
| SCI/SCIF-CHEYENNE | |
| SUMMARY REPORT 20180618 | |
| ARCHON DIRECTORATE | |
| 20180618-0255 0900GMT�BUNKER JOINT BASE ANDREWS | |
| [1]GENERAL PROGRAM SECURITY STATUS IS UNCHANGED. PROGRAM | |
| SECURITY HAS BEEN DETERMINED BY INTERNAL AFFAIRS TO BE SOUND. | |
| EXTERNAL AFFAIRS REPORTS CONGRESSIONAL SECURITY AT CONDITION | |
| YELLOW AND THAT WHITE HOUSE AND JUDICIARY SECURITY ARE AT | |
| CONDITION GREEN (SEE ATTACHMENT FILE ONE). | |
| [2-1]GROUP MIND POTOMAC CONFIRMS THAT THE MIND LOCK EMPLACED ON | |
| PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP BY PSION ADRIAN STEMPLE REMAINS SOUND. | |
| GROUP MIND POTOMAC CONFIRMS THAT ITS SEALS ARE INTACT AND THAT | |
| ITS FUNCTIONING DIAGNOSTICS ARE WITHIN PARAMETERS. THEY CONFIRM | |
| THAT THE MIND LOCK IS NOT LEADING TO ANY FURTHER MENTAL | |
| DETERIORATION OF THE PRESIDENT BUT IS, WITH SOME INTERRUPTION, | |
| ALLOWING THE PRESIDENT�S EXISTENT DETERIORATION TO NATURALLY | |
| PROCEED AT ITS NORMAL PACE. | |
| [2-2]EVALUATION-TEAM EAST�S MAIN EVALUATION OF THE PRESIDENT�S | |
| MENTAL STATE IS UNCHANGED. EVAL-TE HAS DETERMINED THAT THE | |
| PRESIDENT IS SUFFERING MENTAL DETERIORATION IN THE FORM OF | |
| EPISODIC AND PROGRESSIVE MILD DEMENTIA. THE DEMENTIA, IS | |
| INTERFERING WITH HIS PRESIDENTIAL DUTIES AND HAS NOT REACHED A | |
| POINT WHERE HE HAS REACHED A STATE WHERE HE MUST BE REMOVED FROM | |
| OFFICE. CONFIRMED SIGNIFICANT BEHAVIORAL CHARACTERISTICS OF THE | |
| PRESIDENT INCLUDE IMPRESSIONISTIC THINKING, PROBLEMS IN | |
| CONCENTRATION AND FOCUSED ATTENTION, A DECLINE IN DISCURSIVE | |
| THINKING, AN AVOIDANCE OF READING, WHICH INCLUDES IMPORTANT | |
| PRESIDENTIAL BRIEFS AND PAPERS, AN INABILITY TO MAKE IMPORTANT | |
| DECISIONS CONCERNING COMPLEX MATTERS, AVOIDANCE OF THE | |
| RESPONSIBILITIES OF HIS OFFICE, AND SECRETIVE BEHAVIOR IN | |
| PERSONAL MATTERS REGARDING INDISCRETIONS IN BOTH PERSONAL AND | |
| PROFESSIONAL RELATIONSHIPS AND IN MATTERS OF FINANCE. REFERENCE | |
| FOR THIS ARE FOUND IN THE LAST GIVEN REPORTS SUPPLIED BY LIASONS | |
| FBI/CSS AND JCS/CSSE (SEE ATTACHMENT FILE TWO). | |
| [3-1]THE ARCHON DIRECTORATE HAS DETERMINED THAT PSION ADRIAN | |
| STEMPLE BE PERMITTED TO ENTER INTO HIS MEETING WITH THE | |
| PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES. MR. STEMPLE DID NOT SOLICIT | |
| THIS MEETING BUT IT HAS BEEN CONFIRMED THAT IT WAS CONTRIVED BY | |
| THE PRESIDENT�S BODYGUARD, MILO DOUBEK WHO HAS UTTERED | |
| STATEMENTS OF SIGNIFICANT HOSTILITY TOWARDS MR. STEMPLE. | |
| EVAL-TE HAS DETERMINED MR. DOUBEK AS HAVING AN INCREASING | |
| DETRIMENTAL INFLUENCE OVER THE PRESIDENT ENCOURAGING THE | |
| PRESIDENT TOWARDS UNLAWFUL ACTIONS, ESPECIALLY THOSE ACTIONS | |
| WHICH MAY INCLUDE VIOLENCE. | |
| [3-2]THE DIRECTORATE HAS DETERMINED THAT PSION ADRIAN STEMPLE, | |
| BECAUSE OF THE PERSONAL DANGER HE MAY EXPERIENCE, BE PERMITTED | |
| TO CARRY WITHIN HIS PSIONIC TEMPLATE PARA-DIMENSIONAL KARG A | |
| PREFECT ANALOG THAT CAN SUPPRESS THE ANTI-PSIONIC FIELD AROUND | |
| THE PRESIDENT. THE DIRECTORATE HAS ALSO DETERMINED THAT MR. | |
| STEMPLE MAY ONLY USE THE ANALOG FOR HIS OWN PERSONAL PROTECTION | |
| BUT THAT HE IS NOT PERMITTED UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES, USING THE | |
| ANALOG, TO CAVITATE THE PROTECTIVE ANTI-PSIONIC FIELD WITHIN THE | |
| IMMEDIATE PROXIMITY OF THE PRESIDENT (SEE ATTACHMENT FILE | |
| THREE). | |
| [3-3]THE ARCHON DIRCTORATE HAS DETERMINED THAT PSION ADRIAN | |
| STEMPLE BE PERMITTED TO PROFESSIONALLY AND SOCIALLY SEPARATE | |
| MILO DOUBEK FROM THE PRESIDENT BY ANY LAWFUL MEANS NECESSARY. | |
| THE DIRECTORATE HAS DETERMINED THAT THE INFLUENCE MILO DOUBEK | |
| HAS OVER THE PRESIDENT IS DESTRUCTIVE BOTH TO THE PRESIDENT AND | |
| TO AMERICAN NATIONAL SECURITY. THE DIRECTORATE HAS DETERMINED | |
| THAT A THIRD PARTY MUST UNDERTAKE THIS PROFESSIONAL AND SOCIAL | |
| SEPARATION BECAUSE OF ITS SENSITIVE NATURE AND THAT THE USUAL | |
| GOVERNMENT SECURITY PROCESSES HAVE BEEN DISABLED BY THIS | |
| PRESIDENT (SEE ATTACHMENT FILE FOUR). | |
| [3-4]IKORCENI PREFECTURE CENSOR ALLEN GREYBULL CONFIRMS REPORT | |
| THAT WHEN PSION ADRIAN STEMPLE IS WITHIN PROXIMITY OF THE | |
| PRESIDENT, THE MIND LOCK MENTALLY ENABLES THE PRESIDENT TO BE | |
| MORE LUCID FOR PURPOSES OF CONTROL ENABLEMENT AND PRAXIS. | |
| CENSOR GREYBULL ALSO REPORTS THAT THE PRESIDENT�S MIND IS MUCH | |
| LIKE IT WAS IN THE 1980S BUT WITH THE USUAL AGE DIMINISHMENT IN | |
| MEMORY AND DISCURSIVE THINKING. THIS CONDITION OF HEIGHTENED | |
| LUCIDITY ON THE PART OF POTUS IS REPORTED AS TRANSITORY AND WILL | |
| LAST AS LONG AS THIS PROXIMITY OCCURS. CENSOR GREYBULL HAS ALSO | |
| ADVISED THAT IF THE MEETING LASTS LONGER THAN TWENTY MINUTES, | |
| THE LUCIDITY WILL BEGIN TO FALL AWAY OF ITSELF AND THE MENTAL | |
| DETERIORATION OF THE PRESIDENT WILL RESUME ITS USUAL COURSE. | |
| CENSOR GREYBULL AND EVAL-TE BOTH STRESS THAT THE PRESIDENT�S | |
| MENTAL DETERIORATION IS INEVITABLE AND WILL RESUME AFTER MR. | |
| STEMPLE�S DEPARTURE. EVALUATION-TEAM EAST CONFIRMS THESE | |
| ADVISEMENTS AND REPORTS THAT THIS HEIGHTENED LUCIDITY ON THE | |
| PART OF THE PRESIDENT COULD BE A SECURITY DANGER GIVEN THE | |
| PRESIDENT WILL BE MORE CAPABLE OF EXECUTIVE ACTION THAT COULD BE | |
| DETRIMENTAL TO THE COUNTRY. EVAL-TE ADVISES THAT PSION ADRIAN | |
| STEMPLE STRIVE TO LIMIT HIS TIME WITH THE PRESIDENT TO DECREASE | |
| THIS POTENTIAL DANGER (SEE ATTACHMENT FILES TWO AND THREE). | |
| [4]FBI/CSS AND JCS/CSSE REPORT NO INFORMATION SUPPLIED REGARDING | |
| JUDICIAL INVESTIGATIONS CONCERNING THE PRESIDENT. DESPITE THIS, | |
| AT THIS TIME, THE DIRECTORATE HAS DIRECTED OPERATIONAL PLAN | |
| ANVIL TO BE ACTIVATED. DEPARTMENTAL ORDERS HAVE BEEN ISSUED AND | |
| THE SECURITY LEVEL IS ENCODED RED. GIVEN THE POSSIBLITY THAT | |
| THE PRESIDENT HAS BEEN COMPROMISED BY CRIMINAL ENTITIES AND/OR | |
| FOREIGN GOVERNMENTS AND MAY NOT BE HIS OWN MASTER, THE EMPLACED | |
| PROCEDURAL ACTIONS FOR SECURITY IN THE EVENT OF A MAJOR HOSTILE | |
| PENETRATION OF GOVERNMENT ARE NOW CONSIDERED ACTIVE (SEE | |
| ATTACHMENT FILE FIVE). | |
| ATTACHMENTS: | |
| FILE ONE: | |
| FILE TWO: | |
| POTUS | |
| FILE THREE: | |
| STEMPLE | |
| FILE FOUR: | |
| FILE FIVE: | |
| INVESTIGATIONS/SECURITY REQUIREMENTS | |
| GYPHSIGNATURES DIRECTORATE RECORDED BELOW | |
| SECRETARY, FIRST ARCHON 19660318-SN227 | |
| DIRECTORATE CONFIRMS FINAL SUMMARY REPORT W/ATTACHMENTS | |
| 20180618-0255 10450GMT�BUNKER JOINT BASE ANDREWS | |
| CONTROLLED PROGRAM INFORMATION - - ACCESS LIST D | |
| TOP SECRET | |
| #Post#: 20760-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Incident At Mar a Lago | |
| By: HOLLAND Date: December 2, 2018, 5:32 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Lake Worth & Mar a Lago, Florida | |
| July 2018 | |
| It was a beautiful summer morning in Lake Worth, Florida when | |
| Mack sat down in his booth in the Willow Beach Restaurant to | |
| have his morning breakfast which was a favorite of his: Eggs | |
| Benedict with hollandaise sauce on top of a toasted and buttered | |
| English muffin with a fatty, smoky, thinly sliced prosciutto, | |
| garnished with slices of avocado. Mack had never eaten before | |
| at Willow Beach. He had heard about it from some of the locals. | |
| They had said that the food was good and Mack was not | |
| disappointed. When he had taken his first bite he was satisfied | |
| that he had found a premier delicatessen. The dish was delicate | |
| and had a medley of delightful flavors. | |
| Looking outside the windows in front of his booth, he was struck | |
| by how very quiet the downtown of Lake Worth was this morning. | |
| Few people were walking down the sidewalks that were visible | |
| from the restaurant. Automobile traffic was light. | |
| Psionically, all was quiet as well. Mentally, Mack had scanned | |
| out to 1.5 meters, approximately a mile, and sensed little | |
| mental activity of interest to him. He could hear the brain | |
| pulsation of every mind within that area. When he would focus | |
| on someone whose mind was open to hear, he could listen into | |
| that person�s thinking. This morning, Mack had little cause to | |
| do so. For many of the minds everything was well. There was | |
| cheerfulness about the start of a new summer day. Businesses | |
| were opening up and people were going about their usual morning | |
| activities. He sensed that the police and emergency bands were | |
| relatively quiet with most activity occurring further away in | |
| the suburbs of Lake Worth. | |
| Mack felt physically refreshed. Earlier, he had awakened after | |
| a satisfying sleep, and had showered and dressed in his room at | |
| the Diamond Palace Hotel on Marlborough Street, listening to the | |
| morning piano music playing down in the lobby. He had requested | |
| no maid service in the morning and was still listed as a guest | |
| for the following night at the hotel though he had no intention | |
| of returning. As far as the hotel would know, his room would | |
| still be occupied which was part of his plan. He was not going | |
| to return. | |
| Mack reflected upon his plan�s clandestine preparation. After | |
| his meeting with the President, he was going to lure the | |
| President�s bodyguard Milo Doubek into Lake Worth and deal with | |
| him there. It had been decided by the Archon Directorate that | |
| it was important for Milo Doubek to be separated from his | |
| employment with the President and had authorized Mack to do it. | |
| The Prefect of the Star People had agreed to this determination. | |
| Both the Archons and the Prefect believed that Milo Doubek was | |
| too violent to remain in the presence of the President. Even | |
| more, if he remained employed by the President, he would be a | |
| source of temptation to draw the President into ordered acts of | |
| violence. | |
| Mack smiled at this. Though the President was drawn to | |
| violence, he was more timid in respect to it. Bullies were that | |
| way and Donald Trump was a bully. Both Donald Trump and Milo | |
| Doubek were short-tempered and easily vented their anger. This | |
| made them vulnerable. Important to the plan that Mack had in | |
| his mind, Mack felt that Doubek could be easily led around by | |
| his anger. There was some danger, though. Milo Doubek�s sense | |
| of grievance, his vendetta against Mack was drawing the | |
| President mentally into the buffered reaches of his mind lock. | |
| There was some danger there. The Archons had expressed the fear | |
| that the President could break the mind lock if his thoughts, | |
| because of the vendetta, remained fixated upon Mack Stemple, the | |
| actuary of the mind lock. | |
| Mack had to be careful about this. He would be as clandestine | |
| as possible in his dealings with Doubek and he would go to | |
| ground after his visit with with the President at Mar a Lago. | |
| He made the usual preparations earlier in his hotel room. After | |
| refolding his clothes and closing up his luggage, he vectored | |
| them into several of his personal para-dimensional kargs. He, | |
| also, put into his psionic personal storage his Marley 9mm COP | |
| four-barreled derringer. He, also, unlocked and cancelled the | |
| pre-set hand position that he had to allow him to vector the | |
| weapon into his hand at the at-ready status. He did not want to | |
| risk a telementric pre-set being discovered by the Secret | |
| Service. Mack wanted to present himself as much as possible as | |
| being biologically normal just as he was entering the anti-psi | |
| security area that surrounded Mar a Lago. He wanted no | |
| questions asked about what may not seem psionically benign. The | |
| Secret Service was granting him extraordinary permission to have | |
| in his possession an active Prefect Analog within one of his | |
| para-dimensional kargs, something that could nullify virtually | |
| any anti-psionic defense around the President, should he decide | |
| to flex its power outward at a given moment. That he was given | |
| permission to carry the analog was revealing. It indicated how | |
| much the American government trusted him and was determined to | |
| protect the secrecy of the anti-psi program. | |
| He ate his breakfast, enjoying the taste, texture and the color | |
| of the hollandaise sauce and the egg yolk and white as it | |
| spilled onto the brown of his English wheat muffin. As he was | |
| finishing his meal, and after he received another cup of coffee | |
| from the waitress, he mulled over his plan and decided that he | |
| would go through with it as he originally planned. The street | |
| cameras on Marlborough Street were known to him. They would | |
| tell the story that he wanted and would provide the cover he | |
| needed to end the security crisis both affecting American | |
| security and the hidden existence of the Star People. | |
| It was clear from all the American government security sources | |
| that Milo Doubek was angry and was waiting for him. If Mack | |
| wasn�t physically attacked at Mar a Lago, he would be in danger | |
| of it shortly after. Milo Doubek�s anger was such that he would | |
| follow Mack after Mack�s departure from Mar a Lago which was | |
| something Mack had planned for. | |
| If Milo Doubek was traveling to Lake Worth by himself, all would | |
| be well. If he had a backup team, an apprehension team, that | |
| would be different. Mack would have to deal with it. Their | |
| presence could produce many variables about what would occur on | |
| the street and affect the story Mack would be seeking to tell | |
| through the street cameras. That means that Doubek�s backup | |
| team had to be prevented from arriving to Marlborough Street. | |
| He would have to disable them or the vehicles they were | |
| traveling in. But this would be outside the usual range of | |
| conventional psionic attacks even with the added abilities | |
| derived through the Prefect Analog. That means he would have to | |
| psionically picket the routes to Lake Worth. | |
| How many cars and men would Milo Doubek have? Probably it would | |
| be limited to the men he could trust. Most likely, he would | |
| have three cars, with five or six men trusted to keep the needed | |
| operational secrecy. It could be entirely possible that the men | |
| would have connections to the Russian mafia. If he has the | |
| President�s sympathy in an assault or apprehension operation, he | |
| would have the needed access to any cash needed for the | |
| operation. If not, Doubek would have to cut corners but would | |
| still be able to do it with the associates he probably had. | |
| Given that Mack had a hand in ruining Milo Doubek�s prior | |
| wealthy employers and would be arguably a major cause for their | |
| deaths, Doubek would likely be contemplating Mack�s murder. If | |
| this is the case, Doubek would want to keep the number of his | |
| operatives down. If Doubek should have other motives and is not | |
| thinking about murder, he would use them for clandestine | |
| observation or for an apprehension, if he was thinking of | |
| turning Mack over to the Russian mafia. They would be there to | |
| form a box around Mack whenever and where ever Mack is traveling | |
| either on foot or by car. The size of the box would have to be | |
| minimal, involving two cars. On whatever street Mack would be | |
| traveling on, the two cars would remain unseen on different | |
| streets, on either side of him, following his movements, with | |
| the main car, most likely Doubek�s, behind him. If Mack was a | |
| conventional human, they could apprehend him if they wanted to, | |
| or enable Doubek to kill him at the opportune moment. | |
| Mack quietly drank his coffee and looked out onto the street. | |
| He watched as the morning breeze from the ocean caused the palm | |
| branches and the flowers planted in some of the windows gently | |
| sway. | |
| It was just too many variables, Mack decided. Doubek�s backup | |
| team would, undoubtedly, be ruthless and people in Lake Worth | |
| would be in danger if it ever came to gunfire. He would have to | |
| prevent Doubek�s possible backup team from arriving to | |
| Marlborough Street, to the operational area. They and their | |
| cars would have to be prevented from arriving. He would have to | |
| use his psionics and set up mobile Picket AIs. | |
| Mack mentally focused on his passive psionic scan of his | |
| surroundings. It went out to 1.5 meters and Mack could conclude | |
| that downtown Lake Worth remained quiet. He had vectored into | |
| the downtown yesterday and was pleased that, after his | |
| teleportation into Lake Worth, he discovered that there was | |
| little street crime. Lake Worth was upper middle class and its | |
| populace was not on the margin. Mack found that he didn�t need | |
| to use his psionic abilities to their full capacity. He had 36 | |
| AIs, autonomous intellections, which allowed his mind to perform | |
| multiple thoughts and actions at the same time. Some he used | |
| for the continuous physical scan of the area around him. Others | |
| were used for monitoring emergency and telephone communications | |
| in his area. Not all of these AIs were in use. Some were | |
| quiescent. Three would be needed for the psionic Picket | |
| constructs. | |
| Mack closed his eyes briefly and psionically creating the three | |
| constructs, locking one of his AIs into each of them and | |
| projecting them as independent existences to float and gently | |
| revolve above the surface of his breakfast table. He opened his | |
| eyes and observed that the Picket AIs were beautiful to behold, | |
| each little more than the size of an American silver dollar. | |
| Each visually appeared to Mack as small stellated dodecahedrons, | |
| Kepler-Poinsot polyhedrons, which were non-convex regular | |
| polyhedrons composed of 12 five-sided hedron faces with five | |
| five-sided hedron faces meeting at each vertex, giving an | |
| appearance suggestive of a star. They were light blue in color | |
| in the visualization. This was the default form for their | |
| construct. | |
| These Picket AIs were single-use in their attack mode. They | |
| were not stand-off, or stand-alone, attack platforms that | |
| retained their existence while functioning a telepathic or | |
| telekinetic attack. Stand-alone AIs were spherical in form. | |
| These constructs expended their existence when used in an | |
| attack. When they went into an attack, their star-like form | |
| changed. In the attack form their stellations changed, where | |
| all the stellations folded back into a form suggestive of a | |
| spear or arrow point which, to Mack, was rather unnerving to | |
| see. | |
| There was no danger of others seeing what he had just done. | |
| Normal humans could not see psionic constructs. How can a | |
| normal human see another�s mental image apart from their own | |
