yes, i have sat thrown church services with donald trump. i have talked about religion with donald trump.corinthians, doesn t know about the bible, and he doesn t know about contrition. he s convinced himself by saying it over and over again that he s done nothing wrong in this particular case, and the evidence will speak to whether or not that s true. so the other part about this is these trials aren t just what s going to happen to donald trump but politically, as a political scientist, those who are watching the show, wonder what the impact of these trials will be on individuals who formerly supported trump. you were somebody who used to work in the trump white house, you left, you wrote a book, you talked about how it was chaos and a mess. as somebody who used to be part of team trump and worked on african american outreach in particular, do you think any of these trials, this trial in new york which is probably the most
we could slide him different information or news articles he could read while the long proceedings were going on, anything to keep him focused so he wouldn t get up and walk out. i think it s going to be difficult for donald to sit through eight weeks of these proceedings. sometimes they re not exciting, sometimes they re very boring. and as you heard, he sometimes falls asleep during these sessions. and omarosa, also i wonder about this. if he starts to hear testimony that he doesn t like or that he s frustrated by or he doesn t believe in, is there a chance that he s going to blow up or he s going to blurt out and how would his lawyers try to handle that? i would absolutely say it s highly likely. you know, during the campaign, one of the things we used to say is let trump be trump. the worst place you can allow trump to be trump is in a courtroom. because donald trump will express himself. if he hears something he doesn t like, he cannot hide it, nor can he control his expressio