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Trump’s Former Spiritual Adviser Indicted for Sexually Abusing a Child

The Gateway megachurch founder was indicted for sexual misconduct with a 12-year-old girl.

Donald Trump sits in the cathedral pews next to Melania Trump.
Olivier Douliery/Pool/Getty Images

Robert Morris—the televangelist who “spiritually advised” Trump during his 2016 campaign—has been indicted by a grand jury in Oklahoma on five felony counts of lewd or indecent acts with a 12-year-old girl that began in the 1980s. 

“After almost 43 years, the law has finally caught up with Robert Morris for the horrific crimes he committed against me as a child,” said his victim, Cindy Clemishire, now 55 years old. 

“It was kissing and petting and not intercourse, but it was wrong,” Morris begrudgingly confessed last year. “This behavior happened on several occasions over the next few years. In March of 1987, this situation was brought to light, and it was confessed and repented of.” Clemishire, however, reported that Morris did indeed attempt to have intercourse with her when she was 16 years old—after having abused her throughout those years. 

Clemishire met Morris when she was 11 and he was 20.  Morris preached at her church and even stayed in her family’s home during that time. He first abused her on Christmas of her 12th year, telling her, “Never tell anyone about this because it will ruin everything.” 

Morris faces up to 100 years in prison if convicted of all counts. 

In 2007, the televangelist and megacurch pastor had the gall to blame Clemishire for initiating her own sexual abuse. 

“It was your client who initiated inappropriate behavior by coming into my client’s bedroom and getting in bed with him, which my client should not have allowed to happen,” Morris’s lawyer wrote. He also accused Clemishire herself of acting “inappropriately with two other men.” Clemishire was abused by those men as well. 

This disgusting predator of a pastor hosted Trump at his megachurch in 2020 and was present at a White House Rose Garden ceremony for Amy Coney Barret’s Supreme Court nomination.

Trump Announces New Front in His Global Trade War

Donald Trump has unleashed chaos on Europe with new tariffs.

Donald Trump speaks while sitting in the Oval Office
Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post/Getty Images

Reciprocal tariffs from other countries seem to have taken the president by surprise.

Donald Trump announced yet another round of tariffs against the European Union early Thursday, claiming that the “hostile” coalition of countries—who have been allies with the U.S. for decades—would face severe consequences for placing levies on U.S. whiskey imports.

“The European Union, one of the most hostile and abusive taxing and tariffing authorities in the World, which was formed for the sole purpose of taking advantage of the United States, has just put a nasty 50 percent Tariff on Whisky,” Trump posted to Truth Social. “If this Tariff is not removed immediately, the U.S. will shortly place a 200 percent Tariff on all WINES, CHAMPAGNES, & ALCOHOLIC PRODUCTS COMING OUT OF FRANCE AND OTHER E.U. REPRESENTED COUNTRIES. This will be great for the Wine and Champagne businesses in the U.S.”

The EU swiftly hit back Wednesday after Trump raised tariffs on aluminum and steel imports, announcing its own tolls on some of its biggest U.S. imports. Those include American beef, poultry, peanut butter, jeans, motorcycles, and alcohol, the last of which has become collateral damage in Trump’s international trade war.

“The EU is a major destination for U.S. whiskey, with exports surging 60% in the past three years after an earlier set of tariffs was suspended,” reported the Associated Press.

The president’s new tariffs are expected to cost companies billions of dollars. Corporations will either have to eat the losses or—as is more likely—pass the higher costs off to their customers.

“We deeply regret this measure. Tariffs are taxes. They are bad for business, and even worse for consumers,” European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said in a statement Wednesday, noting that the levies will cost jobs and only serve to increase the cost of goods both in the U.S. and abroad.

But Trump’s influence in hiking the cost of alcohol likely won’t bode well for the U.S., if history serves as any lesson. While Trump’s efforts aren’t exactly stripping alcohol from the shelves, they will make the price of liquor, wine, and beer skyrocket. That could make bottles less accessible for the average American and ultimately shrink consumption.

The passage of the Eighteenth Amendment, which criminalized alcohol and sparked Prohibition, was not just wildly unpopular with the American public but had dire consequences for the U.S. economy. Government tax revenues, which up until that point relied heavily on liquor sales to substantiate budgets, plummeted. The lack of alcohol sales between 1920 and 1933 cost the federal government $11 billion in lost tax revenue.

In 2023, alcohol excise tax collections for the federal government totaled $11.1 billion, according to a report by the Congressional Research Service.

Elon Musk Might Not Be Able to Salvage Tesla’s Value After All

Tesla’s value is crashing, despite Elon Musk and Donald Trump’s best efforts.

A bumper sticker on a Tesla says, "I bought this before we knew Elon was crazy"
Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Elon Musk’s rightward turn has led to a downward spiral for Tesla, and no amount of photo ops with Donald Trump will be able to save it, because the president is exactly what’s threatening the brand.

The futuristic electric cars that were previously associated with Democrats have become the bleeding badge of honor for the MAGA movement—and now they’re bleeding stock value, too. 

“We struggle to think of anything analogous in the history of the automotive industry, in which a brand has lost so much value so quickly,” J.P. Morgan analyst Ryan Brinkman told Axios

Tesla stock plummeted 15 percent Monday after Trump couldn’t muster a promise not to drag Americans into a recession. The fall dried up the very last drops of Musk’s postelection gains, costing him a whopping $29 billion

Wedbush analyst Dan Ives, who has previously been bullish about Tesla, told Axios that Musk’s political association with the White House was now hurting his brand. 