| minds? They can see only what they themselves may image in | |
| their own minds. Since he had an active Prefect Analog, Mack | |
| had restricted the visualization even further. No mentalist, | |
| that is to say a telepath who lacked full psionic ability, and | |
| would likely be a governmental agent, be able to see it or even | |
| detect it at a certain distance. And there weren�t any | |
| mentalists around to detect the pickets. After being eighteen | |
| hours in downtown Lake Worth, Mack was confident that none were | |
| present. Mack closed his eyes again and vectored the Picket AIs | |
| to their assigned picket locations one meter apart and two | |
| meters above the Interstate between Lake Worth and West Palm | |
| Beach. They could redeploy if Mack wanted them to, and they | |
| could attack in whatever manner Mack wished them to. | |
| Mack finished his coffee and when the waitress came up, he paid | |
| his bill and went outside. While he was creating and deploying | |
| the Picket AIs, he heard another sound, a different brain | |
| pulsation coming from within his scan area. It was coming from | |
| an anti-psi mind, an aprator-like mind. The pulsation was | |
| distinctive, a higher warbling pitch, which indicated that this | |
| mind had a great potential to mental power. Mack went walking | |
| up the street and down an avenue until he came to the source of | |
| the sound. It was a young girl with her mother waiting on the | |
| side of a street. | |
| She was small, probably around twelve years old. She had dark | |
| luminous hair and when she turned and looked briefly at Mack, | |
| Mack could see that she had dark luminous intelligent eyes. She | |
| looked at Mack with brief curiosity and then looked away. Her | |
| mother, much taller, stood next to her, and seemed very | |
| agitated. Every now and then, the mother looked at her watch | |
| and down the street looking away from Mack. Mack smiled | |
| inwardly. They were waiting for a ride. | |
| The girl�s brain pulse indicated that she had the potential of | |
| eventually become a very powerful �hearing� aprator for the | |
| government, able to detect through a kind of hearing the brain | |
| pulses of psionics such as himself within a distance of hearing | |
| that could even reach to a distance of over a meter. The young | |
| girl didn�t know it but she had a gift deeply coveted by the | |
| governments of the world and it would make her wealthy and | |
| eventual enable her to advance high within the government. She | |
| didn�t realize it but she was being hunted by the government, | |
| and when found, would soon be drafted into government service. | |
| She might not like being a draftee, but they would make it | |
| financially rewarding for her. Low-level mentalists in the | |
| American government would be looking for people like her. They | |
| would find her eventually in the sound of that brain pulse would | |
| eventually become so loud that it could be heard miles away. | |
| She looked at him again and their eyes met. She turned her head | |
| quickly away and Mack could tell that the young girl was pleased | |
| that he was looking at her. Mack knew that it was a young | |
| girl�s pleasure that she was recognized as beautiful. She | |
| reminded Mack of his first love, a girl named Kaitlyn, whom he | |
| had met in Yakima, Washington, at Franklin Junior High School | |
| nearly sixty years ago. At the time, both Kathleen and Mack | |
| were twelve years old and were awkwardly trying to explore the | |
| meaning of their feelings in respect to the opposite sex and to | |
| each other. | |
| The girl looked at him again and then quickly turned her head | |
| away. Mack smiled again, outwardly. As with Kaitlyn, this | |
| young Florida girl didn�t like the novelty of boys and men | |
| looking at her. Most likely, she lacked confidence in her | |
| looks. Mack marveled at how so many beautiful girls were | |
| insecure about their looks, how they appeared to their | |
| classmates. He mother turned to her and said something. Mack | |
| could have listened in but didn�t. Soon a car came down the | |
| street driven by a man, obviously the young girl�s father. Mack | |
| watched as the mother and daughter got into the car and was | |
| pleased to see that she kept her head averted from him as the | |
| car went past him. | |
| Kaitlyn was like that. She kept her head averted towards Mack | |
| and eventually made known her rejection of Mack. It was a pity | |
| that Mack was not able to get to know Kaitlyn. At the time a | |
| psychiatrist, unknown to Mack, was seeking to put him under his | |
| therapeutic control, and had warned Kaitlyn�s parents, and, | |
| doubtlessly, Kaitlyn herself, that Mack, the strange new boy in | |
| her life, was considered anti-social and that she shouldn�t have | |
| anything to do with him. It had broken Mack�s heart. For many | |
| years he was bewildered why she kept him at a distance. This | |
| was before he had awakened to his psionic powers and before he | |
| had met his preceptor, Allen Greybull. At that time, he began | |
| to learn about his powers and prepared himself for the changes | |
| that his powers would bring. It would be after many years that | |
| the misery brought about by the psychiatrist would end. | |
| Mack smiled. Kaitlyn was a gift from God, though, even though | |
| she rejected him and he miserably lost her. She had brought him | |
| such joy that she helped to make him live again in the darkest | |
| of his days. Mack had learned under Greybull�s careful tutelage | |
| that everything in life is a gift, even its misery if it�s | |
| properly received. It was a hard lesson, but Kaitlyn, | |
| unknowingly, helped him in all this. One cannot give up on | |
| love. Love remains love even if, for some reason, it cannot be | |
| reciprocated. | |
| #Post#: 20761-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Incident At Mar a Lago | |
| By: HOLLAND Date: December 2, 2018, 5:34 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| As Mack walked back to Marlborough Street and to the Diamond | |
| Palace Hotel, he had to wonder if President Trump ever fell in | |
| love as a young twelve year old boy while he was in Junior High. | |
| Probably not, as with so many of the young boys of the wealthy | |
| who soon discovered sex apart from love during their early | |
| premature sexual encounters with the hired help. It was common | |
| for the young boys of the wealthy back in the 1960s to learn | |
| about sex from a pretty maid. Back then, at the start of the | |
| so-called Sexual Revolution, maids having sex with a ten to | |
| twelve year old boy could and did occur more than people think. | |
| It was likely that it happened to Trump. Certainly when Trump | |
| was twelve, it was known that he was not looking for love from a | |
| young girl. Even then he was known for looking for sex and | |
| twelve year old girls couldn�t give it to him. Trump went for | |
| the older girls and women. His mind was always on sex and it | |
| would dominate him for most of his life. Did he find love back | |
| then? Mack doubted it. From what he could learn from Trump�s | |
| biography, love didn�t enter his life except in those few | |
| instances where a sexual affair finally blossomed into a more | |
| permanent relationship. Mack believed that Trump didn�t allow | |
| himself to feel love. The disappointments of love went back to | |
| the nightmares of his upbringing. | |
| As Mack turned onto Marlborough Street he saw something that he | |
| hadn�t seen for a while. It was a Rolls Royce stretch | |
| limousine, a Silver Spur model. It was black in its color, | |
| which struck Mack as strange. Most cars in Florida were silver | |
| or white because of the prevalent heat. The chauffeur stood at | |
| attention by the door. It was in front of the doors of a | |
| tavern. | |
| Mack sensed the movement of the tavern doors behind him and | |
| sensed the brain pulses and the electromagnetic fields behind | |
| him that indicated the forms of three persons. Two of the forms | |
| were male, one was female. As Mack was turning he saw that it | |
| was a middle aged man with a very young girl in a miniskirt. A | |
| hulking bodyguard followed behind them. | |
| �Get out of my way!� The rich man snapped. | |
| Mack stepped aside and watched as the chauffeur opened the door | |
| revealing two rows of plush tan leather seats one facing | |
| forward, the other facing backward. There was a television set, | |
| a liquor cabinet, and a refrigerator as far as Mack could see. | |
| A middle-aged pot-bellied man brushed past him with a young | |
| mini-skirted blonde girl. As he was helping her into the car, | |
| it was easy to see that the man was old enough to be the girl�s | |
| father. | |
| �Stand back, sir.� The bodyguard�s face and bulk loomed in | |
| front of him. The bodyguard was a tall man, tanned and bald, | |
| over six feet three. | |
| Mack stepped back as the wealthy man entered his Rolls. The | |
| chauffeur closed the door and went around the vehicle to his | |
| door. Then the chauffeur and the bodyguard got into the | |
| vehicle. It backed up slightly and drove away as Mack marveled | |
| the finery of a well-made hand-tooled luxury vehicle. The | |
| vehicle had Palm Beach license plates. | |
| Mack continued to his walk to the hotel. At the hotel he was | |
| greeted by a desk clerk going off duty who told him that his | |
| taxi company had called and said that that his ride would arrive | |
| shortly. Mack thanked him and sat at the bench in front of the | |
| hotel enjoying the sunlight and taking in the warm ocean breeze | |
| until the black, Greenmall Taxi had arrived and Mack got in. | |
| Mack had arranged the prior evening for a private hire fare | |
| which allowed him to be taken directly to Mar a Lago at Palm | |
| Beach. He had also carefully arranged with that company to have | |
| a West Palm Beach Greenmall taxi provide him with another | |
| private hire fare for his return trip to Lake Worth. That | |
| particular arrangement would be critical to the operation that | |
| he had planned regarding Milo Doubek. | |
| As he got into the taxi, and sat down in the back seat, he | |
| greeted his young, blonde driver, a strikingly beautiful woman | |
| dressed as a chauffeur, and settled back to enjoy the ride. He | |
| had a lot to think about. | |
| As the taxi went up the Interstate towards Palm Beach, Mack | |
| recalled out of his eidetic memory his memories of the place | |
| and, in particular, the story that his friend Preston told him | |
| about Trump and Mar a Lago. | |
| From what Preston had said, when Trump became interested in the | |
| property, it was controlled by the Post Foundation, who | |
| administered it after the death of its original owner, Marjorie | |
| Merriweather Post, who brilliantly developed her 128-room | |
| property into a national landmark. When she died, she had left | |
| the property to the government hoping that it would be used for | |
| diplomatic purposes, but that dream wasn�t fulfilled. The | |
| property, though magnificent, was expensive to operate and the | |
| government wasn�t interested in buying it. Preston said that it | |
| took a minimum of $3 million a year for operational expenses | |
| back in the 1990s. Trump bought the property for $5 million and | |
| put in another $3 million for the furnishings. Trump wanted it | |
| for a winter home but he had to deal with that property�s steep | |
| operational expenses. | |
| Trump�s solution to this financial problem was creative. It was | |
| to turn his newly purchased private home into a private club. | |
| As a landmark and, arguably the finest Palm Beach property, it | |
| had great potential for club use. Calling his members, �his | |
| guests�, Trump decided that his club �guests� would recoup the | |
| operating expenses of Mar a Lago. When Preston heard of this, | |
| he thought the plan was brilliant. Trump proceeded to do a | |
| careful redesign of Mar a Lago to make it a club, restricting | |
| access to those areas reserved only for his family. When the | |
| Palm Beach town council heard about it, they didn�t like it. | |
| They frowned upon the added people and traffic that it would | |
| bring to Palm Beach on South Ocean Boulevard and set | |
| restrictions on Trump�s new club after grudgingly approved of it | |
| in 1995. | |
| The town council imposed restrictions on membership, parking and | |
| traffic. Only 500 people could join, and only 313 car trips | |
| were allowed each day to the mansion. This forced Trump to | |
| restrict the membership to 350 members. This angered Trump and | |
| eventually entered a lawsuit concerning it claiming that the | |
| town council had imposed the restrictions because Trump would | |
| not discriminate against blacks and Jews as other exclusive Palm | |
| Beach clubs. Trump won his lawsuit by the end of the 1990s. | |
| Though he was stuck with the 500 person membership restriction, | |
| he overcame the traffic and parking restrictions. | |
| The Palm Beach elite didn�t like Trump. They found Trump�s | |
| flashy public display of wealth and his flamboyance got on their | |
| nerves. Though he bought, arguably, the finest property in Palm | |
| Beach, he was still not welcome into their society. Trump never | |
| gained membership into the Everglades and Beach and Tennis | |
| Clubs. He was not A-list on the social register and was | |
| excluded from the most exclusive balls and social functions of | |
| �the Season�, Palm Beach�s great circle of social activities | |
| during the winter. He was not granted membership into the most | |
| exclusive golf courses. Mack remembered his friend, Preston, | |
| saying, rather dryly, the fact that �they resented Trump driving | |
| a Lamborghini instead of the usual Rolls Royce, Bentley or | |
| Jaguar�. This denial of entry continued even after Trump�s | |
| accession to the Presidency. Over the years, Trump responded by | |
| having his own charity events and balls at Mar a Lago in which | |
| he invited the rich and famous. Trump also built his own | |
| exclusive golf courses. | |
| Mack continued in his thoughts until his young blonde driver, | |
| dressed in her crisp chauffer�s suit, asked him if he was going | |
| to see the President. He replied to her that he thought it | |
| wouldn�t happen. He told Mack told her that Trump preferred | |
| playing golf to the tedium of talking to �old men from Montana� | |
| and so it was possible it could be cancelled. She smiled at | |
| that. | |
| Mar a Lago is truly iconic, Mack thought. Large sumptuous rooms | |
| filled with exquisite furniture, costly chandeliers, expensive | |
| marble and other stones, great windows with magnificent views of | |
| the ocean and of the grounds, Mack considered that the pictures | |
| in travel books and on the internet do little justice to the | |
| beauty of the place. The way that Trump had arranged it, most | |
| of the property was open to the members of his club. It was an | |
| area larger than what most visitors would think would be open to | |
| the public and club members. The restricted areas were | |
| supposedly quite small. Only certain areas were exclusively | |
| restricted to the Trump family. During Presidential visits, | |
| club activities would, most likely, be severekt restricted, Mack | |
| suspected. Given the rising security concerns, it was possible | |
| that the entire property would be closed off when Trump was in | |
| town. | |
| Mack had been there before with Preston and Mrs. Callendar as | |
| Preston�s special guest back in autumn 1998. Though as a guest, | |
| he was not permitted to sit at the First Table where Trump and | |
| his girlfriend at the time, Melania Knauss, who later became | |
| Trump�s third wife, ate with Preston and his wife, and two other | |
| couples. Mack sat at another dinner table a short distance | |
| away, among those not considered the rich and famous. He had | |
| dined very well and had an enjoyable time with a banker, and his | |
| wife, from Boston, a rap star and his live-in girlfriend from | |
| Hollywood, and two other couples. | |
| They had dined on a nine-course meal which Trump had taken | |
| especial care to please his guests. They first began with | |
| lobster timbale accompanied by a 1994 Chateau Margaux Pavillon | |
| Blanc, a white Bourdeaux. Mack considered the wine to be | |
| intrusive to the taste of the lobster. Then came an | |
| Armagnac-marinated foie gras layered between brioche slices, | |
| then saut�ed in butter and baked, topped with pan-seared foie | |
| gras. This course was served with a Chardonnay, Courton | |
| Charlemagne Diamond Jubilee, Remoissent, 1996. The third, | |
| fourth and fifth courses were interesting and enjoyable: herb | |
| crusted halibut, followed by oven-roasted loin of rabbit with | |
| truffle flavored grits cake, followed by rack of lamb | |
| Dijonnaise. These courses were accompanied by Eschezeaux Louis | |
| Latour, 1993, a Pinot Noir. Mack considered the wine as | |
| excellent and in keeping with the palate needed to enjoy the | |
| courses. Next came crumbled Roquefort folded into a mousse of | |
| whipped cream and whipped egg white, placed on top of a walnut | |
| pastry crisp served with a port wine-poached fig and dried pear | |
| chips. Mack stayed with the Pinot Noir. Finally the dessert | |
| came, chocolate sponge cake with hazelnut cream, covered with | |
| chocolate. Laurent-Perrier rose grand champagne from Gran Crus | |
| vineyards followed. He later told Trump when he was brought | |
| before him for a brief meeting and conversation that he had | |
| dined very well saying that �Papa Stemple would have called it | |
| all �mighty fine fixin�s� and the cooks knew how to �put down a | |
| good feed��. Trump and the other guests within earshot laughed | |
| at that. | |
| That was twenty years ago and now it was shaping up, if the | |
| recent news stories were confirmed to be correct, that Trump had | |
| been spending �dark� money to pay for it all. Mack had heard it | |
| from some investigators that he knew in New York. It hadn�t | |
| come out yet, but back then, Trump was rarely being lent money | |
| for his financial ventures in the United States. Trump had | |
| stiffed too many people, including banks by that time. It had | |
| become well-known that he just was not a person keen on paying | |
| his bills. His Atlantic City casinos were in a bad financial | |
| state in 1998 and Trump was not getting any financial return | |
| from them. | |
| It was a good question where and how he was getting his money | |
| apart from real estate. Mack wondered about this back in 1998 | |
| when he was sitting at that dinner table. Trump�s real estate | |
| money flow doubtlessly didn�t pay for it all. It was well-known | |
