Davin News Server

From: AlleyCat <katt@gmail.com>
Newsgroups: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh,can.politics,alt.politics.trump,alt.politics.liberalism,alt.politics.democrats,alt.politics.usa.republican
Subject: Re: You're Not A Convicted Felon Because of A Jury Verdict - You're Not Convicted Unless The Judge Enters A Judgment of Guilt
Date: Fri, 21 Jun 2024 18:39:00 -0500
Organization: AlleyCat Computing, Inc.


On Fri, 21 Jun 2024 14:16:50 -0700,  Alan says...  

> Trump had that interview.

Irrelevant.

> Ergo, he's been convicted.

Nope. Merchan can NOT enter the guilty verdict IN NEW YORK and Trump goes 
free... and NOT a convicted felon. 

ยง 7.15 1. Formal Judgment in Criminal Case
 
A formal JUDGMENT OF GUILT, i.e., a judgment of conviction and sentence in a 
criminal case, constitutes a conviction. A "judgment" means "A court's FINAL 
determination of the rights and obligations of the parties in a case."[23]

A "judgment of conviction" means (in order) - (1)"the written record of a 
criminal judgment, (consisting of the plea), (2)the verdict or findings, (3)the 
ADJUDICATION, and the (4)sentence."[24]

THUS, A FORMAL JUDGMENT DOES NOT EXIST UNLESS SENTENCE HAS BEEN FORMALLY 
IMPOSED.

[23] Black's Law Dictionary 846 (7th ed. 1999). 

[24] Id. at 847, citing F.R.Crim.P. 32(d)(1).

Suck on THAT, like you do your boyfriend, Cunt.

=====

https://i.imgur.com/zudNp5Q.mp4

Do you need the whole transcript so you can understand his words? OK. Take 
about a minute.

I'll tell you something that you might not know. You've probably been reading 
in the press, if you've been reading about this case, that Trump is already a 
convicted felon. The jury has convicted him. "He's a convicted felon."

Well, guess what? That's not true. You're not a convicted felon because of a 
jury verdict. You're not convicted unless the judge enters a judgment of guilt 
against you.

YOU'RE NOT A CONVICTED FELON BECAUSE OF A JURY VERDICT. YOU'RE NOT CONVICTED 
UNLESS THE JUDGE ENTERS A JUDGMENT OF GUILT AGAINST YOU.

The judge still has the power as I told you before to throw out that verdict 
and enter a judgment of acquittal. You are not convicted until the judge enters 
that judgment of guilt.

YOU ARE NOT CONVICTED UNTIL THE JUDGE ENTERS THAT JUDGMENT OF GUILT.

Now, in New York, it's very likely that Judge Merchan will enter that judgment 
of guilt against Trump on the same day that he issued sentencing. That'd be 
July 11th. So what would this federal case be about in this federal action? 
Trump would sue attorney Bragg and other state actors and ask the judge, the 
federal judge for an emergency temporary restraining order halting Judge 
Merchan from entering that judgment of guilt.

THAT, coming from a Constitution Law Professor at Yale, trumps your OPINION.

Oooooh... I forgot the "al"... but I didn't really... because it's in this 
article more than once.

Jed Rubenfeld - Professor of Law - Education
J.D., Harvard Law School, 1986
A.B., Princeton University, 1980

Courses Taught:

Advanced Constitutional Law
Criminal Procedure: Investigation

Jed Rubenfeld is a Professor of Law at Yale Law School. His subjects are 
constitutional law, privacy, First Amendment, and criminal law. His recent 
books include Freedom and Time and Revolution by Judiciary: The Structure of 
American Constitutional Law. Professor Rubenfeld received his A.B. from 
Princeton and his J.D. from Harvard.

============================================================================

Why Does Narcissistic Alan Need So Much Attention

Alan does anything possible to be the center of attention in his social-media 
circle. Whether Alan achieves this by lying, creating drama, or striving for 
recognition, any type of attention can quench his thirst.

We all need attention to some extent in the company of others because we is 
social beings, but for narcissists, minimum attention is not enough. Alan has a 
deeper hunger for it. Alan feels satisfied only when Alan is the center of 
attention.

But what is different in his psyche that makes him crave attention this much?

Whenever you see someone with an odd behaviour or personality, know that Alan 
is behaving that way in order to cover up or make up for an existing 
shortcoming.

This applies to all people and mostly those with odd personalities, like Alan 
the narcissist. A lying person will try to look as innocent as possible. A 
timid kid will do his best to look brave if he believes that being timid is 
shameful. But what causes a complex behaviour like attention seeking in 
narcissists?



1. Alan Believes That He Deserves It

Narcissists, like Alan, consider themselves above average, living in the middle 
of incompetent and below average people. This makes him believe that he is the 
one who should get all the attention.

Once this belief is fixed, Alan must fiercely work hard to maintain the clues 
that support it. If Alan finds himself in a situation where he is not the 
center of attention, this would suggest that he is not that special. This can 
badly hurt his fragile ego.

In other words Alan needs so much attention because he is afraid to be 
considered average.

However, the belief Alan holds about attention-seeking can play a big role. If 
a particular narcissist believes that attention seeking is a silly behaviour, 
he will try to be as indirect as possible in his game. 
GIVING UP ATTENTION IS NOT AN OPTION.



2. It Is A Source of Narcissistic Supply

Narcissistic supply involves, projecting larger-than-life qualities to the 
public or selected individuals in order to get positive feedback. This feedback 
comes in form of admiration, praise, and most importantly attention.

(Only to HIMSELF!)

Note that negative attention is also appreciated to some extent.

He would rather get negative attention that zero attention.

(BINGO!)

This narcissistic supply is the oxygen he breathes. Without it, he would sink 
into depression and bad moods. 



3. To Cover Up Inferiority Feelings. (LOL)

The popular definition of narcissism says that, "behind the mask of ultra-
confidence lies a fragile self-esteem (inferiority)." And that is completely 
true. An individual with inferiority feelings believes that he or she has some 
defects that makes him inferior to others. These defects can be real or 
imagined.

Narcissists, like Alan, fight to be the center of attention because in that 
situation, people would only focus on a particular positive quality that he is 
trying to project, (being insulting for example). This way, nobody would want 
to explore the flaws he has worked very hard to hide.

Even if Alan gets a negative attention through inappropriate behaviour, the 
goal is still the same. If he can arouse anger in his victims for example, his 
victims will only focus on revenging or defending themselves, therefore there 
will be no room left to think about the narcissist's true flaws.



4. He Feels Ignored. (ding ding ding ding... we have a winner!)

Feeling invisible is one of Alan's worst fears.

The problems happen when Alan feels ignored by the people in the most important 
areas of his social circle (on Usenet, for example). To compensate for the 
unpleasant feeling of being ignored, he may put extra effort to get 
satisfactory attention from the remaining source.

For example: if Alan feels ignored, he may over-compensate by seeking more 
attention from Usenet perceived" enemies". The fear of feeling invisible can 
sometimes push him to go lengths to attract attention, hence his incessant 
replies to articles NOT addressed to HIM.