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A Stray Memory


Note that they no longer complain that the news is "fake." Only that it is "old." 

Mike Lindell walked into the White House with some papers near the end of the transition period. The papers were in plain sight the way he was holding them, and photos indicate that they concerned martial law. 

Bob Costa's question was: where did he get them? Who prepared them? 

Lindell's answer, so far as he gave one, was that "a bunch of lawyers" prepared them. Lindell also says he never read them. 

So, he was walking into the White House with papers randomly given him by lawyers he doesn't know and whose work he didn't read? He didn't really say that, but that seems to be the story he wants to convey so laconically. I suspect he had some idea what was in there and who it came from. 

Anyway, Lindell's melt-down when Costa pressed the point was epic. I love his emphasis on the "oldness" of the news. Its truth doesn't matter if the coup plotters can just wait things out. The need to pretend that the reports of their plotting are "fake" is now apparently behind them.  

But hey, Mike, relax. Maybe you just need a good night's sleep after too many years trying to use those lousy pillows.

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