| that Trump made money from selling his name as a brand name. | |
| That was one of the benefits of celebrity. That would have | |
| added to his income, but could that plus the real estate be | |
| enough? Mack didn�t think so at the time. The years have | |
| passed and time went on, and the news in 2016 and 2017 of | |
| financial ventures and schemes such as Trump University, that | |
| had failed also, didn�t seem to change the nature of Trump�s | |
| income stream. It could only be the alleged �dark money� coming | |
| from money laundering for organized crime and the likely common | |
| practice of the wealthy to tax fraud that enabled Trump to get | |
| the money he needed to live his lifestyle. | |
| Curiously, you could call it, despite all the wealth, a form of | |
| living on �the margin�. Many wealthy people did it. It | |
| reminded Mack of his father, who called his living in a similar | |
| manner a �hand to mouth existence�. Mack had heard over the | |
| years from various people that Trump, in rare moments of truth, | |
| referred to himself as �white trash�, the only difference was in | |
| the amount of money he had. It, of course, could be observed | |
| that the Trumps were trashy in their conduct. | |
| There were other interesting things that happened back then. | |
| After the dinner gathering with Trump at Mar a Lago, Mack | |
| remembered Eric Trump passing by their table going to the Lake | |
| Worth lagoon at the western edge of the property carrying a | |
| fishing pole. It was after 10 pm in that autumn of 1999 and it | |
| was beginning to turn dark. Trump called his son �honey� and | |
| kissed him on the cheek which Preston later told him that it | |
| struck him and his wife as strange. They watched as Eric walked | |
| off into the darkness to fish. | |
| Mack understood Eric�s desire to fish. It was the desire to | |
| connect with nature, to escape the artificiality of the life | |
| with its many walls that confined him, hemming him in from what | |
| life was really like and how it should be experienced. Mack | |
| suspected that Eric Trump liked the idea of having a fish he had | |
| caught, fileted and fried with his morning breakfast. Mack | |
| liked the idea as well. The freshness of the fish did add to | |
| its flavor. Eric had a variety of fish he could potentially | |
| catch. The Lake Worth lagoon, from what Mack knew, had | |
| Bluefish, Spanish mackerel and pompano. There was, also, the | |
| likelihood of sea trout, snapper, snook, and baby tarpon. He | |
| watched with complete sympathy the young man trudge away into | |
| the darkness. As his taxi passed the palm trees and flowers on | |
| the side of the road, it brought his mind back to the present. | |
| That was long ago, thought Mack. | |
| Trump had called himself and his family �white trash�. Moments | |
| of truth like that from Trump were rare. Generally, he hid | |
| himself behind the many lies he told. This was the great truth | |
| about the Trumps given how tawdry they were. They didn�t have | |
| class and they knew it very well, despite their wealth. They | |
| displayed in a manner written large, the invariable truth that | |
| morality, in the final sense, matters. | |
| If you have no morals, in the final sense no actions that you | |
| do, have any value even though you may seemingly gain in it | |
| somehow. You may earn money and power but you don�t gain | |
| critically in something else, you don�t gain in self-respect or | |
| in the abiding respect from others. In the end where morality | |
| is lacking true goodwill and affection are lacking as well. | |
| Whatever respect you may have obtained is not based upon genuine | |
| regard based on love. It would rather be based upon hatred, | |
| upon fear, upon power only, and Trump and his family have a | |
| great respect for power over goodwill. Since this respect is | |
| based upon the veneer of power, it doesn�t last. When the power | |
| is gone the respect behind it is gone as well. Also behind it, | |
| Mack thought, is something else yet again. Behind it all is an | |
| unacknowledged self-loathing. | |
| For the Trumps, their existence is consumed in all this. It is | |
| all hatred and self-hatred. Why tell the truth to people who do | |
| not respect you? Of course, there is the prior question, if you | |
| don�t tell the truth to people, isn�t it a fact that you don�t | |
| respect the people that you are lying to? That is the way it is | |
| with most people. Why should the Trumps be exempted from this | |
| human characteristic in the matter of the truth? What it means | |
| is something simple, because Trump lies to the American people | |
| on such a vast scale, he really doesn�t respect them. In a | |
| certain sense, he despises them. | |
| Mack watched the palms swaying in the breeze that he could see | |
| from the Interstate. He had heard that Trump still has the | |
| respect of multitudes of people. Perhaps he does, but these | |
| people are people who are fellow travelers in his lies, �white | |
| trash� who have a vested interest in furthering them. These are | |
| the people who are filled with hatred towards those that they | |
| perceive as their enemies. They were the ones that had | |
| supported the Obama birther lie, that Obama not born in Hawaii | |
| but rather in Kenya, and wasn�t rightfully President of the | |
| United States. In fairness to Trump, Trump did not create these | |
| liars but uses them politically. Mack reflected that little | |
| does the �white trash� realize that their hatred will get them | |
| nowhere, that their supposed morality is only a pretence, and | |
| that pretences destroy any basis for a dying way of life. | |
| Hatred only begets further hatred in those that nurture it; and, | |
| in the end morality, and, eventually, all religion is left | |
| behind. | |
| As the Greenmall Taxi driver steered the cab off the Interstate | |
| ramp and went onto Southern Boulevard, Mack began to sense, in | |
| the distance on the coast, the great anti-psi field, a dome of | |
| power that would, ordinarily, suppress his psionic powers. As | |
| they got closer, Mack could sense the form of a dome that was | |
| positioned over Mar a Lago. Mack was thankful that he would not | |
| be entirely vulnerable meeting with Trump this time. Mack | |
| turned from his thoughts and looked into the rear-view mirror of | |
| the taxi driver and observed that his attractive blonde driver | |
| was scrutinizing him closely. | |
| �Are you going to play golf with the President?� she asked. | |
| �No,� Mack replied. �It�s not my kind of game.� He had to | |
| smile at the thought of him striking a golf ball with a golf | |
| club. Despite all his superiority in physical coordination over | |
| a normal human, Mack figured that he would look ridiculous. | |
| Mack�s blonde taxi drive smiled at that and turned her eyes back | |
| to the road. Mack was quite confident that she didn�t have very | |
| many fares to Mar a Lago. Most of the out-of-town traffic into | |
| Palm Beach by habitual visitors would be by rented vehicles. | |
| #Post#: 20762-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Incident At Mar a Lago | |
| By: HOLLAND Date: December 2, 2018, 5:38 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Soon they arrived at the intersection of Southern Boulevard and | |
| South Flagler Avenue where they both could see policemen and a | |
| group of men in business suits, undoubtedly Secret Service | |
| agents, behind a cement traffic block on the other side of the | |
| intersection. The cement traffic block was meant to channel | |
| traffic either to the immediate right or to the left of it and | |
| to control traffic into Palm Beach and Mar a Lago. Mack watched | |
| as his taxi driver skillfully wheeled her taxi to the right of | |
| the block and went into a painted pavement lane behind it. The | |
| men approached. The taxi driver unrolled her window and said | |
| that she had a fare going to Mar a Lago. They asked to see her | |
| ID. Then they asked Mack for his ID. | |
| One of the Secret Service men asked him, �Do you have an | |
| appointment with the President?� | |
| �I do,� Mack replied. He took out of his inner windbreaker | |
| pocket a White House letter and handed it to the Secret Service | |
| agent. | |
| The agent frowned while reading the letter and said, �We�re not | |
| aware of this. Our instructions for this morning were that the | |
| President was not going to have any visitors and would be | |
| playing golf.� | |
| Mack listened as the Secret Service agent directed the taxi | |
| driver to proceed to the next checkpoint, the first parking lot | |
| on Bingham Island. She was instructed to remain in the cab | |
| until receiving instructions otherwise. She was advised that if | |
| the appointment was confirmed she would leave her fare there and | |
| depart by the same road she came in. If the appointment was not | |
| confirmed, she was instructed to take him to another desired | |
| location outside of Palm Beach. | |
| When they arrived at Bingham Island, Mack was now under the | |
| anti-psionic suppression field that was meant to protect the | |
| President. Mack was now experiencing life as a norm without any | |
| psionic abilities except for one critical exception. He could | |
| sense the analog remaining active in one of his paradimensional | |
| kargs that he could activate it as needed if he needed to make | |
| active his psionic powers in case of an emergency. This, of | |
| course, would cavitate the anti-psi field around him, freeing | |
| him from it, and it would alert the Secret Service, who | |
| maintained the suppression field. Mack hoped that it would be | |
| completely unnecessary to activate the analog. | |
| As they came up to Bingham Island�s first parking lot, which was | |
| on the left of the highway, they could see that the Secret | |
| Service had a number of parked cars and several tents set up for | |
| their own men and for processing visitors for security. When | |
| the taxi parked at their directions, only Mack was instructed to | |
| get out of the car, hand over again his identification and the | |
| White House letter. He was then instructed to follow the agents | |
| into one of tents where he was asked to remove his shoes, his | |
| belt, and empty his pockets. | |
| Two agents, using hand-held metal detectors, slowly went over | |
| his body until they were satisfied he wasn�t carrying anything | |
| metallic. Others looked at his pocket contents. They noted the | |
| small card wallet and the money clip with bills attached. They | |
| seemed disturbed that he wasn�t carrying anything more, such as | |
| a cell phone and asked him about it. �I left mine in my hotel | |
| room,� Mack replied to them. Other agents looked intently at | |
| his shoes. For a moment, Mack wondered if they were going to | |
| pry off the heels of the shoes. That they didn�t pleased Mack, | |
| but their intensity surprised him. | |
| As Mack was given back his possessions, he could hear one of the | |
| agents talking crisply over his cell phone. �Adrian Stemple has | |
| a letter but no appointment?�. After a short conversation, he | |
| told Mack that �they will see you at the appointment time listed | |
| in the letter.� Mack nodded at that. | |
| After his taxi was dismissed and a short wait in the tent by an | |
| air conditioner, Mack heard the dull motor sound of several golf | |
| carts arriving outside the tent. When Mack went outside with | |
| the agents delegated to accompany him, he observed that they | |
| were not golf carts but were several white Polaris Gem LSVs, low | |
| speed vehicles that were commonly seen in Florida. Following | |
| instructions from the agents, he got into the lead vehicle in | |
| the front. Several agents got in behind him. Other agents | |
| climbed into the LSV behind them. | |
| Soon they were motoring up Southern Boulevard, crossing the | |
| remaining bridge into Palm Beach. Soon they came to the main | |
| entrance, the Mar a Lago southern club entrance on Southern | |
| Boulevard. This was also the direct route to Trump�s domicile | |
| on the property. It was also the main entrance for many of the | |
| members of Trump's club. They had designated parking here along | |
| with the Secret Service. The agents quickly parked and Mack | |
| and the agents got out of the cart. Mack quickly surveyed the | |
| pastel colored building in front of him. He enjoyed the smell | |
| of Mar a Lago�s freshly cut lawn at the distant palms trees, | |
| flower beds and ornate buildings. It was plain to see the | |
| magnificence of the property and the exquisite sense of taste | |
| and proportion that Marjorie Merriweather Post had put into the | |
| buildings. They were little changed when he had last seen them | |
| in 1999. Descriptions about them would do little justice | |
| regarding them. | |
| Passing through the Mar a Lago complex on the outside of the | |
| buildings, walking a circuitous route of sidewalks, surrounded | |
| by Secret Service agents, Mack finally stepped onto another | |
| sidewalk and began to walk towards the private Trump family | |
| entrance. The Trump family complex was a large white and tan | |
| colored building with dark red ceramic roof tiling, that was set | |
| apart from the main Mar a Lago complex. As they came up the | |
| sidewalk alongside the building�s large tinted windows, next to | |
| a garden with flowers and fountains, the men observed another | |
| man stepping out of the shadows of a tree and some shrubs, a | |
| hulking brute of a man with a Slavic face. It was Milo Doubek, | |
| Trump�s bodyguard. | |
| Doubek, undoubtedly violating security procedure, stepped into | |
| the screen of Secret Service men and stood in front of Mack. He | |
| said, �You�ve finally arrived and I can see now that you�re the | |
| same **** **** loser that you�ve always been. You don�t look | |
| tough. You may think that you�re something with all your fancy | |
| martial arts, Stemple, but you�re nothing to fear. You�re | |
| nothing without your weapons, your guns, your balisongs, your | |
| spike-like shuriken, and your fancy kusari chains.� | |
| �A kusari chain is actually called a manrikigusari, Mr. Doubek.� | |
| Doubek shook his head in disgust. �You just talk too much, | |
| Stemple. One of the days we�re going to have it out.� Then | |
| Doubek grinned. �Maybe we should have it out right now,� he | |
| said. | |
| �Stop it, Milo,� the Secret Service agent said sharply. �This | |
| man is here to see the President.� | |
| �Don�t mess in my affairs, Jenkins,� snapped Doubek to the | |
| Secret Service agent. �If you do, you�re sailing into waters | |
| too deep for you. You don�t know what�s going on here.� To | |
| Mack he said, �Now get your **** **** off the sidewalk so that a | |
| man can walk by.� | |
| Mack smiled faintly at that and stepped off the sidewalk. | |
| Doubek took one step closer to Mack, with Jenkins, the senior | |
| Secret Service agent, right behind him. �Just as I thought,� | |
| said Doubek. �Without any weapons, there�s no manhood there.� | |
| Grinning, he raised his fists into a fighting stance. | |
| �Stop it, Milo! Don�t attack him!� bellowed Jenkins who quickly | |
| stepped forward and behind the bodyguard and reached out his arm | |
| to grab him. | |
| Doubek grinned and, looking back over his shoulder, snapped his | |
| right elbow back into Jenkins� face. The man staggered back, | |
| his face bloodied. As the other Secret Service agents stood | |
| shocked, Mack observed that Doubek didn�t hit directly with the | |
| elbow but several inches behind it. The man knew something | |
| about fighting. As Jenkins fell, Doubek jerked his head back at | |
| Mack, and, smiling triumphantly, swung at Mack with a right | |
| punch. | |
| Mack quickly stepped back and watched Doubek�s fist arc past | |
| him. He�s too slow, thought Mack as he went into his own | |
| fighting stance. Oddly, the man had struck at him from directly | |
| in front and not from an oblique angle like he�s supposed to. | |
| Doubek punched again, quicker with his left and Mack stepped | |
| back. Doubek scowled and punched again with his right. Mack | |
| then went onto the offense. He quickly turned his body and | |
| stepped inside Doubek�s reach. Given that the man was so slow, | |
| it was easy to do. Having stepped inside Doubek�s left side, | |
| inside the bodyguard�s punch, Mack reached and grabbed Doubek�s | |
| right wrist with his left hand, quickly pulling it to his left | |
| hip. Then Mack placed his right foot inside Doubek�s right foot | |
| and slammed an underhook under Doubek�s right arm, and pivoting, | |
| placed Doubek behind him. Before Doubek could react | |
| effectively, Mack, having locked Doubek�s arm, swiveled, | |
| straightened and threw the struggling, hapless bodyguard over | |
| his shoulder. The man crashed on the grass with a heavy thud. | |
| Ordinarily, if this was meant to be lethal combat, Mack would | |
| have finished him, killing him then and there, but he didn�t | |
| need to. The once-shocked Secret Service agents swarmed over | |
| the man, first immobilizing him, and then handcuffing him. | |
| As he was hauled to his feet, Doubek roared, �This isn't **** | |
| over yet, Stemple.� | |
| Mack stepped over where the injured Secret Service agent lay on | |
| the ground. His nose looked crushed and was bleeding badly. | |
| One of the agents was on his cell phone calling for an | |
| ambulance. Mack could see that the nose blow was potentially | |
| very dangerous. If the nasal cartilage had been slammed up too | |
| far into the skull, it could be a death wound. | |
| More Secret Service agents arrived, including a senior agent | |
| that Mack knew slightly, a man named Collins. The two men | |
| nodded. Collins was quickly briefed about the situation and | |
| became very angry. Despite Doubek protests, Collins placed the | |
| bodyguard under arrest for felony assault upon a Federal | |
| officer, and advised him of his Miranda rights. | |
| As Doubek was led away, Collins said, �You�ll need to wait here | |
| with these men while I report this to the President.� | |
| As Collins hurried inside the building, Mack observed the | |
| arrival of the ambulance. Having been advised of the situation, | |
| the EMTs quickly got out a gurney and wheeled it up the sidewalk | |
| to the fallen man. They rolled the man onto his side and | |
| struggled to stop the man�s bleeding with gauze, bandages and a | |
| cold pack. As far as Mack could tell, they worked brilliantly | |
| in controlling the nosebleed that came out of his body. But | |
| what of any internal bleeding? That is going to decide the | |
| issue, ultimately. | |
| Collins didn�t immediately return and Mack had to wonder about | |