“Tesla is becoming a political symbol of Trump and DOGE, and that is a bad thing for the brand,” said Ives. 

As Americans have become more disturbed by Musk’s lack of oversight at the Department of Government Efficiency, rooting through citizens’ private data, recommending massive layoffs, and lying about the discoveries of so-called fraud, Teslas and their dealerships have become a target across the country for some destruction of property … which appeared to, in one case, involve Molotov cocktails

Trump said Tuesday that acts of violence against Teslas would be considered domestic terrorism, cementing the automaker’s status as a state symbol and ensuring that Trump cares more about cars than he does about women. 

Tesla’s flailing is not just contained to the United States, either. In Europe, Tesla sales have begun to crash, according to Electrek

In Germany, where Tesla’s first manufacturing facility in Europe has long been a target of climate activists, sales were down 70 percent in February. 

Since Musk’s government stint began at DOGE, his cars have transformed into a symbol of something Germans would rather not be associated with. Patrick Kunkel, the mayor of the small town of Eltville, explained that he’d been receiving pressure from his constituents to stop driving his Tesla. 

“Tesla now epitomizes autocratic thinking. [Musk] is a negative example of what can happen when a highly undemocratic person goes from business to politics,” Kunkel said. It seems like a lot of people feel the same.

Tesla sales have also dropped 48 percent in Denmark, roughly 45 percent in Norway and Portugal, and about 44 percent in France, Spain, and Sweden, according to Electrek

While Tesla does not publish its U.S. sales, the number of registrations fell 11 percent in January, according to S&P Global Mobility.

There is another reason, besides the obvious, that Musk should be chiefly concerned with saving the value of Tesla stock: The billionaire bureaucrat has pledged heaps of shares as collateral for his billions in loans. If the stock value drops low enough, the banks he borrowed from could force him to sell his shares to meet his loan obligations.  

Trump’s Plan to Lock Up Immigrants in Guantánamo Bay Just Fell Apart

All the immigrants being detained in Guantánamo Bay were just flown out.

A group of 5 Venezuelan migrant men deported from Guantanamo Bay walk down from the Venezuelan Conviasa Airlines plane as they arrive at Simon Bolivar International Airport in Maiquetia, Venezuela. They wear gray sweatshirts and sweatpants and orange face masks.
PEDRO MATTEY/AFP/Getty Images
Venezuelan migrants deported from Guantanamo Bay arrive at Simon Bolivar International Airport in Maiquetia, Venezuela, on February 20.

Every person that President Trump dramatically deported to Guantánamo Bay for violating U.S. immigration laws is on their way back to the United States.

Trump initially announced that he planned to send 30,000 undocumented immigrants to Guantánamo Bay, turning the infamous torture facility into an immigration detainment camp. There were 40 people there as of Tuesday, when they were all flown to an Immigrations and Customs Enforcement facility in Louisiana.

The men were flown back on a flight under the banner ICE Air, according to The Washington Post, which was less expensive than the showy military aircraft the administration previously used to transport immigrants to Guantánamo.

“We have 30,000 beds in Guantánamo to detain the worst criminal illegal aliens threatening the American people, some of them are so bad we don’t even trust the countries to hold them because we don’t want them coming back,” Trump initially said in January. “So we’re gonna send them out to Guantánamo. This will double our capacity immediately, and tough, that’s a tough place to get out of. Today’s signing brings us one step closer to eradicating the scourge of migrant crime in our communities once and for all.”

While the Department of Homeland Security has yet to comment on why their plans changed, this situation underscores the fact that Trump’s grand immigration crackdown may be easier said than done.

Pete Hegseth Moves to Replace Military’s Lawyers for Chilling Reason

Donald Trump’s defense secretary has some seriously troubling plans for the U.S. military.

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth speaks animatedly with his hands in a meeting.
Win McNamee/Getty Images

Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth is taking aim at the military’s legal system, specifically the judge advocate general’s corps, in order to relax the rules of war. 

The Guardian reports that Hegseth is nominating new judge advocate generals, or JAGs, to replace the ones he fired last month, which will kick off an overhaul of the system. Hegseth has chosen his personal lawyer, former Navy Officer Tim Parlatore, to oversee the effort. Parlatore defended President Trump in his classified documents trial and former Navy Seal Eddie Gallagher on war crimes charges, and will continue to run his private practice at the same time.   

The overhaul will consist of retraining military lawyers so that their legal advice to commanders will allow for more aggressive tactics and more leniency on charging soldiers with battlefield crimes. Parlatore has reportedly said that JAG officers get too involved in decision-making and don’t exercise discretion in their prosecutions. 

Parlatore and Hegseth view JAGs as too restrictive on rules of engagement, and don’t like the interpretation of law that soldiers need to identify a target having a weapon before opening fire. Hegseth has also stressed the need to bring back a “warrior ethos” because he thinks the military has gone soft. 

Hegseth referred to military lawyers as “jagoffs” in his book The War on Warriors, saying that restrictions on the laws of armed conflict were too high for soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan, which aided the enemy. While a Fox News host in Trump’s first term, Hegseth successfully appealed to Trump to pardon U.S. soldiers accused of committing war crimes, including Gallagher. 

Hegseth’s actions are ominous and disturbing, especially considering that he thinks very little of the Geneva Conventions on human rights. The fact that he faces his own sexual assault allegations also casts a shadow on his planned legal overhaul, as prosecuting sexual abuse in the military has long been a major problem. It seems that he thinks that there is no problem with U.S. soldiers committing war crimes, as long as America is “tough.”