It's a good thing he doesn't want to sign each one. |
The best reason. Donald Trump wants to make sure that he gets proper credit for handing out this token payment to millions of Americans suddenly cast out of work in the midst of economic chaos.
So there’s a hold on issuing the checks—while they work out a way to print Trump’s name on them.
Yes,
these $1,200 checks—checks that will definitely see
Americans through the next 18 months until a vaccine arrives and the nation
instantly returns to right where it was before anyone
knew how to pronounce “COVID”—are the only thing standing between families and
being tossed from their homes.
They’re vitally important in allowing families who find the local food banks picked clean to feed their families. They’re the only way that families who have lost their health care in the middle of a health crisis can find to pay for services that definitely are not free. But nobody eats until Donald Trump gets his name on the checks. Seriously.
They’re vitally important in allowing families who find the local food banks picked clean to feed their families. They’re the only way that families who have lost their health care in the middle of a health crisis can find to pay for services that definitely are not free. But nobody eats until Donald Trump gets his name on the checks. Seriously.
This
may sound like the sickest of sick jokes. Unfortunately, it’s not.
As The Washington Post reports, Trump is determined that people feel grateful, dammit, that he applied his scribble to legislation to which his only contribution was making sure it screwed the Postal Service. So no one gets a check until the IRS works out a way to get his name onto every one.
As The Washington Post reports, Trump is determined that people feel grateful, dammit, that he applied his scribble to legislation to which his only contribution was making sure it screwed the Postal Service. So no one gets a check until the IRS works out a way to get his name onto every one.
The
trouble is … that’s never been done before. Because, believe it or not,
past White House residents have not put their ego ahead of people’s basic
needs. And Trump’s scrawl can’t go onto the signature line, because, by
law, he’s not authorized to disburse funds.
Getting Trump’s name in place actually took changes to the programming that prints the automated checks.
So with some emergency coding, a big, gratitude-inducing “Donald J. Trump” is being squeezed in over in the memo field.
Getting Trump’s name in place actually took changes to the programming that prints the automated checks.
So with some emergency coding, a big, gratitude-inducing “Donald J. Trump” is being squeezed in over in the memo field.
Making
that happen and seeing that each and every check gets Trump’s name is
slowing the whole process by “a few days.” But it’s not like
people can’t go without food, medicine, housing, and everything else for a
few days in exchange for something as important as another stroke to
Trump’s ego.
After all … this is an emergency. Trump hasn’t felt comfortable playing golf in days, and instead of rallies where thousands cheer every inane utterance, he’s had to settle for taking over every television network for hours each day to explain how he has absolute power, but zero responsibility.
Now buy his drug.
After all … this is an emergency. Trump hasn’t felt comfortable playing golf in days, and instead of rallies where thousands cheer every inane utterance, he’s had to settle for taking over every television network for hours each day to explain how he has absolute power, but zero responsibility.
Now buy his drug.
Of
course, by the time the checks actually arrive, it may be too late for that
rent or food or medicine you had planned for that money. Leaving your family
with a real puzzle over how to spend all those Trumpbucks.
That’s
why we’re opening a special pop-up store to sell a $1,200 pitchfork and box of
torches special. Act quickly to receive a free gallon of tar and a bag of
feathers. And believe me, it all has Trump’s name on it.