| that. Did the President know, or more importantly, acknowledge | |
| Doubek�s hostility toward�s Mack? He looked beyond the fallen | |
| man and the EMTs on the lawn towards the flowers and shrubs on | |
| the edge of the lawn. The flowers were beautiful as they swayed | |
| in the gentle ocean breese. He continued to watch the EMTs | |
| struggling to control the bleeding of their patient, the hapless | |
| Jenkins. After they seemed to have dealt with the bleeding, | |
| they checked the fallen man�s vital signs and at a certain point | |
| determined that he could be safely moved. They quickly loaded | |
| him onto the gurney and then wheeled him out to the ambulance. | |
| As the ambulance left, Mack heard a voice behind him. It was | |
| Collins. | |
| �The President will see you now.� Collins looked grim. | |
| With the other Secret Service agents, Mack followed the senior | |
| agent into the building, through an ornate foyer and then into a | |
| large office with plush carpeting where the foot sank | |
| noiselessly. The walls and carpeting in the room were various | |
| shades of a light pastel green. In front of him was President | |
| Trump, ringed by Secret Service agents, sitting at his large | |
| mahogany desk. Behind him was a large Presidential portrait of | |
| himself. | |
| Mack paused and observed that to his left were overstuffed | |
| chairs in front of an ornate gas fireplace. Mack had to wonder | |
| who would use a fireplace in Florida. Further away to his left, | |
| there was an open doorway to a hallway, and Mack noted more | |
| Secret Service agents were standing there. There were other | |
| costly paintings and tapestries on each of the walls. To the | |
| President�s right and behind him, and to Mack�s left was another | |
| doorway that led to the Presidential restroom. To the | |
| President�s left and Mack�s right was the remaining wall to the | |
| room, composed of large windows, from floor to ceiling. | |
| #Post#: 20763-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Incident At Mar a Lago | |
| By: HOLLAND Date: December 2, 2018, 5:39 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| President Trump, sitting silently, was frowning at him. As Mack | |
| could clearly see, from the large picture window directly to the | |
| left of the President�s desk, President Trump had apparently | |
| watched the whole incident as it occurred right outside his | |
| window. Mack wondered, given Trump�s history of bullying, did | |
| the President contrive this incident? Standing next to his | |
| desk, another man, a balding, burly man, was holding a black | |
| leather portfolio. Obviously, the man was a Presidential aide. | |
| Mack smiled faintly. | |
| Collins, with several of his Secret Service men, went up and | |
| behind the Presidential desk. The burly man, holding the | |
| portfolio, stepped forward and offered his hand. �I�m Gregory | |
| Pond, the President�s aide, for this meeting.� | |
| Mack shook his hand and mumbled the usual words of courtesy. | |
| When the two men approached the President�s desk, Trump arose | |
| from his chair and the two men shook hands. Trump motioned Mack | |
| to be seated in the lone, bright yellow leather chair in front | |
| of the desk. The remaining Secret Service men remained standing | |
| silently behind him. | |
| �That was impressive, Mr. Stemple on how you dealt with Mr. | |
| Doubek,� said the Presidential aide. �I was in the Marines and | |
| I�ve seen shoulder throws before. You could have killed him | |
| quite easily when you had him down.� | |
| Mack nodded. | |
| Charles Pond smiled. �You took a chance with him. You didn�t | |
| soften him up with a number of blows before throwing him. He | |
| could�ve overpowered you after you grappled him.� | |
| Mack shook his head, �No chance of that,� he said. �Back in the | |
| Eighties and Nineties, when he was in his twenties and thirties, | |
| he would have been faster, and more formidable. He is a | |
| conventional street fighter, but he�s never acquired more | |
| formal, systematic training in fighting. He�s now in his | |
| fifties and is clearly ill-prepared and unconditioned. He�s way | |
| too slow to be an effective bodyguard and is clearly untrained | |
| on how to deal with an opponent grappling him. He only tried to | |
| grapple back ineffectively when it was far too late to protect | |
| him.� | |
| Pond continued to smile. �It�s too bad that this has happened. | |
| On behalf of the White House, Mr. Stemple, we offer you our full | |
| apologies.� | |
| Mack nodded. �It will be good to see the man tried for | |
| assault,� he said. �The Secret Service has lost the services of | |
| a fine man. Agent Jenkins of the Secret Service will need to | |
| take time off to recover from his wounds.� | |
| Trump interrupted, �Jenkin�s injury is a simple nose bleed. | |
| There won�t be any criminal charges entered because of this | |
| incident. I�ve ordered the Secret Service not to press | |
| charges.� | |
| The President and Mack Stemple stared at each other. | |
| Mack continued, �That was a felony assault, Mr. President. It�s | |
| not simply a matter of a nosebleed. Mr. Jenkins was given a | |
| nearly fatal blow in the face. This is because a serious part | |
| of his nose cartilage was rammed into his skull. In certain | |
| circumstances that can be a fatal wound. Now if that man | |
| dies--� | |
| �He�s not going to die, Mr. Stemple.� | |
| Mack stared at Trump; and, wondered again, did he really | |
| understand what happened in this incident? Did he contrive this | |
| incident? What was clear was that the President didn�t | |
| understand the enormity of what had just happened. | |
| Trump stared at Mack sternly, �This is not going to court and | |
| you�re not going to tell anyone about this.� He said. | |
| Mack shook his head. �That�s not possible, Mr. President. What | |
| I�ve witnessed was a felony assault and if I receive a subpoena | |
| concerning it, I can�t conceal the facts involving the matter.� | |
| �We�re going to have you sign a non-disclosure agreement before | |
| you leave,� snapped Gregory Pond. �And you will keep what has | |
| happened here secret.� The Presidential aide was beginning to | |
| look exasperated. | |
| �No can do, Mr. Pond,� said Mack. �A non-disclosure agreement | |
| is not legally binding in the face of a criminal matter.� | |
| The President interrupted. �I DON�T CARE WHAT THE LAW SAYS,� | |
| shouted Donald Trump. �I�M THE **** PRESIDENT AND I�M GIVING | |
| YOU A PRESIDENTIAL ORDER. YOU�LL DO WHAT I SAY!� | |
| �It�s not what you think, Mr. President.� | |
| �SHUT UP!� | |
| �It�s a matter of law, Mr. President.� | |
| �DIDN�T YOU HEAR ME, LITTLE MAN? I�M GIVING THE **** **** | |
| ORDERS AROUND HERE!� | |
| The two men stared at each other until Trump finally looked | |
| away. He was not used to people meeting his glare. | |
| Speaking more quietly, Trump said, �You shouldn�t blame Milo | |
| Doubek for hating you. He�s told me that you�ve destroyed two | |
| of his prior employers.� | |
| �Who are they, Mr. President?� | |
| �They were Leonard Malcolm and Parker Simonsen. They were also | |
| friends of mine.� | |
| �I had fairly little to do with the death of those two men. | |
| When I was hired by a lawyer, Arthur Bascom, in New York City in | |
| October of 1998, to investigate a file that came into his | |
| possession, he was murdered by a team of men employed by Leonard | |
| Malcolm. It is true that Malcolm had hundreds of men chasing me | |
| to obtain the file, but I didn�t kill any of them or him. He | |
| was, in turn, hunted by the FBI who determined that there was | |
| probable cause that he ordered the murder of Arthur Bascom. | |
| Malcolm, it could be said, destroyed himself because of his many | |
| murders. He tried to go to ground because he had a number of | |
| safe houses. He was eventually found to have died of exposure | |
| in a ditch outside of Ft. McLeod, Canada. | |
| �Concerning Parker Simonsen, I did investigate crimes involving | |
| him in Latin America during the 1990s. My work was not | |
| considered definitive and did not replace the later FBI | |
| investigations. As you probably know, he was brought down by | |
| FBI investigations into his money laundering and gun running in | |
| Latin America in the 1980s and 1990s. I did not have very much | |
| to do with those investigations that were completed in 2014 and | |
| 2015. When the police came to his home to arrest him, he put a | |
| gun to his mouth and pulled the trigger.� | |
| �These men were friends of mine,� said the President. �Then | |
| there was Howard Braddock. You came into his life, as well, and | |
| now he�s dead too. He was a good friend of mine as well.� | |
| Mack smiled again, faintly. �My brief moment with Braddock goes | |
| back to November 1985. He tried to sexually assault a young | |
| girl in Miami after drugging her. He had a reputation for | |
| date-raping young girls.� | |
| President Trump frowned. �I�ve heard about that. A lot of | |
| talk, I think. To me, it�s little more than fake news. That�s | |
| something, Mr. Stemple, that�s never been proven. What�s your | |
| story about this?� | |
| �The young girl�s brother was looking for her sister and I heard | |
| about it. He was alarmed about her safety and I offered to help | |
| him. We tracked Braddock and the girl to a hotel room. After | |
| we entered the room, I surprised and knocked down his bodyguard | |
| down and locked him in a closet at the same time the girl�s | |
| brother confronted a highly chastened Mr. Braddock. It was this | |
| girl�s brother who knocked him to the floor and bloodied his | |
| nose. While the young girl�s brother carried his unconscious, | |
| drugged sister out to his car, I watched Braddock to prevent him | |
| from interfering with the young girl�s escape. | |
| �Braddock was, of course, angry. He was angry that he�d been | |
| knocked to the floor and his nose was bloodied. He was further | |
| angry that I wouldn�t allow him to get up. He didn�t know the | |
| girl�s name and was angry that anyone was making a fuss over a | |
| girl who �didn�t count for anything�. | |
| �What he didn�t know was that the girl�s brother was going to | |
| drive her back home in North Carolina and would, from that | |
| point, be out of his reach. He didn�t know that the brother | |
| would take his sister across the Georgia line by morning. After | |
| about five minutes, and some words, I left him and that motel | |
| room and walked to a nearby bar.� | |
| �What happened then?� | |
| �Braddock followed me minus his bodyguard.� | |
| �That sounds stupid,� interjected Gregory Pond. | |
| �It was.� Mack smiled broadly. �Braddock, yelling profanity at | |
| me, pulled a gun on me. To his surprise he was immediately | |
| countered by seven off-duty police officers drawing their | |
| weapons. Braddock, unwisely, had chosen to make his play within | |
| a well-known Miami bar frequented by off-duty cops. This, of | |
| course landed him in trouble. As he dropped his gun, he | |
| couldn�t very well tell the police the reason why he was angry | |
| and waving a gun around. He then told them that he had made a | |
| mistake in the identity of the person that he was looking for, | |
| and that he had pulled his gun on the wrong person. After some | |
| further questioning, in his awkward flustering, he resumed his | |
| profanity and turned his anger and foul language onto the cops. | |
| He even tried to assault a few of them before they hauled him | |
| away. � | |
| �That was very stupid,� admitted the President. | |
| �He faced multiple charges because of the incident. I | |
| understand that he was involved in litigation about the incident | |
| for several years. He escaped punishment because of his sizable | |
| investment in good lawyers.� Mack stopped smiling. �He was | |
| later killed when his new bodyguard found him in bed with the | |
| bodyguard�s even newer wife. He punished Braddock with a blow | |
| to the back of the head with the butt-end of his over-sized | |
| revolver. I understand, later on, that the bodyguard had gotten | |
| off quite lightly.� | |
| Trump seemed mollified but skeptical. �I knew all three of | |
| those men,� said President Trump. �I�ve always thought of them | |
| as good men.� Trump frowned. �I really don�t like the idea | |
| that you became involved with them shortly before their deaths.� | |
| �I�m not some kind of angel of death, Mr. President. You could | |
| say that death followed those men until their time ran out. I | |
| just happened to be around at the time of their demise.� | |
| �I don�t like it that wealthy persons such as those men and me | |
| are confronted by men of lesser quality. Milo Doubek was right, | |
| I think, in raising the question of how and why you entered | |
| their lives. True, he hated you, but there has to be some | |
| reason for that hatred.� | |
| �I tend to draw the hatred of evil men.� | |
| Gregory Pond interrupted, �You have an interesting file, Mr. | |
| Stemple. There�s not much to it. It�s lacking a lot of | |
| information that one would ordinarily find in a government file. | |
| What is interesting is what it doesn�t contain.� | |
| �I can�t be expected to be held accountable for that.� | |
| �Are you going to sign a non-disclosure agreement?� Trump | |
| demanded. | |
| �No.� | |
| Pond frowned. �Perhaps after we�ve looked at your file, you | |
| will,� he said. | |
| Mack smiled. �I�d be happy to see what�s in that file. And I | |
| would be happy to answer any questions you may have as long as | |
| it doesn�t touch upon current classified matters.� | |
| �AS PRESIDENT, I HAVE THE RIGHT TO SEE ANY CLASSIFIED MATERIAL | |
| REGARDING ANYONE OR ANYTHING!� Trump bellowed, �WHO DO YOU **** | |
| THINK I AM?� | |
| Mack continued to smile. �You�re a man with secrets who has | |
| much to fear and you know the players I�m talking about. I | |
| know about your association with criminal organizations and we | |
| both know what they�re capable of. Secrecy is meant to protect | |
| you and your family.� | |
| �You think that criminals would dare meddle in my affairs. That | |
| sounds far-fetched, Mr. Stemple. Nobody is going to bother the | |
| President of the United States.� | |
| Mack smiled. �You can only hope for that,� he said. | |
| #Post#: 20764-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Incident At Mar a Lago | |
| By: HOLLAND Date: December 2, 2018, 5:41 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| The men stared at each other uncomfortably and a silence | |
| descended upon the Presidential office. | |
| The President�s aide, Gregory Pond, broke the silence. �We | |
| understand from your file, Mr. Stemple, that you�ve had a lot to | |
| do with criminal cases involving the most lethal criminal | |
| organizations. We can understand why they�re out for your | |
| blood.� | |
| Mack looked at the aide. He could see that that Pond was | |
| temporizing, probably wanting to make sure that their meeting | |
| would be productive. Mack suspected that Pond, likely, thought | |
| that the meeting was pointless. He had to know that Mack could | |
| have been interviewed by the FBI back in Montana for whatever | |
| questions they had about his file. It was evident that the | |
| meeting was pre-textual. | |
| Trump scowled. �I�ve had no trouble with connected guys, | |
| Stemple,� he said. �They don�t bother me when you get to know | |
| them.� | |
| Mack cut him off. �This isn�t Atlantic City, Mr. President. | |
| Back then, you and the mob were in a series of joint ventures at | |
| those casinos of yours. You and they had shared interests which | |
| involved a lot of money. Back then, you could say you were | |
| �mobbed up� as the expression goes. You had their protection. | |
| �That�s not the way it is with the Latin American gangs and the | |
| Russian mafia that I�ve been in contact with and you know it. | |
| These mobs, as you know, are quite different and far more | |
| ruthless. They have no abiding connection with you and they�d | |
| as soon as kill you, and members of your family, if they thought | |
| you had betrayed them for some reason, or if they could get back | |
| at me for revenge. | |
| �As you�ve probably read from my file, I�ve created an, as yet | |
| undisclosed, secret interlocking matrix of circumstances which | |
| has led to the shredding of much of their finances on a global | |
| scale over the years. They would like to stop their recurring | |
| financial losses. Since this involves a multiple of global | |
| criminal organizations, there is a lot of pain going around and | |
| a lot of anger. Just because you�re the President of the United | |
| States, that�s not going to stop them from eventually coming | |
| after you and your family. We�re talking about billions of | |
| dollars here.� | |
| �Those brief, enigmatic, incomplete reports do indicate that | |
| you�ve done something big and that you�re potentially in a dire | |
| situation,� Pond agreed. | |
| Trump wasn�t buying it. �That sounds far-fetched, Stemple. I | |
| really doubt that any mob or any group of connected guys would | |
| want the heat that would come from attacking a prominent | |
| American politician or his family.� | |
| �This is not the same circumstances you remember, Mr. President. | |
| I�ve cost them a lot of money and critical personnel and so | |
| they�d like to get back at me, and all the other agents who�ve | |
| helped make their lives short and miserable, in their many | |
| factional disputes. They can clearly see your connection to | |
| criminal organizations and will recognize that you are a part of | |
| their world and not of the world of law. They will treat you | |
| and your family accordingly.� | |
| �You think that I�m a part of their world?� Trump smirked, his | |
| eyes mocking as he leaned back in his chair. | |
| Mack smiled faintly. �Are you a law-abiding citizen? Have you | |
| done any money laundering or tax fraud recently? If you�ve | |
| entered their world, and have been granted access to the | |
| benefits they can offer you, you play by their rules. Their | |
| world has its own laws and its own expectations of conduct and | |
| secrecy. They can and do punish their own.� | |
| Trump snapped forward in his chair, his face red with rage. | |
| �WHO DO YOU **** THINK THAT I AM, DARING TO ACCUSE ME IN FRONT | |
| OF WITNESSES OF TAX FRAUD AND MONEY LAUNDERING!� | |
| �I�m just a plain man, Mr. President. I call it as I see it.� | |
| �YOU DON�T HAVE ANY PROOF OF THIS!� shouted the President. | |
| �For me it�s not a matter of proof at all. Certainly it�s that | |
| way with the mob. They�re not concerned about proof. They | |
| value silence, omerta as the American mafia called it. If they | |
| think that you�ve betrayed them and are misusing the information | |
