Alex Jones

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Pretty much!

Ned Raggett, Thursday, 4 August 2022 02:26 (one year ago) link

I literally cannot imagine a minimally competent attorney having things play out quite this way by accident. But that’s complicated and weird. So Occam’s says his counsel is unimaginably awful then?

I mean, pretrial you may (likely even) have agreements on unintentional production or go by rcp or maybe local rules on failure to produce, and i dunno here.

Given we have an atty flipping off opposing counsel in the courtroom, i’m still just— wtf are these ppl. It’s so fucked up. In layers.

I should probly go read a law blog but fuck that lol.

Warning: Choking Hazard (Hunt3r), Thursday, 4 August 2022 02:51 (one year ago) link

On the other hand, imagine having Alex Jones as your client.

Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 4 August 2022 03:07 (one year ago) link

Legal experts will tell you it’s difficult to get the death penalty in a civil trial, but I really think Alex Jones can pull it off here

— pixelatedboat aka “mr tweets” (@pixelatedboat) August 4, 2022

frogbs, Thursday, 4 August 2022 03:09 (one year ago) link

Did closing statements finish yesterday? I had to go to work while Reynal was talking about how much $150M would weigh.

Yup, jury now deliberating as of yesterday late afternoon

Ned Raggett, Thursday, 4 August 2022 14:04 (one year ago) link

His lawyer basically went "Uh can we do that over?" re phone stuff and the judge said:

"I'm not going to seal the quantity of information without knowing what's in it."

— Travis County Judge Maya Guerra Gamble, rejecting Alex Jones's motion as to the phone data — as well as his bid for a mistrial

— Adam Klasfeld (@KlasfeldReports) August 4, 2022

Ned Raggett, Thursday, 4 August 2022 15:06 (one year ago) link

Sounds like the J6 Committee could have the phone as soon as today -- and Bankston talked about it containing "intimate messages to Roger Stone," and I'm not going there.

Ned Raggett, Thursday, 4 August 2022 15:12 (one year ago) link

I have transferred
the data
that was on
your cell phone

and which
you were probably
hiding
from prosecution

Forgive me
they were incriminating
so guilty
and so many

— Johnny McNulty (@JohnnyMcNulty) August 3, 2022

thinkmanship (sleeve), Thursday, 4 August 2022 15:22 (one year ago) link

omg

castanuts (DJP), Thursday, 4 August 2022 15:23 (one year ago) link

jury's deliberating on a restitutional figure and after that a punitive figure, i believe

mark s, Thursday, 4 August 2022 15:25 (one year ago) link

xp lol at the icebox poem

mark s, Thursday, 4 August 2022 15:25 (one year ago) link

This Popehat piece is good.

When modern American political culture winds up in court, the... participants are speaking different languages, and using language in different ways. Courts are focused on a taxonomy of words. Are they factual? Are they opinion? Are they literal or figurative? Courts also care about the literal truth of words. That’s central to defamation law — it’s not defamatory unless it was false. Courts are about analysis, and the entire project of the law is about words meaning specific things.

But modern American political culture is emotive and even artistic. It uses language like a musician uses notes or an impressionist uses brush strokes. Whether it’s Marjorie Taylor Greene talking about Bill Gates' efforts to colonize our bowels through "peach tree dishes" or Alex Jones ranting about gay frogs, modern politicians and pundits use language to convey feelings and attitudes and values, not specific meanings. If you demand Alex Jones defend the specific meaning of his words, it’s like demanding your eight-year-old defend his statement that his birthday party was the best day ever when previously that’s what he said about Disneyland. Trump was the Salvador Dali of this movement, his speeches full of melting clocks of ire and resentment. As an artist of lies he was prolific.

I’m offering a descriptive observation, not a positive normative judgment. Truth exists. Truth matters. Even if Alex Jones’ broadcasts are dreamscapes of spleen, they have real-world effects. Some people take them literally and act accordingly, as we’ve seen as the parents of murdered children tell their harrowing stories of the harassment Jones encourages. And a society where words are unaccountable, where language is just us finger-painting with our own shit, is ungovernable and unlivable.

