Showing posts with label constitution. Show all posts
Showing posts with label constitution. Show all posts

Sunday, May 4, 2025

It's Literally His Job (Updates)

 

I wonder where Trump could have learned this very important job-related question from? Oh! That's right! His oath of office, which he has taken twice:

I do solemnly swear (or affirm) that I will faithfully execute the Office of President of the United States, and will to the best of my Ability, preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United States.

Friday, April 18, 2025

Proof of Life

 

At least we know he's alive--there was a part of me that wondered if the White House dug in because they were trying to cover up that they had gotten a man killed. But no, it's just that they want to be able to do anything they want to do to anyone without regard for their rights under the US Constitution. And being the sort of person I am, while this proof of life is a welcome sign that both the US government and El Salvador feel the need to respond to pressure--this is not yet a good sign, it's a photo op--

See, he's alive, but he is still held, it's because the US is paying for El Salvador to keep him, and the Trump Administration feels no shame about any of that. 

Yet.

I think it is important that we look at the opinion authored by Judge Harvie Wilkinson rejecting a request from the DOJ to pause an order that they facilitate Garcia's release from custody in El Salvador:

"The government is asserting a right to stash away residents of this country in foreign prisons without the semblance of due process that is the foundation of our constitutional order," Wilkinson, who was appointed by President Ronald Reagan, wrote. "Further, it claims in essence that because it has rid itself of custody that there is nothing that can be done. This should be shocking not only to judges, but to the intuitive sense of liberty that Americans far removed from courthouses still hold dear."

Monday, April 14, 2025

The Homegrowns are Next

 

Trump is serious, He wants to deport US citizens to an El Salvador hellhole. Don't kid yourself it will be for "good reasons".  Accept and believe the evidence of your eyes and ears: this man genuinely believes that people who criticize him or those who help him should be labelled criminals. The threat of being "disappeared" is how Trump means to manage dissent in this country.

But it's not just the first amendment that is in danger. It's the whole bill of rights. 

 He doesn't believe in due process or the Constitution, and neither does his attorney general. His White House is full of people who will simply lie regarding this one man--but they will also lie about anyone Trump deems an enemy of the people, because that is how the lies of weak people work. 

They don't suddenly develop a conscience somewhere down the line. The weakness corrodes every scruple, and soon the rule of law is gone.

This should be front page, five-alarm, screaming bloody murder news. It's time to call it fascism, and it's time to seriously talk about impeachment and removal. It's past time, even. But it might not be too late.


Tuesday, April 1, 2025

Young and Not Very Credible

 

Karoline Leavitt responds to a reporter ABOUT an outrage--that the US government is sweeping up innocent individuals off the street and having them clapped into a hellhole, WITH outrage--HOW DARE YOU!

Easy! Because it's true and it's newsworthy. 

Much ado was made about Leavitt being the youngest press secretary for the White House, and I have to admit to rolling my eyes at that. It isn't an accomplishment when she was selected to be a cute shiny face to lie to people, and being too young, possibly immature, to understand what she needs to know or that "spinning" on behalf of a corrupt regime isn't merely a good paying job, but a moral excrescence. 

The journalists inquiring about due process aren't bleeding heart libs--they care about a thing called the rule of law. Leavitt's emotional misdirection has the benefit of seeming unaffected, because it may very well not be a sophisticated act from someone who should know better. She may be unaware that in small "l" small "d" liberal democracies, legal protections exist to protect the innocent

Of course, in TrumpWorld, it is a lot to imagine she would also care.  Her lack of credibility is just as bad as Spicer or Huckabee Sanders before her. 

Sunday, February 9, 2025

A Constitutional Crisis and a Confederacy of Dumbasses

 


Huh. You know, if a general violated any international treaties and committed war crimes, a judge would very legitimately have something to say about that. A judge could certainly reject the case of an attorney general and determine that their reading of the law was wrong if it very much was. And the idea that judges can determine that an act of Congress or of the executive office was in violation of the Constitution is called "checks and balances." The old separation of powers thing where we don't want any branch of government to be really dictatorial. 

