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Playboy model and Trump's alleged affair and coverup


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The New Yorker is reporting new details of an alleged 2006 affair between President Trump and a former Playboy model -- and how it was allegedly covered up. The magazine cites a report that American Media Inc. paid former model Karen McDougal $150,000 for the rights to her story before the 2016 election.

Former AMI employees told the magazine that the company's CEO, David Pecker, routinely purchases, then does not print, negative stories – a practice known as "catch and kill."

Pecker is a friend of Mr. Trump.

A spokesperson for AMI said McDougal's story was never  published because it was not deemed credible.

A White House spokesperson told the New Yorker that Mr. Trump never had an affair with McDougal, calling the story "fake news."

The story comes the same week after Stormy Daniels, the porn star whom Mr. Trump's attorney acknowledges paying $130,000 just before Election Day, believes she is now free to discuss an alleged sexual encounter with the man who is now president.

At the same time, developments in the bizarre case fueled questions about whether such a payment could violate federal campaign finance laws.

Daniels, whose real name is Stephanie Clifford, believes that Mr. Trump's personal lawyer, Michael Cohen, invalidated a non-disclosure agreement after two news stories were published Tuesday: one in which Cohen told The New York Times he made the six-figure payment with his personal funds, and another in the Daily Beast, which reported that Cohen was shopping a book proposal that would touch on Daniels' story, said the manager, Gina Rodriguez.

"Everything is off now, and Stormy is going to tell her story," Rodriguez told her manager told The Associated Press Wednesday.

 

 

 

Ahhh geeez. Does this ever end?

 

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9 minutes ago, Shabibilicious said:

Once a cheater, always a cheater.  I'm always amazed when an adulterer leaves his/her spouse to marry the adulterer he/she is cheating with and then one of them cheats with another....and the adulterer left behind is completely devastated by the betrayal.  :blink:  Hellooo....McFly?

 

GO RV, then BV

 

There's an old saying... "If you'll do it with me, you'll do it to me"

 

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Psychiatrists have noticed five clear types of delusions:

  1. Erotomanic. These individuals believe someone is seriously in love with them, more in the Hollywood romance, even spiritual way, rather than in the sexual sense. It is often a famous person—a film star or famous athlete—but also can be powerful superiors at work. Whilst someone with this delusion can keep it a secret and do very little, others may expend a great deal of energy trying to contact their delusional lover via emails, visits, or stalking. Most are women, but men with the delusions tend to act more boldly and get in more trouble with the law, particularly if they believe their ‘lover’ is in trouble or imminent danger.
  2. Grandiose. These are sometimes called delusions of grandeur and manifest when a person believes (with no evidence) that they are special: they have amazing abilities or have made a vitally important discovery. Often the delusions are religious for those with the disorder, often believing that they have a unique and privileged relationship with the "The Almighty." Sometimes they feel they are a prominent person and have special relationships with other prominent people.
  3. Jealous. This is clearly manifested in the strong, but unfounded belief that a partner is unfaithful and cheating on them: Odd bits of ‘evidence’ are put forward for these claims. They may hire a private detective, attempt to imprison their partner as well as physically and verbally attack them.
  4. Persecutory. This is the belief that someone or some group is conspiring against them. They could be cheating, spying on, harassing, or gossiping about them, or even attempting to poison or drug them. They are often angry and resentful with deep feelings of injustice. Many attempt to quell the persecution by legal means or appealing to authorities. It is the most common type of all the delusionary disorders. Some even get violent and aggressive towards those they believe are deliberately targeting them.
  5. Somatic. This is the delusion that one’s body is somehow strange or not functioning properly. It may be the belief that one smells odd, or that particular parts (nose, breasts, feet) are particularly odd, misshapen or ugly. Often people with these delusions believe they may have some internal bug or parasite that is destroying or affecting some very specific part of their body.
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