The point is that courts are ill-equipped to deal with people like Alex Jones, and people like Alex Jones are ill-equipped to deal with courts. Jones’ catastrophic testimony in his own defense illustrates this. Jones struggled to fit his bombast within the framework of the law, within the distinction between fact and opinion. It’s a bad fit because that’s not how he uses words. If Jones had been honest — an utterly foreign concept to him — he might have said “I just go out there and say what I feel.” The notion that Sandy Hook was a hoax is a word-painting, a way of conveying Jones’ bottomless rage at politics and media and modernity, and he can no more defend it factually than Magritte could defend the logical necessity of a particular brushstroke.

but also fuck you (unperson), Thursday, 4 August 2022 15:37 (one year ago) link

jury's deliberating on a restitutional figure and after that a punitive figure, i believe

― mark s,

I've seen the punitive stuff to come referred to as a separate trial. Will they use the same jury or a new one?

xpost Yeah, that's good. It's even more complicated when someone's previous invoked abstract word art is cited in a strict legal setting. You hear Alex Jones say frogs make people gay, and the reasonable response is "what did he just say?" You cite it in court, and the challenge becomes delineating exactly what he *did* say. Is that legal proof that he is a liar, or a lunatic?

Reminds me of when my kids were younger and they would (for example) ask where I'd been, and I'd say, or, I was just having dinner on the moon. They would call that a lie, and I would say it's not a lie, because it could never be true.

Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 4 August 2022 15:56 (one year ago) link

xp -- same jury, a Dan Solomon tweet from a few minutes ago clears it up

Indeed

worth being clear that whatever number they do eventually come back with does NOT represent the total damages—they are deliberating on compensatory damages only. once they're done, there are two more witnesses, then the jury goes back to determine punitive damages

— dan solomon (@dansolomon) August 4, 2022

Ned Raggett, Thursday, 4 August 2022 16:15 (one year ago) link

the verdicts are split so the jury is not thinking about how much money Alex and Infowars have when they are deliberating on compensatory damages—this part is about the plaintiffs and what fairly compensates them, not about Alex and what he can afford to pay

— dan solomon (@dansolomon) August 4, 2022

Ned Raggett, Thursday, 4 August 2022 16:16 (one year ago) link

yeah it reminds me of my brother, who watches Rogan & Alex Jones (he admits Jones is a clown, but that "he turns out to be right a lot", with no further elaboration on what, exactly, he was ever right about)

it's one thing to try to convince others of this bullshit, who can use actual facts to refute them, where everyone gets frustrated and insists the other guy is wrong. what I don't get is how these people convince themselves. they're always wrong about everything. half the shit they say is utterly insane and all the "just you wait" shit never comes to fruition. and yet they never seem to do any self-reflection, cuz you can always convince yourself you were right all along somehow.

frogbs, Thursday, 4 August 2022 16:17 (one year ago) link

solomon also notes* there are three more defamation cases to come! and that's before the aggravated perjury charge (not yet paid) even lands!

*noted yesterday actually i think

mark s, Thursday, 4 August 2022 16:22 (one year ago) link

Alex Jones' lawyers were just now arguing for a mistrial because they accidentally sent the Sandy Hook family lawyers the entire contents of Jones' phone.

Judge denies the motion.

— Ben Collins (@oneunderscore__) August 4, 2022

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 4 August 2022 16:28 (one year ago) link

xpost Yes apparently three other ones to come, one more in Texas and then others in Florida and Connecticut. Jones blew them all off and now he gets to deal with the results.