This is the "are you smarter than a fifth grader?" level of understanding how our government works.  Senators Mike Lee and Tom Cotton also played very dumb about what they should have very earnestly understood based on their own education. 

Sunday, December 8, 2024

Trump on Any Day Ending in "Y"

 

Trump "Met the Press" and in his interview with Kristen Welker, he said all kinds of incredibly fascinating things. He still only had "concepts of a plan" with respects to health care. He's going to deport the "Dreamers" and is looking into ending birthright citizenship (which is actually in the Constitution). He lied about how many murders have been committed by undocumented migrants. He admitted he "can't guarantee" his tariffs won't raise prices (because they will).  He's going to get rid of Christopher Wray as head of the FBI for no other reason than wanting his own attack-dog there. 

Oh yes, and he wants the 1/6 Committee in prison for noticing he defrauded people by lying about the 2020 election and directed a crowd of rioters at the Capitol to "Stop the Steal (AKA the lawful certification of the election)" and then the Committee really went wild and pointed it out

TrumpWorld is always a bit more mad that people point out wrongdoing then that they are guilty of it. Trump is allergic to accountability. It makes him break out in vendetta.

Thursday, June 6, 2024

Your Moment of Law 'n' Order

 

The MAGA folks are very in favor of law and order (uniforms, hassling the riff raff) except when it applies to them. 

Here in Pennsylvania, we actually had Republican state congressional members get real BIG MAD at the state house when confronted with the actual heroes of 1/6-Republican members get real BIG MAD at the state house when confronted with the actual heroes of 1/6--the police who put their bodies on the line for actual law and order, instead of responding to the whims of a con artist who wanted an insurrection because the Constitutional way of doing things wasn't good enough for him.  (The man who lied about the election he LOST and now wants to pretend the people who pepper sprayed and beat cops with improvised and purposefully brought weapons was political prisoners and heroes." 

Which shows how the GOP seems to feel about things. Being hypocrites and all. And this brings me back around to how the GOP still wants to defund the police--because they "feel" they are going after the wrong people. 

It seems like Republicans don't want to address the elephant in the room--they want cops to selectively ignore the "right (wing) people" and only pursue the "woke and broke". 

When they talk about anything being "free and fair"--I am not sure what they think either "free" or "fair" mean--they have whole other definitions for these things than the dictionary.  But I will assume from their ideas of freedom and fairness regarding their understanding of "equal treatment under the law" that they....

Mean nothing at all. 

Monday, May 27, 2024

Memorial Day

 

In memory of those who have served and lost their lives in the name of freedom, this grateful nation should never forget that sacrifice, nor support tyranny abroad, or support the rule of tyranny here. For those who would support and commend dictators from the land of the free or wish for a day-one dictator in this nation themselves, desecrate the sacrifices of the brave.


Wednesday, May 8, 2024

TWGB: Fresh New Contempt

 

Disclaimer: I am not a lawyer, but in a situation where re-posts count as violations of the gag order, yes, it seems very likely to me that Trump's paid spokesperson trashing one of the witnesses would also count: he is just trying to use other people's mouths to say what his can't.  

It's clear that Stormy Daniels' testimony made Trump very uncomfortable, and looking again at her story, I see why: it isn't really a story about a fully consensual fling. Although there is some playfulness (the rolled magazine part), the invitation to dinner to have...not-dinner and the discussion of a possible Celebrity Apprentice spot that now looks more like there were sexual strings attached, it seems clear she felt obligated or manipulated into sex. I don't think that it makes him look MORE of a creep to me but solidifies the type of creep he is. 

But at the same time, "family values" choir boy Speak Mike Johnson was saying this:

 

Tuesday, May 7, 2024

TWGB: Contempt!

 


Oh, he's allowed to answer the question. Donald Von Shitzinpantz can testify and talk about testifying, this has been well-established. What he can't do is denigrate the witnesses or the jurors. Now, maybe listening to this lying ass is a form of denigration to the jury--but it isn't prevented by the gag order. And for the nth time--a gag order isn't some brand-new fresh thing invented just to give Trump a hard time. It is a normal application of restraint for a defendant who is already liable to fuck with the witnesses or jury in a way detrimental to the pursuit of justice.

