Given the timeline of 2013, Trump’s golden showers tape in Moscow specifically may have been always a media confabulation of two events still related. David Corn’s new book has some excerpts out suggesting that the Steele dossier’s account could have that combined narrative.
We have sadly learned too much about Trump’s erotic predilections as well, even if the “wetting Obama’s bed” story might not be as true as Trump’s being spanked by a copy of Forbes with his face on the cover.
The Stormy Daniels lawsuit has at least made us aware of President Dennison’s less pornographic foibles in his “inclusion riders” including bodily harm and children-out-of-wedlock. More interesting are the photographer and other media star named in the suit. And the lawfare seems like intellectual property suits more concerned about how people can make money from it rather than reputational harm, after all Prexy Dennison didn’t have to “pay for it”.
Nonetheless there is something, more likely many things extortion-worthy. Heck, “the pee tape” (or a copy of it) still could even be that “gift” given to Trump by Putin in lieu of showing up at the 2013 beauty pageant.
That it is conceivable for Trump wanting such a shower display or one to be staged for him brings the notion of a US presidency into the salacious realm suggested by the Steele dossier.
More importantly, many can now be touched by its mythos even as disinformation, considering now 21 people have been affected by a recent UK poisoning incident less likely to be connected directly to Steele than it’s being portrayed by certain media outlets.
What David Corn’s co-written book brings are more accumulated proof of the lies that Trump tells including the knowledge of the reasons for those Trump Tower meetings in 2016. The dossier continues to be now even more credible by the increasing sources of anti-evangelical behaviors.
In June 2013, Trump arrived in Las Vegas to preside over the Miss- USA contest, which was owned by the Miss Universe company. Goldstone, Aras Agalarov, and Emin were in town for the event. Emin posted a photo of himself outside Trump’s hotel off the Vegas strip wearing a Trump T-shirt and boasting a hat exclaiming, “You’re Fired”—the tagline from Trump’s hit television show, The Apprentice. Trump had yet to meet the Agalarovs. But when they finally got together in the lobby of his hotel, he pointed at Aras Agalarov and exclaimed, “Look who came to me! This is the richest man in Russia!” (Agalarov was not the richest man in Russia.)
On the evening of June 15, the two Russians and their British publicist were planning a big dinner at CUT, a restaurant located at the Palazzo hotel and casino. Much to their surprise, they received a call from Keith Schiller, Trump’s longtime security chief and confidant, informing them that his boss wanted to join their party. Sure, they said, please come.
At the dinner for about 20 people in a private room, Emin sat between Trump and Goldstone. Aras Agalarov was across from Trump. Michael Cohen, Trump’s personal attorney who acted as the businessman’s consigliere, was on the other side of Goldstone. Also at the table was an unusual associate for Trump: Ike Kaveladze, the US-based vice president of Crocus International, an Agalarov company. In 2000, a Government Accountability Office report identified a business run by Kaveladze as responsible for opening more than 2,000 bank accounts at two US banks on behalf of Russian-based brokers. The accounts were used to move more than $1.4 billion from individuals in Russia and Eastern Europe around the globe in an operation the report suggested was “for the purpose of laundering money.” His main client at the time was Crocus International. (Kaveladze claimed the GAO probe was “another Russian witch-hunt in the United States.”)
[...]
The Act was no ordinary nightclub. Since March, it had been the target of undercover surveillance by the Nevada Gaming Control Board and investigators for the club’s landlord—the Palazzo, which was owned by GOP megadonor Sheldon Adelson—after complaints about its obscene performances. The club featured seminude women performing simulated sex acts of bestiality and grotesque sadomasochism—skits that a few months later would prompt a Nevada state judge to issue an injunction barring any more of its “lewd” and “offensive” performances. Among the club’s regular acts cited by the judge was one called “Hot for Teacher,” in which naked college girls simulate urinating on a professor. In another act, two women disrobe and then “one female stands over the other female and simulates urinating while the other female catches the urine in two wine glasses.” (The Act shut down after the judge’s ruling. There is no public record of which skits were performed the night Trump was present.)
www.motherjones.com/...
Friday, Mar 9, 2018 · 12:37:32 AM +00:00 · annieli
(CNN)
A woman who previously accused Donald Trump of inappropriate sexual contact was named in the non-disclosure agreement signed by porn star Stormy Daniels as having "confidential information" about Daniels' alleged affair with Donald Trump.
Angel Ryan is one of four people in the "prior disclosure" section of the "confidential settlement agreement," who had been told about allegations of an affair with Trump by Stephanie Clifford, whose stage name is Stormy Daniels. Ryan's stage name is Jessica Drake.
[...]
Ryan was among a string of women who alleged unwelcome sexual advances by Trump in the days after a 2005 "Access Hollywood" tape was released in which Trump brags about being able to grope and kiss women.
In response to Ryan's allegations, the Trump campaign said at the time, "Mr. Trump does not know this person, does not remember this person and would have no interest in ever knowing her."