| you have on them, you�ll pay for it. Don�t think it�s simple | |
| vindictiveness. They have to set an example for all the others. | |
| They need to have their law prevail so that they can conduct | |
| business and make money in the manner that they�re accustomed. | |
| They take a dim view of those that affect their ability to make | |
| money. And, certainly, if they learn that you know about those | |
| persons that have been making their lives miserable for the last | |
| thirty years, and if they don�t have their way with you, they�ll | |
| go out of their way to make sure you pay for it. Their tempers | |
| are still boiling about the American agents who�ve made their | |
| lives miserable.� | |
| �That still sounds far-fetched.� | |
| �You�re not a citizen of the outward world of law Mr. President, | |
| a world of national and international law that has its rules and | |
| its sense of honor. On that, on a certain level, they respect | |
| it and will keep some hands off of it, but you�re a citizen of | |
| their world. And that world of the lawless has its own laws.� | |
| Mack paused. �You�re in their world of evil.� | |
| Trump slouched back in his chair. �There you go again,� the | |
| President muttered. �Coughing out that cheap moralizing like | |
| life is some sort of Sunday School. You�ve done it for years, | |
| you and your friend Preston Callendar. Only choke artists are | |
| goody-goodies.� | |
| �I�m just a plain man, Mr. President. I like using old | |
| fashioned words like good and evil and that a man�s word is his | |
| bond.� | |
| The President�s aide, Gregory Pond, then spoke. �You�re not | |
| just a plain man, Mr. Stemple. You�re here because we have | |
| questions about your personnel file.� Pond opened his portfolio | |
| and looked down at the pages attached in it. He said, �You�ve | |
| worked some 46 years, in some capacity for the government. | |
| Though Milo Doubek hates you, it seems that your file | |
| information about it that would cause any investigator to ask | |
| questions.� | |
| �I don�t see why.� | |
| �In 46 years you�ve never rose beyond the GSA ranking of GSA-9. | |
| And you were never paid the equivalent salary for that rank.� | |
| �Call it lack of ambition.� | |
| Gregory Pond smiled at that. Mack smiled inwardly as well. | |
| Both men had met highly ambitious people in their line of work | |
| in DC and both knew perfectly well that this lack of ambition | |
| was atypical. | |
| Pond continued, �You were born in Yakima, in the State of | |
| Washington on April 4, 1947. Your father was an electrician and | |
| your mother was a homemaker. You attended Dwight Eisenhower | |
| High School and graduated on June 3, 1965. | |
| �Your grandparents lived in Lewistown, Montana and you spent | |
| many happy summers there. You hiked and fished extensively. | |
| From what your file says you got to know the Big Snowy Mountains | |
| quite well. You were adventurous. Even when you were very | |
| young, when you were nine years old, you walked the miles of | |
| steep trails to Knife Blade Ridge and Greathouse Peak above the | |
| clouds, and you did it alone. When the time came for Selective | |
| Service, the file has a big surprise. You weren�t immediately | |
| drafted into military service and shipped off to Vietnam like so | |
| many young men. It was different for you.� | |
| �So how it goes.� | |
| �So it does, Mr. Stemple.� Gregory Pond paused. �That�s when | |
| your personnel file starts to become odd, very odd indeed. You | |
| received a special military assignment. With your voluntary | |
| enrollment letters to Selective Service and your congressional | |
| representatives, asking for special assignment, it was | |
| immediately granted to you, despite the lack of any training on | |
| your part.� | |
| �Perhaps they thought I�d be a quick study.� | |
| Pond looked at Mack in disbelief and continued, �In November | |
| 1965, and your initial orders, you were enrolled into a secret | |
| program of the Defense Intelligence Agency called Project | |
| BROADSHIELD as a GSA-8. This was a secret program of utilizing | |
| some draft-eligible men as military policemen. There is no | |
| record of your testing for the General Services Administration. | |
| There is no record of your DOD training. You weren�t going to | |
| serve as any other citizen who was to serve their military | |
| service at the time. You simply had it written in your record | |
| that such training was waived. Your file indicates that not | |
| everyone in DOD thought this was okay. General Carpenter of the | |
| USMC had it recorded in a letter that he didn�t like it, | |
| initially, but that you passed the Marine Corps training | |
| standards in the ten days that you were assigned to Camp | |
| Pendleton.� | |
| �He just wanted to make it sure that I was up to the marching | |
| and saluting and the cleaning of latrines.� | |
| Pond chuckled at that but Trump scowled, �Grown men playing | |
| soldier . . .� Trump said. | |
| Pond, frowning briefly at that, returned to his file. He | |
| continued, �Through the DIA, you were assigned initially to the | |
| U.S. Air Force as a Second Lieutenant, a rank equivalent to your | |
| GSA ranking. Your orders were cut for you to report to Offutt | |
| AFB and to report to Colonel Vossler. You worked in the Air | |
| Force�s Office of Special Investigations, working some nine drug | |
| investigations and two murders for that service working on a | |
| variety of different Air Force bases and locations. You served | |
| with them from December 1965 until March 1967. | |
| �You then received new orders informing you to report to General | |
| Nielson at Fort Bragg. At that point, you took off your Air | |
| Force uniform and donned U.S. Army olive green and reported to | |
| Fort Bragg as a Warrant Officer, the equivalent of your GSA | |
| ranking. You worked in the Army�s Criminal Investigations | |
| Division under Colonel Kirkham for two years, from March 1967 to | |
| March 1969. You worked seven drug investigations and four | |
| murders for that service. Your investigations went over the | |
| entire country, and you did much that impressed the FBI when | |
| they were brought into those investigations.� | |
| Trump shook his head. �Another **** law and order creep . . .� | |
| he muttered. | |
| Gregory Pond, annoyed, looked briefly back at the President. | |
| Mack looked at the impassive faces of the Secret Service men | |
| guarding the President. Despite that impassivity, Mack | |
| suspected that they were annoyed as well. | |
| Mack turned his head back to the Presidential aide and said, | |
| �They had it all wrong. Being I�m too independent, I wasn�t | |
| Bureau material. I doubt that I could�ve passed the FBI | |
| entrance examination.� | |
| �Perhaps that�s so, Mr. Stemple. You would�ve needed a | |
| university degree to get into the Bureau and you don�t have | |
| one,� responded the aide. | |
| �It�s just that I�m a plain man, Mr. Pond, just plain folks at | |
| bottom.� | |
| �Get on with this, Gregory,� the President grumbled. �And | |
| continue giving us only the high points.� | |
| �Yes, Mr. President.� Gregory looked back at Mack and said, | |
| �You went to Vietnam from late December 1967 to March 1968 | |
| during the TET Offensive, and participated in Operation KRAKEN. | |
| In the non-classified report in your file, it indicates that | |
| you and your Army squad killed a Russian national in the jungle | |
| outside of Saigon who was codenamed KRAKEN in the operation. | |
| You were involved in four fire-fights during the investigation.� | |
| �Much to my regret.� | |
| �Indeed. Your file doesn�t have much to say about this | |
| incident, but there were more letters of commendation entered | |
| into your file after you�d returned State-side. In July 1968 | |
| you were increased in rank to GSA-9. In that rank you were | |
| still classed as a Warrant Officer. In March 1969, orders were | |
| cut again and you were assigned to the U.S. Navy, with the Naval | |
| Investigative Service, under Commander Britton; your duty | |
| station being U.S. Naval Station San Diego. At that time you | |
| now had a Navy Warrant Officer rating. You worked another seven | |
| drug investigations and two murders. That was your last | |
| assigned duty station until you left Project BROADSHIELD in | |
| December 1971. Unlike a conventional draftee, you served six | |
| years. You didn�t win any medals for valor. You did not | |
| advance in GSA grade beyond GSA-9.� | |
| �Such was my lackluster career.� | |
| �Don�t offend my intelligence, Mr. Stemple. You are much more | |
| efficient than your file seems to imply. Your pay records | |
| indicate that you were never paid in any manner corresponding to | |
| your GSA rating. You were only paid annually $3,000 a year as a | |
| GSA-8 and $3,500 a year as a GSA-9.� | |
| �Such is my woe, to be taken advantage of.� | |
| �You left military service under Project BROADSHIELD but your | |
| personnel file continues nevertheless. Several security | |
| investigations reported that you met a young woman, Calanthe | |
| Poulain, when you were in Seattle, in May 1971. You were | |
| married in Gig Harbor, in August 1973. You were married for ten | |
| years. You lived in Port Townsend, and later, Everett, | |
| Washington, working as an officer on a small commercial fishing | |
| boat. She worked as an elementary school teacher. She was | |
| known for her kindness and religious devotion. One of those | |
| reports indicated that she died in a traffic accident in August | |
| 1983. You never remarried.� | |
| �Callie was a remarkable woman.� | |
| �I�m sorry for your loss.� | |
| �Get on with it,� muttered Trump. | |
| #Post#: 20765-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Incident At Mar a Lago | |
| By: HOLLAND Date: December 2, 2018, 5:42 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| �In June 1985, Mr. Stemple, you began your work as a contract | |
| agent for the FBI in conjunction with the US Marshal Service as | |
| a contract agent with no GSA rating, serving as an advisor to | |
| them concerning investigative issues. You did this until your | |
| final separation of service from them in June, 2015. You worked | |
| two or three investigations a year, completing a total | |
| participation in 77 investigations during your employment | |
| period. According to these reports, though the credit was | |
| largely given to FBI agents, much of your work was critical. | |
| Your file is filled with significant letters of commendation. | |
| Your personnel file reports that you are now fully retired but | |
| not likely to draw Social Security. I am struck by the | |
| emotional intensity of many of those letters of commendations | |
| and reports concerning your part involving the various criminal | |
| investigations that you were a part of.� | |
| �So you see, Mr. Pond, my file�s nothing to worry about. But if | |
| you look at those letters, other people had completed more | |
| critical accomplishments needed to bring those investigations to | |
| a successful conclusion. My work was not that important. | |
| Actually it�s more lackluster. It�s just another lackluster | |
| file about a lackluster contract agent.� | |
| �NO IT ISN�T!� Trump bellowed. �WHO THE HELL DO THINK YOU ARE! | |
| WHO, IN THE DEVIL, WORKS FOR WAGES AT THE POVERTY LEVEL?� | |
| Mack smiled at the President, �I guess I did,� Mack confessed | |
| sheepishly. �I guess I was taken advantage of.� | |
| �No, Mr. Stemple.� Pond interrupted. �Don�t offend our | |
| intelligence. The record is very clear about your great | |
| competence, and that, despite your completing a series of very | |
| high risk investigations against highly placed criminals and | |
| organized crime families you�ve received very little in | |
| recognition or remuneration for it. This lack of proper | |
| remuneration leads us to think that there is either something | |
| wrong with your income or that there is a problem with your file | |
| as well.� | |
| Mack smiled. �I�m sure you can see that, in the file, as a | |
| low-level contract agent I was paid routinely out of the | |
| operational funds of the department itself and that these funds | |
| were tax exempt. I�ve filed taxes every year despite that and | |
| not having a legal requirement to do so.� | |
| �You have been careful to file taxes, Mr. Stemple, but your | |
| remuneration is still very odd. Given that you were paid out of | |
| operational funds only, in a sense, you lacked, because of the | |
| payment status, the more formal status that is typical of a | |
| contract agent. You were listed and described as a contract | |
| agent, but your payments that you received seem to deny it. You | |
| were paid as if you were some small-time informer of the Bureau, | |
| one who is to be paid or discarded very casually. All this is | |
| very odd and it doesn�t explain the small amounts that you were | |
| paid. We know, Mr. Stemple, but we cannot see how one can live | |
| for decades on the small pittances of money that you�ve | |
| received. Also, we don�t know where you live. From what we can | |
| tell, you�ve possibly been living out of safe-houses | |
| operationally maintained by the U.S. Marshal Service for its | |
| witness protection program.� | |
| �Now there�s your answer about my many residences; and I�ve also | |
| scrounged for money in various ways.� | |
| �You found that money in the black economy, Mr. Stemple?� | |
| �Yes.� | |
| Pond frowned at Mack. �In your file, your connection with the | |
| black economy was raised, because there was a reported rumor | |
| that you liked to knock over drug houses, stealing drug gang | |
| money and guns. It was reported that you liked to call these | |
| drug houses �your banks�, where you could get some �folding | |
| money� when you occasionally needed it.� | |
| �I�m sorry, Mr. Pond, but I�m not responsible for any rumors | |
| coming out of the FBI.� | |
| �You�ve lived your life very dangerously, Mr. Stemple. It takes | |
| a brave man to go into a hostile neighborhood and knock off a | |
| drug house for their money and guns. The reports offers no | |
| particulars but lists about fourteen different drug houses where | |
| the money and guns were pilfered by unknown persons, causing | |
| some nine major gang wars. The information available indicates | |
| that these seizures of drug money were huge. What makes the | |
| report intriguing is that there are no reported deaths or | |
| criminal incidents involving these burglaries. The burglar or | |
| burglars came and went from the houses like ghosts.� | |
| �That�s all just rumor, Mr. Pond; and, besides, I�m afraid of | |
| ghosts.� | |
| Pond looked unconvinced. �You seem to be quietly living off of | |
| tax-free income for a long time, Mr. Stemple. We have to ask | |
| questions. We have to ask how you�ve supplemented you income | |
| over the years.� | |
| �It�s with plain living and high thinking, Mr. Pond.� | |
| �You�ve allegedly lived off the government expense, using a | |
| number of WITSEC�s safe houses as your listed places of | |
| residence; or, as it seems, by the address that you put in as a | |
| physical address for the post office boxes that you�ve had. | |
| There are, also, a number of reports that some of these safe | |
| houses are not real but merely notional residences. If you are | |
| using these safe houses, another question comes up. Aren�t the | |
| use of these safe houses some sort of off the books payment in | |
| kind to you?� | |
| �No.� | |
| �Are you living in the Fort Benton, Montana safe house?� | |
| �No. Actually the address is notional. The apartment exists | |
| but I don�t live there. It only exits as a legal address for | |
| government purposes for me. The address is meant to serve as | |
| misdirection for the people who may be hunting me.� | |
| �You�re acting like a nebbish, muttered Trump. | |
| �That�s Yiddish,� said Mack. | |
| �It is,� said the President. �As you probably know, I salt my | |
| speech at times with Yiddish. It�s like I said: I know words. | |
| I have the best words.� | |
| �Nit alts vos men veyst meg menzogn.� | |
| The President frowned. �What does that mean, Stemple?� | |
| �It means �not everything one knows must be told�.� | |
| The President nodded approvingly, �I agree with that,� he said. | |
| �I can agree that there is the need for people to keep secrets. | |
| No one questions that.� Mack frowned. �So you believe that you | |
| know words?� | |
| �I do, certainly far better than you, Stemple. I got an | |
| education remember? You failed to get a degree.� | |
| Mack ignored the insult. �So you say that you have a developed | |
| vocabulary, then.� | |
| �I do.� | |
| �Then you shouldn�t oppilate, anymore, regarding the Russian | |
| investigations.� | |
| �I suppose you mean obstruct.� | |
| �I do. You seem to lack the ability to accept the inevitable | |
| objurgation in respect to it.� | |
| �What in hell does that mean, Stemple?� | |
| �It�s the ability to accept any rebukes for your obstructive | |
| misbehavior.� | |
| �That�s just simply a cheap moralism, Stemple, an insignificant | |
| loser�s religiosity.� | |
| Mack shook his head. �It�s a matter of law, Mr. President, this | |
| matter of obstruction. All you�re doing is offering | |
| tergiversation.� | |
| �Stop that!� | |
| �Don�t you know that word?� | |
| �Why the hell should I?� | |
| �Now you�re offering more evagation, Mr. President. It seems | |
| that you can�t take the increpation you like to dish out.� | |
| �Shut up!� | |
| Mack heard a faint cell phone buzzing and watched as the Senior | |
| Secret Service agent, Collins, take out his cell phone and look | |
| at a text message. As he was standing behind Trump, he leaned | |
| forward and whispered something into his ear. | |
| Trump announced to the assembled Secret Service agents, �Todd | |
| Jenkins, the Secret Service agent, has been admitted to hospital | |
| for observation.� The President had the anger come back into | |
| his eyes and he looked defiantly at Mack. | |
| Mack returned his angry look with a sharpness of his own. �Then | |
| my observation is correct, Mr. President. The man was severely | |
| injured.� | |
| Trump scowled, �This isn�t a big deal, this man�s injuries. | |
| It�s only a simple nose bleed. And before this meeting is | |
| through, you�re going to be signing that nondisclosure | |
| agreement.� | |
| Mack shook his head. �No can do, Mr. President. Not at this | |
| point. Not by a long shot. I�ve seen Milo Doubek being cuffed. | |
| Now he needs to be arrested and charged for felony assault. | |
| Nothing less will do.� | |
| �No, Stemple. I won�t have a good man charged for causing a | |
| simple nosebleed.� | |
| �He assaulted a Federal officer.� | |
| Trump leaned forward in his chair and bellowed, �YOU **** | |