Ned Raggett, Thursday, 4 August 2022 16:29 (one year ago) link

Sorry just saw a tweet above reporting it

xyzzzz__, Thursday, 4 August 2022 16:29 (one year ago) link

I can think of like 20 separate @dril tweets that would apply to this trial right now

frogbs, Thursday, 4 August 2022 16:32 (one year ago) link

Chances are good that "he turns out to be right a lot" just means "he accurately reflects how I perceive the world around me", which also means "I am hopelessly incapable of self-reflection".

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Thursday, 4 August 2022 16:32 (one year ago) link

perjury charge (not yet paid) s/b perjury charge (not yet laid), confusion fans

mark s, Thursday, 4 August 2022 16:35 (one year ago) link

number three. i will never take the advice of my lawyers, my loved-ones, and colleagues to #StopThePosts

— wint (@dril) September 11, 2013

mark s, Thursday, 4 August 2022 16:37 (one year ago) link

Meanwhile over in Jones' head

Jones said he started making phone calls to his wealthy acquaintances today asking for money. Says the "orders have come down from on high" to shut him down so he can't report on fraud in the upcoming midterms. He's called this new fundraiser "Operation David." Ok man.

— Anna Merlan (@annamerlan) August 4, 2022

Ned Raggett, Thursday, 4 August 2022 17:00 (one year ago) link

wasn't that asshole mysteriously gifted millions in Bitcoin at some point?

Josh in Chicago, Thursday, 4 August 2022 17:12 (one year ago) link

It's worth $899 now though

F'kin Magnetometers, how do they work? (President Keyes), Thursday, 4 August 2022 17:34 (one year ago) link

The notion that Sandy Hook was a hoax is a word-painting, a way of conveying Jones’ bottomless rage at politics and media and modernity, and he can no more defend it factually than Magritte could defend the logical necessity of a particular brushstroke.

This is a comically stupid take from someone I thought to be otherwise pretty intelligent. It's a trivial matter to take the statements Jones makes about Sandy Hook and "defend them factually". The defense fails not because he's T.S. Eliot or William Carlos Williams, it fails because he is making transparently and obviously untrue statements. Yeah, prose and poetry can be like surrealism or jazz is some ways. But in other ways, words are not at all like surrealism or jazz, in that they make testable assertions about reality. Jones lied, he knew he was lying, and bottomless rage (and huge profits) making you speak carelessly isn't a defense.

Jaime Pressly and America (f. hazel), Thursday, 4 August 2022 17:58 (one year ago) link

This is a comically stupid take from someone I thought to be otherwise pretty intelligent.

Agreed. Like Wile E. Coyote, he takes an idea that appears to have some minimal amount of plausibility and then uses it to rocket himself straight over a cliff into a void of absurdity.

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Thursday, 4 August 2022 18:48 (one year ago) link

telling magritte his lawyers just uploaded ceci into my dropbox and asking him if he knows what perjury is

mark s, Thursday, 4 August 2022 18:52 (one year ago) link

that passage is, to my reading, describing how unmoored from reality Jones' statements are, and that as a consequence Jones himself is not only unequipped to defend them factually, but unable to conceive of doing so. it's saying his words are not only prima facie indefensible in court, but that Jones is constitutionally incapable of mounting a defense. it's not supporting the notion of his words as art, it's saying the height of Jones' fuckedness is courtesy of his own petard.

Vance Vance Devolution (sic), Thursday, 4 August 2022 19:20 (one year ago) link

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

a (waterface), Thursday, 4 August 2022 19:21 (one year ago) link

I agree with sick’s reading; it was a very elegant way of calling Jones a colossal dumb fuckstick

castanuts (DJP), Thursday, 4 August 2022 19:34 (one year ago) link

Describing why someone is a human diaper doesn’t make being a human diaper okay

castanuts (DJP), Thursday, 4 August 2022 19:35 (one year ago) link

the art stuff is very extremely dumb though, and doesn't make that point at all

(the point it makes is that popehat shouldn't talk abt art or music)

mark s, Thursday, 4 August 2022 19:40 (one year ago) link

Yeah, he was tiptoeing around pointing out that Alex Jones is insane.