So if someone has a problem with Trump being under a gag order, go look at how Trump tries to fix or even rig things to his benefit. He loves the obstruction of justice because he is not a big fan of justice from Mueller to Merchan to his obviously delayed for all the fuckery reasons federal cases

He isn't even a big fan of the Constitution if it stands in his way. 

Tuesday, March 5, 2024

Did I Expect Something Else?

 

The day before Super Tuesday, what SCOTUS was not going to do was decide Trump was going to be taken off of primary ballots and definitely declared a no-goo insurrectionist who better not try running for dogcatcher. What they did decide was that the statute couldn't be applied by the states as is--and I don't try to pretend to be the Constitution-understander, but if this was some kind of cop-out, it was a UNANIMOUS cop-out. 

For what it's worth, the states most likely to toss Trump off the ballot would be those where he wouldn't win anyway. If a loosey-goosey standard for who gets declared an insurrectionist is accepted, I would expect red states to get completely silly over labeling anyone who ever protested on the left being labelled "antifa" and a potential insurrectionist. (I feel like Ted Cruz and Tom Cotton have political fanfic about doing just that stuffed under their mattresses.) 

I can't get disappointed. After all, if SCOTUS thinks they have saved themselves from some kind of legal free-for-all today, surely, they are aware by now of what their docket will look like November- January 2025. And as for the idea that Congress do something about settling this same issue NOW--I don't think you'll find enough huevos for an Easter Egg hunt. 

What was it a very smart man had said? "Don't boo. Vote." I don't think there was ever going to be a better answer than that. 


Saturday, November 18, 2023

A Pretty Presidential Paradox

 


So, speaking of threading needles, I think the Colorado decision is a case of trying to get an entire camel through a needle's eye. It posits, in great detail, that the President of the United States is absolutely responsible for inciting the insurrection. Whoo boy, is he! 

Judge Wallace’s assessment of Mr. Trump’s behavior before and on Jan. 6 was damning, and, notably, she rejected his lawyers’ argument that the First Amendment protected him. His words and actions, she wrote, met the criteria set by the Supreme Court in Brandenburg v. Ohio for distinguishing incitement from protected speech.

“Trump acted with the specific intent to incite political violence and direct it at the Capitol with the purpose of disrupting the electoral certification,” she wrote. “Trump cultivated a culture that embraced political violence through his consistent endorsement of the same.”

Referring to his speech on the Ellipse on Jan. 6, in which he told his supporters that they needed to “fight like hell” and that they were justified in behaving by “very different rules,” Judge Wallace said, “Such incendiary rhetoric, issued by a speaker who routinely embraced political violence and had inflamed the anger of his supporters leading up to the certification, was likely to incite imminent lawlessness and disorder.”

But would he be barred from running for office as if he was, like, an officer of the United States at the time? Like an officer-officer. A guy with an office?  Weeeeelllllll....

Color me skeptical*. I always thought the person in the Oval Office was sort of like the CEO of the country. It's an executive office. Trump was the officeholder when all of this went down. It feels like deciding he is responsible, but escapes being treated as an officeholder because of the unique nature of his office is a bit of a cop-out. It's like saying "The buck stops with the president" but you can fling it anywhere but at Trump. 

I do like the part where the blame for the insurrection is very solidly laid at his feet though--that's a good start.

*All disclaimers about getting most of my idea about law from television shows pertain.

Friday, July 28, 2023

Sam Alito Should Retire.

 


I have an opinion about this particular justice that is not nice. Samuel Alito's wife leased land to an oil and gas firm while Alito sat in judgment over the EPA. Alito is no stranger to conflicts of interest--it's just that he isn't interested in discussing the conflict part of it. I have once and forever stated that the definition of "conflict of interest" for conservatives was that if one always has decided in one's own interest, there is never a conflict. And I'm not sure that flippant construction doesn't accurately describe the conservative court. 