| ASSAULTED MY BODYGUARD, MR. STEMPLE! I SHOULD HAVE HAD YOU | |
| ARRESTED FOR THAT, DAMN YOU!� | |
| Mack shook his head, his eyes still sharply on the President. | |
| �No sir. I didn�t assault your bodyguard. As the security | |
| cameras will disclose, and as these Secret Service agents will | |
| testify, I never punched back at Milo Doubek. I simply grappled | |
| him and threw him to the ground after evading his punches to | |
| enable an easy arrest by the Secret Service. | |
| �Milo Doubek continued his felony assault resisting arrest. He | |
| did try to strike at the Secret Service agents trying to subdue | |
| him on the ground. The security cameras will clearly show that | |
| he was resisting arrest.� | |
| �That is why you never punched him before grappling him,� said | |
| Gregory Pond softly. �You didn�t want to leave yourself open to | |
| the charge of assault, of being either the aggressor or of | |
| someone involved in a fight.� | |
| �Precisely,� said Mack. | |
| Trump exploded and his eyes had a look that Mack had never seen | |
| before. �DAMMIT! DAMN IT ALL!� the President leaped up out of | |
| his chair, his eyes ablaze, and slammed a gray leather | |
| portfolio, that was on his desk in front of him, onto the floor | |
| in front of Mack. The assembled Secret Service agents and the | |
| Presidential aide, Gregory Pond, looked shocked and said | |
| nothing. | |
| Mack said quietly, �Calm down, Mr. President.� He said. �We | |
| can talk this out but you have little to negotiate. I could | |
| report Milo Doubek�s assault against me to the Justice | |
| Department or, if need be, to the local police. I�m not going | |
| to let this pass by. You�d better arrest him soon.� | |
| Trump didn�t reply. His face was flushed, showing a bright red, | |
| his body was trembling slightly, his smoldering eyes remained | |
| fixed on Mack. | |
| If looks could kill, thought Mack. It was now time to start | |
| pressing him. �You will not escape the scandal and the | |
| political consequences that will result from it so you�d better | |
| get used to the idea of getting ahead of this scandal instead of | |
| trying to hide and later be found failing miserably about trying | |
| to hide it.� | |
| THAT�S NOT **** POSSIBLE!� bellowed President Trump. �IT�S NOT | |
| GOING TO HAPPEN AND I�M NOT GOING TO HAVE HIM ARRESTED!� | |
| Mack continued calmly. �There are too many witnesses to this, | |
| Mr. President. You can�t possibly keep this hidden. And you | |
| don�t have any options. If you don�t have that man arrested, I | |
| will make sure that he is arrested. I�ll report the incident | |
| and he will be arrested for probable cause for felony assault. | |
| I�m really firm upon this and this is not negotiable.� | |
| As the President glared at him, Mack turned his eyes to the | |
| Presidential aide. Now it was time to set the knives deep. | |
| �There is probably more to this incident than what meets the | |
| eye. Did Milo Doubek do this on his own volition? Or did he | |
| have it suggested to him by someone else? Was the attack on | |
| Agent Todd Perkins deliberate or did he do it out of passion? | |
| And the biggest question of all: what will Milo Doubek say to | |
| the authorities after he�s been arrested or questioned | |
| concerning this issue?� | |
| Pond didn�t answer that and Mack had nothing further to say. As | |
| he looked back at the President, he could see that Donald Trump | |
| looked aghast, very much surprised by the question. There was | |
| fear in them. | |
| Then the President�s eyes quickly became ablaze in anger again, | |
| his reddish face became even more crimson. He started shaking | |
| where he stood. Forming fists, he slammed his fists onto the | |
| desk and shouted, �I WILL NOT STAND FOR THIS!� | |
| #Post#: 20766-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Incident At Mar a Lago | |
| By: HOLLAND Date: December 2, 2018, 5:44 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| The room remained quiet, as the men watched the struggle in the | |
| President�s face, where the President strove to gain | |
| self-control. They watched as his body ceased to tremble and | |
| the anger gradually fade from his eyes, and the redness fade | |
| from his face. They were relieved when the President, his face | |
| flushed red, sighed and finally sat down. | |
| He can�t win some battles, thought Mack. And he can�t win this | |
| one. If only he could stop his continual nonsense. | |
| At that moment, a Secret Service agent came forward and picked | |
| up the portfolio that was on the floor and put it on the | |
| President�s desk. | |
| The sharpness went out of the President�s eyes. He looked at | |
| Mack and then muttered, �How long have we been acquaintances, | |
| Stemple?� | |
| �It�s been some 38 years.� | |
| �Our mutual friend, Preston Callender, swears by you. He | |
| declares that you are one of his most loyal friends.� | |
| �I suppose I am.� | |
| �I�m having trouble remembering. When was the time that we had | |
| our first, direct meeting.� | |
| �That was in September of 1981. Preston asked me to meet with | |
| you at Restaurante Courbet to talk about Atlantic City and the | |
| mob.� | |
| �I remember it. I remember you telling me that Preston didn�t | |
| want me to be either building or investing in those casinos in | |
| Atlantic City.� Trump frowned and shook his head in disgust. | |
| �That was na�ve of him, Stemple.� | |
| �He only wanted to prevent you, Mr. President, from any further | |
| unnecessary contact with the mob. He was afraid that if you | |
| bring them on as financial partners, you�d be entering into | |
| their world and they will from that point on expect your | |
| compliance to their rules and their world of fear.� | |
| �That�s still na�ve of him, Stemple. How can you do any kind of | |
| real estate in New York without some connections with the mob? | |
| His advice was idiotic.� | |
| �As your friend, he was trying to protect you, Mr. President. | |
| As I said at the time, over that dinner, over Courbet�s famous | |
| pork cutlets, I advised you to preserve your independence, to | |
| keep your contacts with the mob to a minimum.� | |
| Trump contemplated Mack. His anger faded. �You�ve known | |
| Preston for a long time.� He said finally. | |
| �That�s correct, since the late 1970s.� | |
| �And our meeting at Rusterman�s or, rather, Restaurante Courbet | |
| was in September 1981?� | |
| �Yes, Mr. President.� | |
| �That was at the time you were supposedly in Everett, | |
| Washington, working on a fishing boat.� | |
| �I would, occasionally, visit Preston and Mrs. Callendar during | |
| that time. And as my file shows I did some work for the | |
| government during the off-season and during those days when our | |
| ship was laid up in harbor.� | |
| �Your file indicates that,� said Gregory Pond. �Curiously, the | |
| Information regarding governmental work at that time is missing | |
| in your file.� | |
| �It was pro bono and of brief assistance, merely, so it was | |
| completely off the books.� | |
| Trump smiled faintly, �You�re mighty generous in your poverty by | |
| providing free labor to the government.� | |
| �Though the world is a cold place to the very poor, my love of | |
| country keeps me warm.� | |
| Trump snapped, �Don�t you get smart with me, Stemple.� | |
| �I�m not being smart. You�ve went to Fordham and later to | |
| Wharton. I went to the University of Montana and didn�t obtain | |
| a degree.� Mack paused. �Let�s be frank about why I�m here. | |
| I�m here not because of questions about my file. I�m here | |
| because of Milo Doubek�s vendetta against me because of my | |
| supposed destruction of his prior employers and your friends, | |
| the very wealthy Leonard Malcom and the lesser wealthy Parker | |
| Simonsen. I suppose I�m facing here the sorry fact that he�s | |
| caught you up into his vendetta and that he�s been playing you, | |
| leading you around by the nose to get what he wants.� | |
| Gregory Pond snapped, �We have legitimate questions regarding | |
| your file, Mr. Stemple!� | |
| �It is quite evident that at this point that you don�t have | |
| anything. If you do, then turn it over to the Inspector General | |
| of the Justice Department,� answered Mack. �There�s no harm in | |
| following DOJ guidelines regarding questions regarding possible | |
| security violations and malfeasance discovered in current or | |
| non-active government personnel records. They�re quite | |
| competent and thorough in their investigations.� | |
| �I don�t trust them,� said Trump. �And neither should you.� | |
| �I�ve worked, Mr. President, as a contract agent. By necessity, | |
| I�ve worked in the shadow of things on the border of the law. | |
| I�ve always understood the necessity of never crossing that | |
| border and becoming lawless. I cannot, because of who I was | |
| back then do anything that could taint evidence. I do admit | |
| that I�m a person that other people have to wonder about. But | |
| I�m a man who�s faced serious dangers and so you can�t expect my | |
| record to be complete in all respects, and the IG of the DOJ is | |
| going to understand that.� | |
| �You know you�re going to have to sign that non-disclosure | |
| agreement, Stemple.� Trump was not going to let it go. | |
| �It won�t work, Mr. President. Your bodyguard, Milo Doubek, | |
| assaulted a Secret Service agent, a felony attack upon a Federal | |
| officer, and he assaulted me. This attack was witnessed by over | |
| a dozen Secret Service personnel who were behind me and possibly | |
| by more in your camera monitored security rooms here at Mar a | |
| Lago. Furthermore, it�s been recorded on your security cameras | |
| outside. Those recordings are now evidence necessary for a | |
| court of law and must be preserved. | |
| �You don�t seem to understand the significance of what happened. | |
| Your man, Todd Jenkins, is now in hospital supposedly under | |
| medical observation. I think that you should be more worried. | |
| His situation is more serious than you think. If the cartilage | |
| in his nose has been slammed into his skull deep enough, he will | |
| die because emergency surgery may not be able to entirely stop | |
| the bleeding into his skull.� Mack paused. �If Mr. Jenkins | |
| should die because of this assault, you�ll have to face the | |
| music, especially if you and Milo Doubek had contrived this | |
| incident.� | |
| Trump glared at him. �I DIDN�T HAVE ANYTHING TO DO ABOUT THIS | |
| INCIDENT!� he bellowed. | |
| Mack returned his look with calmness. Mack could sense his | |
| growing control of the situation. | |
| Trump glared at Mack and then began to calm down. He gazed | |
| around at the assembled Secret Service agents. �I expect | |
| secrecy in this matter to be upheld,� the President said firmly. | |
| �I punish disloyalty wherever I find it.� | |
| �You can�t hide a felony assault upon a Federal officer,� Mack | |
| said quietly, �especially if the assault leads to grave injury | |
| or death of the officer involved.� | |
| Trump glared at Mack and snapped, �I�m the boss here.� | |
| �No, Mr. President. That�s not correct. The law�s the boss.� | |
| Trump glared at Mack and Mack serenely returned his look. | |
| Eventually the President�s face relented in its anger. Trump | |
| sensed his own loss of control of the situation. His expression | |
| softened and he said, �To return to our former conversation, you | |
| know, that in order to be in real estate in New York City, you | |
| have to have contacts with the mob. You have to know this. I | |
| know that you know this.� | |
| �Yes, Mr. President.� | |
| Trump looked apologetic. �Like you, I�ve lived on the edge of | |
| things, the edge of the law. I can understand your need for | |
| secrecy. I have my own reasons for my own secrecy. I can | |
| understand that what may be important for you is something that | |
| needs to remain hidden. I have the same problem. Everyone | |
| knows that politicians and businessmen can find themselves of | |
| the edge of things and have the need to skirt the law.� | |
| �I can understand that, Mr. President.� | |
| �I think that we have a share interest, the need to keep our | |
| secrets kept. I know that you can make it hot for me. You | |
| certainly know that I can make it hot for you. I can understand | |
| your grievance with Milo Doubek, about his striking Agent | |
| Jenkins. I think that you�re misunderstanding me. I want the | |
| best for Agent Jenkins and I want the best for both of us.� | |
| �I�m all for having the best, Mr. President.� | |
| �I figured that you would.� At that moment a white-gloved, | |
| white-coated Marine, carrying a covered silver tray, appeared at | |
| the door to Mack�s left. Trump nodded and the soldier entered | |
| and put the tray on the President�s desk. The President told | |
| the Marine, �Set a table and another hors d�oeuvre tray for Mr. | |
| Stemple.� To Mack he said, �I�m having as hors d�oeuvres caviar | |
| on toast and smoked salmon sandwiches. Do you have any wine | |
| preference?� | |
| Avoiding the ever-present Palm Beach champagnes, Mack said, �A | |
| white zinfandel would be fine.� | |
| Mack watched as the Marine quietly exited the room much as a | |
| well-trained butler would do in the presence of a wealthy | |
| employer. As he watched the man�s receding back, Mack wondered | |
| what the Marine thought about his current duty assignment. Most | |
| likely, he hadn�t dreamed of performing butler duties. He, most | |
| likely, volunteered with the expectation of dirt and blood in a | |
| far off land. | |
| Soon the same Marine returned carrying another covered silver | |
| tray of hors d�oeuvres and crystal glasses for the two men. He | |
| was accompanied by two other white-coated Marines: one was | |
| carrying a small end table for him; the other was carrying two | |
| silver ice buckets with opened bottles. One which would be the | |
| wine for Mack and the other would be, probably, a seltzer for | |
| the President. | |
| The men watched silently as the Marines set up the table next to | |
| Mack�s chair and placed the covered silver tray and ice bucket | |
| with the wine bottle upon it. The Marine who has carrying the | |
| glasses set a glass on the President�s desk and using a | |
| corkscrew opened the bottle of seltzer for him and poured it for | |
| him into his glass. He then came to Mack�s small table and | |
| uncorked the wine bottle. He presented the wine cork to Mack | |
| who sniffed it and smiled, indicating that it was okay. The | |
| Marine then poured the initial glass of wine into Mack�s glass. | |
| As the Marines left, the two men took off the lids covers of | |
| their serving trays and noted with approval the small | |
| sandwiches, the buttered toasted bread and the caviar in its | |
| central basin on the tray. The two men raised their glasses in | |
| unison to each other and then drank. | |
| �We�ve known each other for years,� said the President, as they | |
| lowered their glasses. �I know that our relationship is that of | |
| acquaintance rather than that as a friend. I think that our | |
| mutual friendship with Preston Callender is very important for | |
| the both of us.� | |
| �I agree, Mr. President.� | |
| �We�ve been jointly at a number of receptions held by Preston | |
| over the years. We really hadn�t talked to each other much | |
| during those receptions. You�ve seemed to have held back.� | |
| �I didn�t want to obtrude in any way into Preston�s society, Mr. | |
| President, because of my friendship with him. I tend to view | |
| myself as one of the sometime-hired help though he doesn�t think | |
| of me as such. I am, despite my withdrawal, well-known and | |
| liked by a number of his friends.� | |
| �With Preston, it�s all different. He makes friends of the | |
| hired help and I can understand that. Because you�re wealthy, | |
| you get to know the people around you.� Trump said quietly. | |
| �He appreciates character, Mr. Trump.� | |
| The two men started eating the hors d�oeuvres. Mack ate one of | |
| the smoked salmon fingerling sandwiches. It was a small | |
| delicious, crust-less white bread sandwich, that had excellent | |
| smoked salmon, cream cheese and watercress. Mack paused for a | |
| moment thinking that it would be a form of impoliteness to be | |
| eating when all the Secret Service men were standing around | |
| without being able to eat or drink as well; but then he resumed | |
| eating. He remembered that they could only eat or drink off | |
| duty. He observed that, also on the tray, were green olives | |
| and stuffed mushrooms filled with cream cheese, garlic, parmesan | |
| cheese and several seasonings. There were also miniature | |
| eclairs. The President didn�t mention these latter hors | |
| d�oeuvres. Perhaps they were ones that he always had and so he | |
| never thought to mention it. | |
| �What do you think of the caviar?� asked Trump. | |
| Mack looked up at him. The President�s eyes had a sense of | |
| amusement and something else yet again. Mack wondered, was | |
| there a sense of pleading in the President�s eyes? To Trump he | |
| said, �I haven�t tried them, yet, Mr. President. �They�re | |
| rather large, black caviar than what I�m most familiar with. Is | |
| it Caspian Beluga caviar?� | |
| Trump smiled broadly, �No, Mr. Stemple. It�s a fine, Volga | |
| Beluga caviar. I�ve obtained it through the offices of Russian | |
| President, Vladimir Putin.� | |
| Mack smiled inwardly at that. He hadn�t tasted Beluga caviar | |
| since the 1990s when it was prevalent among the wealthy. It was | |
| now under an import ban and Trump may have violated US import | |
| restriction laws and had also confessed to it in front of his | |
| security staff. Beluga caviar from the Volga was actually | |
| Caspian Beluga caviar that was harvested on the Volga River. | |
| The harvesting of both forms of the same caviar, and smoked | |
| sturgeon, had been outlawed by Russia and other international | |
| bodies because of over harvesting and UN trade restrictions. | |
| For years the product, though a common Palm Beach staple, was | |
| strictly forbidden for importation into the United States. But, | |
| nevertheless, Trump had the caviar and so that meant that it was | |
| probably smuggled in via Russian diplomatic pouch. Mack had to | |
| wonder how many other things that Trump may have received | |
| covertly by people and countries since his inauguration. | |
| He turned his gaze from Trump back to his hors d�oeuvres tray. | |
| He picked up the small, ivory spoon in front of the small dish | |
| of caviar that rested in the small basin that was in the center | |
| of the serving dish. He dipped his spoon into the caviar and | |
| tasted it. The fishy, salty pickling hit his taste buds in a | |
