True dat. You don't waste your time or breath on tire kickers who don't want to reach a deal.
Usually they don't have the scratch to execute what they say they can deliver any way. It's all a show to make them feel like they're sooo busy and consequential.
Cash = commitment. Always remember that lifetip from The Throbber.
The car dealer accountant perspective is the perfect context for analyzing trump. That’s exactly who he is. Thanks throbber.
Not even close to IRL.
But thanks for playing.
That’s who trump is. That’s what his base is able to understand.
You have a customer
Awesome surrender. As always.
That’s who trump is. That’s what his base is able to understand.
I mean who can stand up to this kind of rhetorical skill after only 3 years or so of you repeating the same thing over and over?
Embattled attorney Michael Avenatti was charged by federal prosecutors in New York Wednesday with defrauding adult-film star Stormy Daniels, the client who propelled Avenatti into the national spotlight.
Avenatti, 48, faces one count of wire fraud and one count of aggravated identity theft. He faces up to 22 years in prison if convicted of those charges. Daniels is not named in the indictment, but a federal law enforcement official confirmed to Fox News that she is the client prosecutors claimed Avenatti defrauded.
Avenatti rocketed to fame representing Daniels when she sued to be released from a non-disclosure agreement involving an alleged tryst with President Trump in 2006. He parlayed his notoriety into numerous cable news appearances and even was floated as a potential Democratic presidential candidate in 2020.
According to prosecutors, Avenatti stole "a significant portion" of an advance Daniels was supposed to receive from a book deal in the summer of 2018 by sending a doctored letter with Daniels' signature to her literary agent that instructed the agent to divert the money to an account controlled by Avenatti. The lawyer then spent the money -- $148,750 -- "on airfare, hotels, car services, restaurants and meal delivery, online retailers, payroll for his law firm and another business he owned, and insurance."
The indictment said that after Daniels asked Avenatti why she had not received the money, Avenatti falsely claimed he was still trying to extract the payment from the publisher. Weeks later, the lawyer allegedly "used funds recently received from another source" to pay Daniels the money she was owed.
True dat. You don't waste your time or breath on tire kickers who don't want to reach a deal.
Usually they don't have the scratch to execute what they say they can deliver any way. It's all a show to make them feel like they're sooo busy and consequential.
Cash = commitment. Always remember that lifetip from The Throbber.
The car dealer accountant perspective is the perfect context for analyzing trump. That’s exactly who he is. Thanks throbber.
Not even close to IRL.
But thanks for playing.
That’s who trump is. That’s what his base is able to understand.
You have a customer
Awesome surrender. As always.
That’s who trump is. That’s what his base is able to understand.
I mean who can stand up to this kind of rhetorical skill after only 3 years or so of you repeating the same thing over and over your butthurt loserdom?
Comments
Avenatti, 48, faces one count of wire fraud and one count of aggravated identity theft. He faces up to 22 years in prison if convicted of those charges. Daniels is not named in the indictment, but a federal law enforcement official confirmed to Fox News that she is the client prosecutors claimed Avenatti defrauded.
Avenatti rocketed to fame representing Daniels when she sued to be released from a non-disclosure agreement involving an alleged tryst with President Trump in 2006. He parlayed his notoriety into numerous cable news appearances and even was floated as a potential Democratic presidential candidate in 2020.
According to prosecutors, Avenatti stole "a significant portion" of an advance Daniels was supposed to receive from a book deal in the summer of 2018 by sending a doctored letter with Daniels' signature to her literary agent that instructed the agent to divert the money to an account controlled by Avenatti. The lawyer then spent the money -- $148,750 -- "on airfare, hotels, car services, restaurants and meal delivery, online retailers, payroll for his law firm and another business he owned, and insurance."
The indictment said that after Daniels asked Avenatti why she had not received the money, Avenatti falsely claimed he was still trying to extract the payment from the publisher. Weeks later, the lawyer allegedly "used funds recently received from another source" to pay Daniels the money she was owed.