but also fuck you (unperson), Thursday, 4 August 2022 19:43 (one year ago) link

People who are insane can lie and do wrong, of course, but Jones seems incapable of stopping himself from self-sabotaging behavior in the presence of sane people.

but also fuck you (unperson), Thursday, 4 August 2022 19:48 (one year ago) link

the art stuff is very extremely dumb though, and doesn't make that point at all

(the point it makes is that popehat shouldn't talk abt art or music)

― mark s, Thursday, August 4, 2022 8:40 PM (twelve minutes ago) bookmarkflaglink

i agree with the writer's overall point, but the art comparisons are fundamentally a mistake not least because intelligent visual language use in the art of, say, magritte, is high. also popular demagoguery and art come from very different places i think.

the cat needs to start paying for its own cbd (map), Thursday, 4 August 2022 20:01 (one year ago) link

(yeah, citing any specific artist would prob have weakened his point, but going for Magritte over eg Pollock does especially obscure it)

Vance Vance Devolution (sic), Thursday, 4 August 2022 20:09 (one year ago) link

for a couple weeks in elementary school, everyone was playing rock paper scissors. there would be tournaments going on at recess, every recess. it was the height of competitive rock paper scissors in my life, and i think in the lives of most of us kids in that schoolyard. but then bart simpson came. rock beats scissors. scissors beats paper. paper beats rock. bart simpson beats rock, paper, and scissors. bart simpson began to be deployed as an option, leading to contested tourney results. first it was rare, then it became expected for it to happen in any game. but still there was a level of sportsmanship, in that you wouldn't do it more than once during a single day, because it was so clearly unfair. but then bulldozer was invented. bulldozer beats bart simpson. but arguably, bart simpson also beat bulldozer. that's when things really spiraled out of control, and the game had changed. i can still remember a kid from the earlier days, beating scissors with his rock. he raised up his clenched fist as high as he could, then brought it pulverizing down to the ground, then of course the fake explosion noise. classic victory. then just a few weeks later, BART SIMPSON! BULLDOZER! BART SIMPSON! BULLDOZER!

Bruce Stingbean (Karl Malone), Thursday, 4 August 2022 20:09 (one year ago) link

Lmao, what about dynamite tho

Sonned by a comedy podcast after a dairy network beef (bernard snowy), Thursday, 4 August 2022 20:12 (one year ago) link

*good bad and the ugly whistling as the dynamite is lit*

damn, that could be a fun option! dynamite blows up everything, BUT you have to light the fuse at least a turn before it explodes, AND there have to be three ties in a row in order to trigger it

Bruce Stingbean (Karl Malone), Thursday, 4 August 2022 20:15 (one year ago) link

....your honor, is why i believe that i am telling the truth about bart simpson doing 9/11 with dynamite, all evidence covered up by the bulldozer, your honor, is what i heard and i don't do all the shows, either, i don't know what ads i show, and i don't know what my guests know, and everyone else does it

Bruce Stingbean (Karl Malone), Thursday, 4 August 2022 20:17 (one year ago) link

Per Solomon, verdict is in

Ned Raggett, Thursday, 4 August 2022 21:13 (one year ago) link

oh shit, cut the baby in half?

rip alex jones

Bruce Stingbean (Karl Malone), Thursday, 4 August 2022 21:14 (one year ago) link

Last Jedi style

Ned Raggett, Thursday, 4 August 2022 21:17 (one year ago) link

tiptoeing around pointing out that Alex Jones is insane.

except Alex Jones isn't clinically insane at all. he's badly warped and not too bright, but that's not insanity. for decades he was richly rewarded for spewing a constant stream of fabrications and fabulations. to the tune of tens of millions of dollars. it must have felt like he'd acquired a magical superpower that never failed. now it's failing him and he can't understand why.

more difficult than I look (Aimless), Thursday, 4 August 2022 21:18 (one year ago) link


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