| pleasing manner and he enjoyed the rare treat. He had both seen | |
| and eaten this kind of caviar years before, in the 1980s and | |
| 1990s when it was more common. Mack then picked up a buttered | |
| toast square and put another spoonful of caviar on it and popped | |
| it in his mouth. He immediately experienced again the | |
| distinctive salty brine of classic Beluga mixed in with the | |
| texture of the buttered toast square. The combination of the | |
| toast and the caviar was unexpectedly good. Mack had never | |
| eaten caviar on toast before. He had usually eaten it with | |
| blinis. | |
| The President brought him out of his thoughts. �Every spoonful | |
| of that, Mr. Stemple, is worth roughly four hundred dollars,� | |
| said Trump. �It won�t take you very long to have eaten what | |
| you�ve made in a single year for the last forty years.� | |
| Mack looked up at Trump and saw that the President was broadly | |
| smiling again. �I suspect you�re right, Mr. President.� | |
| Mack ate more caviar, the small salmon sandwiches, the green | |
| olives and the stuffed mushrooms. Both men ate quietly and Mack | |
| reflected upon what he had heard from one of his friends that | |
| food was a way of bringing people together. | |
| �I want you to understand, Mr. Stemple, that I mean no harm to | |
| anybody. I�m like you. I�m at the edge of things and I have to | |
| have my secrets and sometimes skirt the laws.� | |
| �I can understand, Mr. President, the need to step around the | |
| skirts of Lady Justice, but we dare not try to pull the skirts | |
| off of her. Your attacks upon law enforcement and criminal | |
| investigations are uncalled for, especially for someone who | |
| claims that he is innocent.� | |
| Trump shook his head. �But what am I to do, Mr. Stemple? Like | |
| you, I�ve skirted the law in matters. Sometimes the laws are | |
| unjust. Sometimes laws are things that sometimes get in the way | |
| of things that you have to do. Sometimes laws become simply | |
| obstacles that need to be removed. Sometimes, if I have to put | |
| it more crudely, the law is like a woman, something to be taken | |
| advantage of.� | |
| �A woman doesn�t like to be taken advantage of; and, Lady | |
| Justice will certainly see that her laws shall be enforced. In | |
| the end, justice prevails, one way or another.� | |
| Trump chuckled at that. �The na�ve moralism that you have is | |
| amazing.� | |
| �You don�t seem to like the challenge I pose to you, calling you | |
| and your actions evil.� | |
| �I�ve heard that before from you and Preston. That�s Sunday | |
| School nonsense, Mr. Stemple.� | |
| Mack smiled at that. He continued, �It makes me wonder why I am | |
| here. The issues regarding my personnel file, though of some | |
| question, are largely bogus or could be handled by the IG of the | |
| DOJ. Are you trying to battle me because of something we�ve | |
| shared in our past? Or is it that I remind you of other old | |
| battles you�ve waged in your childhood?� | |
| �We�re doomed to have our battles, Mr. Stemple.� | |
| Mack nodded. �I suppose so, Mr. President. I suppose that | |
| we�re going to have it out even though it�s completely | |
| unnecessary.� | |
| Trump did not immediately respond. | |
| #Post#: 20767-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Incident At Mar a Lago | |
| By: HOLLAND Date: December 2, 2018, 5:46 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| Mack leaned back in his chair and continued, �If you had | |
| questions regarding my services in connection to the FBI and the | |
| U.S. Marshal Service, Mr. President, you really didn�t need to | |
| summon me here. You could have gone this morning to your golf | |
| game and had some FBI agents either here or out of Butte | |
| interview me.� | |
| �Butte?� asked the President. | |
| �Butte, Montana.� | |
| �Oh,� said Trump. �I�ve never heard of that place.� | |
| �This just makes me ask why I�m here. I�m keeping you from your | |
| golf game.� | |
| Trump didn�t respond. | |
| Mack smiled. �Then this has to be about something else yet | |
| again.� | |
| �I admit that I wanted to talk to you, Mr. Stemple.� | |
| �Was it about our last conversation at the White House back in | |
| May of last year?� | |
| Trump did not respond. | |
| Mack smiled faintly. That had to be it. | |
| �I don�t remember it,� Trump said. | |
| Mack continued. �In our last conversation back in May 2017, I | |
| said, �The ability to apologize is the ability to express love | |
| and the capacity for giving and receiving love. It is, also, a | |
| measure of whether or not one can take personal responsibility | |
| for something and to escape the agony and trap of human | |
| vindictiveness.� | |
| �To which you replied, �It just sounds like the tripe of | |
| moralizing weakness to me, Stemple.� | |
| �I replied to that saying, �You strike me as unhappy, Mr. | |
| President. You�ve not been happy in the matters of love and | |
| human relationships.� | |
| �To which you responded saying, �And you should keep your nose | |
| out of my life, little man. I can�t see it, for the life of me, | |
| why the truth or lies are important. They aren�t. It�s only | |
| wealth and power. I suppose I might be confused about the truth | |
| at times, but everybody does. And I don�t apologize for | |
| anything.�� | |
| Trump smiled at that. He was recognizing his own words. | |
| Mack continued, �To that statement, I replied, �That�s not the | |
| way to happiness.� | |
| �To which you replied, �We have different ideas about happiness, | |
| little man. I�m a billionaire and the President of the United | |
| States. You�re just another nobody at the poverty level.� | |
| �I then responded, �I�m just echoing a conversation you and | |
| Preston had some thirty years ago.� | |
| �You then said, �I don�t remember it.� | |
| �It was at this point that I said the following, �Mr. Wiseman, | |
| Mr. Isaac Holt, a particular friend of mine, and I witnessed it. | |
| It was in May of 1987. At the time, Preston said that he felt | |
| sorry for you, that he mourned for you. Preston said that he | |
| remembered the years back in time when you were struggling to be | |
| your own man, the person you, yourself, wanted to be. He | |
| further stated that you had a rough childhood, an unloving | |
| father and distant mother and that you were in rebellion.� | |
| �You did not respond to this so I continued saying that �Finally | |
| you were forced into that military school to learn discipline | |
| and self-control. Preston told you that he suspected that it | |
| was either that or that you would be forced into psychiatric | |
| treatment. In short, Preston said you were beaten down and | |
| forced into the mold of what your father wanted you to be. | |
| Preston stated that that he thought you had inwardly died | |
| inside.�� | |
| �That�s what I said, Stemple. How you can remember like that is | |
| effing amazing.� | |
| �I try to be accurate, Mr. President. At the next point of the | |
| conversation I said, �Preston said he mourned that you never | |
| became the man that you wanted to be. Furthermore, he stated | |
| that you never found your life-long love and that you are | |
| inwardly a hollow man, a charnel house of burnt out emotions. | |
| Remembering this conversation from long ago, he now warns you | |
| that, because you�ve become the man you are, that this is no | |
| excuse for treason or financial malfeasance. You are | |
| responsible for all of your actions.� | |
| �You didn�t respond immediately to this but you were annoyed. | |
| Finally you said, �I don�t remember this conversation, Stemple. | |
| I find it difficult to believe that Preston authorized you to | |
| say all these things.� | |
| � I replied saying. �Preston did not make any authorizations for | |
| my meeting here. My representation is in respect to the | |
| Association.� | |
| �You then told me, �Well, I want you to know, little man, that I | |
| am my own man. Who I was when I was young was a failure. | |
| Becoming the man my father wanted me to be was what I was | |
| supposed to be. I�ve become that and even more. I�m the | |
| President of the United States and I know that, given the great | |
| responsibility of my office that the buck always stops here at | |
| my desk. One can�t blame my father for what I�ve become. Tell | |
| Preston that I don�t need his sympathy.� | |
| �I then replied, �I will. And I will iterate again that he will | |
| view dimly any attempts on your part to evade any personal | |
| responsibility for your actions.� | |
| �You then replied, �Very well, little man, or should I say, poor | |
| little man, get out of here, Stemple. Tell Preston that I�m | |
| very disappointed that he and his Association could not be more | |
| loyal to me. This is just plain disgusting.� At that moment, | |
| you got up from your desk and went over to the window that looks | |
| out over the Rose Garden.� | |
| Trump nodded. �That�s what it was. I remember the conversation | |
| now.� | |
| The two men sat in Trump�s office and quietly ate their hors | |
| d�oeuvres and looked out the large windows at the palm trees | |
| whose large leaves were gently swaying in the breeze and the | |
| birds flitting through the shrubs and flowers that were beneath | |
| them. As Trump drank his seltzer, Mack sipped his wine. It was | |
| a plain zinfandel, but of good quality, thought Mack. | |
| Trump smiled. �Your talents are amazing, Mr. Stemple,� he said. | |
| Mack smiled. �Thank you, Mr. President.� | |
| �I wish I could hire you.� | |
| �I�m retired, Mr. President.� Mack could see the disappointment | |
| in Trumps eyes. For a moment, Mack could see that the | |
| President�s was inwardly worn with the wrinkles seemingly more | |
| pronounced on his face. His odd yellow-dyed hair was now | |
| showing a hint of gray, matching the gray appearing in his bushy | |
| eyebrows. | |
| �According to what my aide says, you are one of the best field | |
| operatives that the FBI knows of.� | |
| �I try, Mr. President.� | |
| �And you succeed.� Trump paused looking at Mack thoughtfully. | |
| �You seem to have had, in the past, good colleagues to work | |
| with.� | |
| �I have.� | |
| Trump looked sharply at his Secret Service agents and his aide, | |
| Mr. Pond. �Unlike you, I�ve had problems with my staff being | |
| disloyal,� he said. �The lack of loyalty among my staff, my | |
| colleagues and my friends has made life hell for me.� | |
| �Each President has had his challenges over the years.� | |
| �Nothing like what I�ve experienced, Stemple. I�ve experienced | |
| a real witch hunt, a vendetta by many people including that | |
| Special Counsel, Robert Mueller.� | |
| �If you�re innocent, give him whatever he asks for, and do it | |
| quickly. The longer you hold off, the more people are going to | |
| think that you are guilty of something and are hiding it. At | |
| least, release your tax returns for the last 20 years.� | |
| �It�s not that simple.� | |
| �If you�re innocent, it�s not that difficult. Whatever business | |
| information becomes public and serves as an advantage to your | |
| competitors will be more than offset by the discovery of your | |
| innocence. The resulting popularity will increase the value of | |
| your name brand.� | |
| �What do you think of Special Counsel Mueller, Mr. Stemple?� | |
| �He�s very professional. From what I�ve heard from people | |
| who�ve worked for him, he�s very good at his job.� | |
| �Have you ever met him?� | |
| �I have several times. Once, I met him at the White House when | |
| he was the FBI Director. Another time it was at a dinner | |
| reception in Washington DC, which was also attended by Preston | |
| and Mrs. Callender. Mack sighed and looked sharply at the | |
| President. �I would be careful, Mr. President, in dealing with | |
| Special Counsel Mueller. I would advise you to always tell the | |
| truth around him. He is very formidable intellectually and | |
| morally. He�s a decorated Marine Corps veteran. In Vietnam, he | |
| won the Bronze Star with Combat �V� for valor under fire. He | |
| merited that honor by rescuing a wounded comrade while in a | |
| firefight that killed over half the men in his platoon. He was | |
| later further wounded in another firefight and received the | |
| Purple Heart.� | |
| �I�ve heard about that.� | |
| �Then you know that he�s a hero and that it would be politically | |
| dangerous to fire him.� | |
| �I don�t think that he�s out of my political reach to fire him.� | |
| Trump shook his head. �Nobody�s out of my reach. You seem to | |
| have a sharp look into the minds of other people, Mr. Stemple. | |
| Do you have any idea of what Special Counsel Mueller may be | |
| thinking of me?� | |
| �I suspect Special Counsel Mueller has a deep understanding of | |
| criminal psychology. I�m sure he�s aware of your rough | |
| childhood and the strengths and weaknesses of your personality.� | |
| Trump looked at Mack and frowned. �And what would those be?� he | |
| asked. | |
| �You might not want to hear it,� Mack said. �It touches upon | |
| the evil that other people see in you.� | |
| �And what is that?� | |
| �It goes back to our last conversation about you not becoming | |
| the man you wanted to be. You are alien both to yourself and | |
| others. You only became the man that others wanted you to be, | |
| particularly your father.� | |
| �I�m who I am, Stemple. Let�s not blame it upon my father.� | |
| �I agree. That was then and this is now. You are who you are | |
| now, Mr. President, and your actions now cannot be blamed upon | |
| your father. That past is dead. You�ve made your pact with | |
| the devil and you�re going to have to live with it. | |
| �I think that Mueller will perceive that you�re now this hollow | |
| man, this alien version of yourself, this face, this appearance | |
| of someone, who acts out publically and privately what others | |
| wanted you to be. This is all you want to be. Think of it! | |
| You�ve only performed like an actor on a stage. You�ve done | |
| this in the past; you�ve done it all of your life. You�re doing | |
| it even now in my presence. You�re doing a performance like | |
| you�ve performed on reality television, except for that problem | |
| that the small screen reality isn�t the true reality. | |
| �Mueller, I think, is not making any judgement of contempt about | |
| you. I think that he has sought to learn all he can about you. | |
| I believe he understands the grief that you experienced when you | |
| were young. I doubt that he will think that you can be excused | |
| for the many lies that you�ve told and the lawless things that | |
| you�ve done. It�s now become a question of character and | |
| whether or not you have broken any laws. Have you broken any | |
| laws that are grounds for impeachment or imprisonment? That�s | |
| the answer he�s seeking. These investigations are going to | |
| proceed despite what he�s learned about you, about your inner | |
| hollowness and self-loathing.� | |
| �So you think that Special Counsel Mueller believes this.� | |
| �I believe so, Mr. President.� Mack paused. �It�s in that | |
| hatred of your own self and others is where the criminality | |
| begins.� | |
| �What else does Special Counsel Mueller thinks about me?� | |
| �You�re not going to like what I�m going to say.� | |
| �I�m a big boy, Stemple. Go ahead and say it.� | |
| Mack smiled faintly. �Though I�ve spoken with him only | |
| briefly, I�m well aware that he�s much like me. He seeks to | |
| figure out the minds of all his adversaries that he�s come in | |
| contact over the years. It aids him in his prosecutions and | |
| that�s part of his job.� | |
| Trump nodded. | |
| Mack continued, �Don�t you realize how easily a lie passes | |
| through your lips? Since you are hollow, not a real person, you | |
| are a concoction of your ideas of yourself at the moment. Who | |
| you are and what you are is ever changing. You continually | |
| re-invent yourself as you need to do at a particular moment. | |
| And these changes confuse your friends and causes contempt in | |
| your enemies. | |
| �You delight in your lies because it is a kind of creation, or | |
| rather, re-creation of yourself. Since you are not inwardly | |
| your own person or man, you are this figment that you create and | |
| act out each day. In creating these figments, you become your | |
| own god and you worship that god. That god, which is yourself, | |
| delights you and makes you identify with this god in pride. | |
| This god makes you happy. The figments of your mind are where | |
| you exist. Your life is in these lies, these figments. | |
| �Since you are your own god, your god is your only law. To all | |
| others you are lawless because you do not and cannot recognize | |
| the laws of others. No god can be lorded over by others. You | |
| are at war with all other gods, other laws, and other | |
| moralities. | |
| �Since your life has been lie, everything around you is or | |
| becomes a lie as well. And because lies are so easy, to have | |
| faith in others and in oneself becomes hard. It becomes hard to | |
| believe that others may be faithful to you. So it has been easy | |
| for you to be unfaithful to each of your wives. It has been | |
| easy to use them and to discard them after they have served the | |
| purposes of your pleasure. | |
| �Since you are faithless to many, you expect others to be | |
| faithless to you. You demand personal loyalty, even though you | |
| know that you will never extend the same personal loyalty to | |
| others. | |
| �What does this all mean in the end? It is what Robert Mueller | |
| and any other law enforcement professional confronts: a | |
| corrupted tissue of lies, faithlessness and disloyalty. And | |
| that is what the criminal mind is, at bottom. It is a heart | |
| given over to evil.� | |
| The two men looked sharply at each other. | |
| Trump shook his head. �You�re just being overly righteous, | |
| Stemple,� he said. �What you�re saying is a lot of damned | |
| tripe,� he said. �That�s a lot to pile on and you really piled | |
| it on. Perhaps Mueller thinks this and perhaps not. You must | |
| have waited a long time to have had the opportunity to say it. | |
| �You�re refusing to look at how the world works. You have to | |
| realize, Stemple, you can�t make any money and attain to any | |
| power if you�re someone who�s moral. Sanctimonious posturing is | |
| only for contemptible hypocrites. It�s like I say, | |
| goody-goodies just don�t see it. You�re refusing to see how the | |
| world works. And I can explain myself.� | |
| �Then please do so.� | |
| #Post#: 20768-------------------------------------------------- | |
| Re: Incident At Mar a Lago | |
| By: HOLLAND Date: December 2, 2018, 5:48 pm | |
| --------------------------------------------------------- | |
| �That�s all moralizing on your part, Stemple. That�s what | |
| you�re known for, among people in Preston�s circle of friends. | |
| Our friend, Preston heard all of this Sunday school chatter. | |
| They are words that don�t mean anything anymore.� Trump glared | |
| at his Presidential aide, Gregory Pond. �Sit down, Gregory,� he | |
| said testily. | |
| Mack watched as the Presidential aide and former Marine went and | |
| sat at in a straight-backed chair next to the President�s desk. | |
| He watched as the President took up a salmon sandwich and | |
| quickly ate it, wiped his lips with a paper towel and then drank | |
| a gulp of his seltzer. | |
| Trump looked up at Mack and said, �I�m going to explain myself | |
| one more time, and I�m going to make myself clear.� | |
| �Thank you, Mr. President.� | |
| �This Sunday school chatter from Preston and you is tripe, pure | |
| tripe. It doesn�t mean anything. When I was a boy, I remember | |
| going to a Presbyterian Sunday school when I was young and the | |
| teachers taught us kids a whole pack of nonsense. I really mean | |
| it! It�s the plain and simple nonsense about some kind of | |
| �father in the sky� who looks over mankind and rewards something | |
| he calls the good and punishes something he calls evil. All | |
| this talk about God is a pack of lies, simply a pack of lies.� | |
| �It is, Mr. President?� | |
| �Don�t interrupt me, Stemple. I remember quite well being a | |
| small boy. I remember how I cried myself to sleep at nights | |
| because of my father was cruel and this �father in the sky� was | |
| silent to my prayers and pain. If my earthly father was such a | |
| terrible disaster of a person, the one who caused my mother, my | |
| brothers and sisters, and myself, so much pain in our lives, who | |
| is this �father in the sky�, this god, who simply looked upon | |
| our pain and heard our prayers and did nothing? Nothing at all! | |
| He did absolutely nothing! It was at that time that I learned | |
| was that God didn�t exist and that religion, plain and simple, | |
| is a superstition that is taught to help weak people who find | |
| themselves in pain and can�t do anything about it. | |
| �As I was growing up, I wised-up about this. I realized that | |
| religion was a sham. I, also, realized that I had to be angry | |
| and tough to get along in the world, and not be ashamed of | |
| having become who I am. I�m proud to say what I�ve become. | |
| �You�ve heard the talk that I was a bully in my youth. I was | |
| that bully and was damned proud of it. I remember beating up | |
| the younger boys in primary school and enjoying it. It was the | |
| time that I had my first taste of raw power, a chance to | |
| overcome the fear and pain that haunted me when I was young. I | |
| reveled in my anger and my toughness as I beat up the younger | |
| boys. I loved to watch them crapping their pants in fear and | |
| pain as I beat them, as they were calling for their mamas. I | |
| was amused that all these crying Sunday school boys, these | |
| goody-goodies, could be beaten and their God didn�t help them or | |
| stop me. Their God couldn�t stop me, because I knew better. | |
| How can an illusion, a superstition called God, stop anyone? | |
| �It was about this time that I learned all about the impotence | |
| of the big lies and illusions that you find in this world. This | |
| �father in the sky�, this god of the Sunday schoolboys and their | |
| parents, is only just an illusion, and, this Sunday school | |
| chatter is only tripe, offal food that�s in bad taste and | |
| nutrition. You can eat tripe if you want to, but I don�t. I | |
| prefer the real meat and drink of true power, what we really | |
| learn by experience.� | |
| �But what about the truth, Mr. President?� | |
| �Given that religion and other lies run through society, I�ve | |
| learned that what is truth is. It is what you make of it in | |
| this world. What it is, finally, is something what you can | |
| impose upon others. That�s the truth though people don�t want | |
| to hear. | |
| �When I was beating up the kids, especially the little Sunday | |
| school twerps, all they had were their God and their pain, and | |
| their illusions to comfort them. My experience was different | |
| and much truer to life. I stood on my own two feet. I met pain | |
| head on and by inflicting pain in return. When I was angry with | |
| what I was suffering at home, I gave out even more pain on the | |
| playgrounds in school to show I wasn�t going to be taken | |
| advantage of. At that time I learned about power and the truth | |
| that�s found in life. My experience showed me what the truth | |
| was. The truth was that it was to be the big man in life and to | |
| hell with the little wimps who end up crapping their pants with | |
| fear. | |
| �I was thrilled with all the power that I had. When I was | |
| collared by the teachers and taken to the principal because of a | |
| particular beating, my father, angry and frustrated that he was | |
| not controlling me, unable to bend me to his will on the school | |
| playgrounds, came and got me out of trouble, very much like any | |
| servant will seek to please his master out of a difficulty. I | |
| discovered that, in my thrashing of those kids, I found that I | |
| was dominating my father, showing that I could be just as brutal | |
| as he was. And he helped me in this in that he was seeking to | |
| prevent me from suffering the consequences of my actions. He | |
| was my accomplice and I was daily laughing how I pulled this | |
| over him. He didn�t want me to be expelled from school. He had | |
| to help me, despite that he hated to do it. I finally got back | |
| at him. I had the power. | |
| �Moreover, I reveled in the great truth. I had seen how power | |
| imposes its truth upon all. And power makes any other truth a | |
| lie, because power imposes what the truth shall be and how it | |
| shall be recognized. Many times the teachers and principal was | |
| intimidated by my social and family prominence and turned and | |
| looked the other way as I beat up the younger kids. In time I | |
| learned that truth was not important. Truth was something based | |
| on power and self-assertion. It�s a place where a strong man | |
| steps forward and asserts himself. He pushes aside the weaker | |
| and says what and how things are going to be. A strong man | |
| finds out that truth is something that doesn�t mean anything of | |
| itself. It�s something that is imposed upon other people. | |
| Truth is what you make of it in the world.� | |
| Mack smiled. �So this is the reason you have made so many | |
| allusions to the schoolyards of your youth. Those times were | |
| very important for you.� | |
| �That�s right, Stemple. Those schoolyards were the places that | |
| form identity and where I had formed my own identity.� | |
| Mack continued to smile. �I suppose you could call it a tenuous | |
| sort of identity. And so back in March, when former | |
| Vice-President Biden said, in speaking about your comments about | |
| grabbing a woman by her crotch, that if you both were in high | |
| school, he would have taken you behind the gymnasium, and beat | |
| you up.� | |
| �Yeah, Stemple, that�s what Biden said, that loser. I said, | |
| publically, that he�d go down fast and hard if we fought. He�s | |
| just another typical blowhard and a weakling. I�ve seen a lot | |
| of weak men in my time, all talk and no action. A lot of my | |
| political opponents in the Republican Party are a bunch of | |
| weaklings, Sunday school simpering wimps. | |
| �Look at Jeb Bush. He was supposedly solid, but he could never | |
| be the manager of a going business concern, certainly not a | |
| business that I would own. He�s not a stand-up guy. He quit | |
| the Republican Party earlier this year. He didn�t have the | |
| stuff within himself to fight me for the power. | |
| �Then there�s little Marco. Marco Rubio looked much like the | |
| Sunday school boys I used to beat up.� Trump laughed. �What I | |
| can say about the man?� he said. �One thing for sure is that | |
| he�s all boy and no man, not red-blooded, not stand-up strong by | |
| a long shot. He�s just another Sunday school wimp.� Trump | |
| laughed again and said, �He�s got little hands and little feet | |
| and shiny black shoes that go squeak, squeak, squeak.� | |
| Mack frowned. �He�s just trying to get along with you, Mr. | |
| President.� | |
| �No Stemple. You�ve got it all wrong. He�s just caved in and | |
| surrendered to me much like the other wimps, especially that | |
| sniveling coward, lying Ted Cruz. He was the first guy, not me, | |
| to make the Obama birther issue a big issue. Then he started | |
| squawking when he became the target of another big issue. Can | |
| you imagine it? Cruz couldn�t take what he was prepared to dish | |
| out! | |
| �He�s married to that Heidi Cruz, an ugly woman with an ugly | |
| past, and he calls himself a Christian. He probably shouldn�t | |
| be in the Senate since he was born in Canada. And it�s possible | |
| that his father, Rafael Cruz, is involved in the Kennedy | |
| assassination. What an ugly blight that he and his family has | |
| been on the Republican Party.� | |
| Mack shook his head. �Those are all lies like the Obama birther | |
| issue,� he said. | |
| �So you say, as if your or if anyone else�s words mean anything, | |
| Stemple. They don�t mean anything at all. You talk as if talk | |
| means anything. It doesn�t. Words spoken today are gone | |
| tomorrow. It�s just chatter like the tripe we received at | |
| Sunday school, the hollow tasteless guts of something, not the | |
| real meat and drink of the reality that we need. You need to | |
| realize that you and the other Sunday school wimps that don�t | |
| know what the score is. The scores being made are made by the | |
| angry and the tough. We can only say that the score for Sunday | |
| school wimps is zero, a flat zero. | |
| �Then there is George Will, the talking head. He quit the Party | |
| like Jeb Bush and the Party�s better off without him. He was | |
| part of that same bunch of intellectual eggheads who condemned | |
| me in their rag called the National Review back in January of | |
| 2016. They talked as if Republicans are conservatives, | |
| forgetting that the Party has wised-up to them and are no longer | |
| listening to them. They don�t realize that Republicans finally | |
| woke up to the fact that these talking heads have been part of | |
| the Party�s calculated destruction of the middle class and have | |
| no idea what pain they�ve caused. | |
| �Imagine the stupidity of those guys. Their stupidity is a lack | |
| of vision, of being cut off from life by living in their | |
| intellectual ivory towers. They didn�t realize that all their | |
| ideas have hurt people. All those Conservative thinkers can say | |
| that they believe in their principles, disregarding the fact | |
| that those same principles don�t mean squat when they�re ruining | |
| the middle class. They�re just a bunch of scabs trying to cover | |
| the wounds they�ve inflicted on common people and onto the | |
| Republican Party. | |
| �It�s the same with that Joe Scarborough, Steve Schmidt, and all | |
| those others of the same ilk who�ve complained that they didn�t | |
| leave the Republican Party but that it left them. Well, I�d | |
| like to tell them that I�m the culmination of what Ronald Reagan | |
| meant back in 1980. Conservativism meant the rule of the | |
| wealthy in the end and now they�re objecting to what�s the | |
| original basis of what they�ve been doing. If they�ve | |
| gerrymandered congressional districts big time, and lied big | |
| time to the public, they�d have to eventually make it known what | |
| they�ve really thought about democracy all along. Why don�t | |
| they accept who I am, and that I�m what they wanted in the end? | |
| They wanted a strong man to rule, a strong man to cut the | |
| corners around the law, a man who lives on the edge of things. | |
| They�ve always glorified the angry and the tough. But I bet | |
| that they wouldn�t know what I mean by that. They�re just all | |
| Sunday school wimps who need a good pounding.� | |
| Mack smiled, �Don�t you think that what you�re saying might be a | |
| simplification of a more complex reality?� | |
| Trump didn�t immediately respond. | |
| Both men ate their sandwiches and spooned the caviar onto their | |
| toast squares. When Mack lifted the wine bottle out of the ice | |
| bucket, pulled the cork, and poured himself another glass of | |
| wine, he heard Trump sigh. | |
| �I didn�t create the evil in life that we see,� Trump continued. | |
| �Look at what we�re eating here, the hors d�oeuvres, the caviar | |
| and smoked salmon sandwiches, the mushrooms and green olives.� | |
| �And what is your point, Mr. President?� | |
| �Did the sturgeon offer its caviar, its young eggs to us, | |
| because it wanted to? Did the sturgeon, after it had lost its | |
| life and caviar, offer itself to be smoked and eaten in Russia? | |
| Did the salmon that we have eaten, in turn, offer up itself to | |
| be smoked and eaten? I think not. | |
| �We live in a world where creatures eat and are eaten. We find | |
| ourselves as being born and thrown into the world where this is | |
| facing us. There is, for us, no choice in this matter. Either | |
| we eat or are eaten, consume or be consumed. This is something | |
| that the �father in the sky� has created for us and the Sunday | |
| school boys whimper about and refuse to acknowledge. There are | |
| predators and there are prey.� | |
| �And you call yourself a predator.� | |
| �I do, Mr. Stemple. I�m an apex predator, a predator supreme. | |
| I�m a man who�s at the top of the food chain. I�m the angry | |
| one, the tough one. I�m the person who says what the law is and | |
| what the truth shall be, and everyone else has to toe the line.� | |
| �So the truth is based on force.� | |
| �Yes, Stemple. Why don�t you admit it?� | |
| �Facinus quos inquinat aequat.� | |
| �What the hell does that mean, Stemple?� | |
| �It�s a quote from Lucan. He said �Crime equalizes those whom | |
| it contaminates�.� | |
| Trump frowned. �I don�t follow you.� | |
| �One can start by being angry and tough, and strive and become | |
| an alpha predator, even an apex predator. But when you start | |
| saying what the law and the truth is, as the predator you enter | |
| into crime and war against the whole of society. And you are | |
| soon equalized with the other criminals in a desperate battle | |
| for survival.� | |
| �But that is what life is, Mr. Stemple. It�s a battle for | |
| survival.� | |
| �Yes, it is to a certain extent, Mr. President. But life is, | |
| also, a sharing of that same battle for survival, where a loving | |
| community allows for better chances for all its members. But if | |
| you wage war against society, you�ll simply become a criminal | |
| and war against society. Like your fellow criminals, you lessen | |
| your chances for survival.� | |
| �That�s Sunday school tripe, Stemple. You�re talking about the | |
| public good as if there is such a thing. There isn�t. Those of | |
| us that are the producers of this world, those of us who make | |
| the things of this world, who make the profits, have to have a | |
| free hand to do what we want. If we need to pollute, we do it. | |
| If we need to skirt past banking laws, we do it. We need to do | |
| all these things so that those who don�t produce, the rest of | |
| human can survive, that�s to say the �takers�, the supposed | |
| consumers. It�s the wealthy who are the producers. The rest | |
| are parasites. | |
| �Haven�t we Republicans always said that there isn�t really a | |
| public good and that there is only private profit? The primary | |
| motivation about things isn�t about the good, such things as | |
| love for others. You are either predator or prey. What are | |
| you? If you are angry and tough, you are a predator. You will | |
| go on to riches and power and glory. You will eat and drink in | |
| high fashion. If you are prey, you are a failure, or are soon | |
| to be regarded as such. You�ll only eat Sunday school tripe in | |
| your youth, with pointless talk about love and goodness, and you | |
| will choke on whatever food you�ll eventually be eating in | |
| poverty.� | |
| �No public good? For you, is it only private profit? Where | |
| does sharing enter into all this? How does love, a form of | |
| sharing, come into this?� | |
| The two men stared at each other. | |
| Mack continued, �If there�s no public good but only private | |
| profit, how can there be shared goods in society, shared social | |
| and family values? When a couple falls in love, if their love | |
| is true, they eventually marry, they share their love and their | |
| goods, and their marriage is a public good since it brings | |
| social stability and, many times, children into the world. | |
| These children replenish the numbers of the nation, or the rest | |
| of society has an interest in the nurturing of those young. I | |
| would suggest that love is not private profit, Mr. President. | |
| It�s not a calculated selfishness. It�s a public good, a sharing | |
| of love that first starts between two people and ends up | |
| embracing a community.� | |
| �That�s Sunday school tripe, Stemple. The existence of the sex | |
| drive in people shows that this supposed love is all a matter of | |
| selfish calculation. You have your sexual desires and, as a man, | |
| you want to plant your seeds in a fertile woman. But the sex | |
| drive is what those words mean: it�s a driving force. It | |
| consumes men and women. It�s hard-wired into our nature. This | |
| force doesn�t recognize monogamy and the illusion of this thing | |
| called love. It only recognizes the fulfillment of its purpose. | |
| Men and women who have large, healthy sex drives need to | |
| satisfy it. There is no need to moralize about this. Having | |
| sex is like blowing your nose with tissue paper. You do it and | |
| the matter is done. Sunday school wimps fail to realize that.� | |
| �I was talking about love, Mr. President. I wasn�t talking | |
| about the sexual drives inherent in men and women. Those are | |
| two different things.� | |
| �Stemple, you�re just ridiculous. The main thing about love is | |
| the sex. Children are incidental to the men and women out to | |
| satisfy their desires. Everything about love and marriage is a | |
| matter of calculation, indeed everything is a matter of | |
| calculation.� | |
| Mack picked up his glass of wine and raised it towards the | |
| President. �And, in saying that, that is why you never found | |
| the love of your life.� | |
| ***************************************************** | |
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