So what is my take on Alito and his beefing on the idea of checks and balances? Because it boils down to whether Alito thinks he has a say over Congress' ability to set tax law without Congress having an ability to determine whether Alito has any ethical standards he ever has to conform to

It would seem to me like Alito does not prefer to have any ethical standards pertaining to him by another authority because he understands his situation wouldn't stand up to scrutiny, and if he doesn't like my opinion on that, he can fucking fight me. 

He won't and doesn't need to, because in his world, my opinion is an irrelevancy. (Also, I would cream him on his conflicted ass and the legacy of it point by butchered legal point.)

He needs to retire because he's at this point trolling how much SCOTUS doesn't have to conform to any ethical standards and he wants to pretend Congress has nothing at all to do with the configuration of the court or the ethics they need to adhere to. But the Constitution literally does exactly that.  Congress can determine how many justices, and even if they can be impeached for their skullduggery. 

Weird that he missed that. It feels very intentional.

Saturday, December 3, 2022

TWGB: How is Trump Doing Today?

 


If your answer to the titular question is "ready to set fire to the Constitution", then yay! You got it in one. Today's manic post on Truth Social reads:

So, with the revelation of MASSIVE & WIDESPREAD FRAUD & DECEPTION in working closely with Big Tech Companies, the DNC, & the Democrat Party, do you throw the Presidential Election Results of 2020 OUT and declare the RIGHTFUL WINNER, or do you have a NEW ELECTION? A Massive Fraud of this type and magnitude allows for the termination of all rules, regulations, and articles, even those found in the Constitution. Our great "Founders" did not want, and would not condone, False & Fraudulent Elections!

So, I guess he's unhappy?

Now, far be it for me to put words into the mouths of the "Founders" (what is with Trump and the quotation marks?), but our elected officials swear an oath to the Constitution because without laws, we don't have a government, but anarchy. You might even say, if we throw out the Constitution, we "wouldn't even have a country," to use the refrain uttered by Trump and other "Flight 93 election" folks on the right.

It sounds like. once again, Trump is spouting a little too much "truth". Just as he acknowledged taking classified documents transparently, he is now telling us that he wants laws broken to restore him to office. He knows there's no Constitutional basis for any kind of a do-over. but it doesn't matter--he wants another chance and quickly.

It seems like this post coincides with the "revelation" of supposed Biden campaign-influenced suppression on social media of Hunter Biden stories in the "Twitter files" Elon Musk dropped last night. The funny old thing is--there isn't a there, there. To the extent there was any government influence, this happened during the Trump Administration, so whose government was it?  And many career IC officials felt, from experience, the Hunter Biden laptop story should be distrusted because it looked like disinfo.

Experience like the foreign disinfo campaign that went hard in 2016. In favor of Trump.  

It also coincides with another bad week for Trump in the courts,  As in:

Five members of the Oath Keepers were convicted for serious felonies relating to the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection that the former president instigated. The South Carolina Supreme Court ruled that his former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows must testify in Georgia’s criminal investigation into his attempt to overturn the state’s results. And a federal judge denied Trump’s claim that he has absolute immunity from civil suits.

And people are still talking about how his friend Ye is having a very public racist meltdown. And also, Pat Cipolone and Patrick Philbin testified before a grand jury Friday and an appellate court dismissed "Loose" Cannon's Special Master ruling. And the Ways and Means Committee has six years of Trump's tax returns. And the Trump Organization fraud case goes to a jury on Monday...

I'm sure Trump is writing a new Constitution on the Mar-A-Lago walls in ketchup at this point. 

But as the old saw about "taking Trump literally or seriously" goes, we've seen by now--after 1/6? I take him very seriously and literally. He definitely is encouraging the breaking of laws to get him reinstalled in office. That's why he has shown so much solidarity lately with those arrested and tried for their participation in the 1/6 insurrection. 

He still means to do terrible harm to this country, and that people still support him is appalling.


Friday, April 1, 2022

Highly Visible and Easily Defined

 

Take a look at this SOB, won't you? This is following on the peculiar trolling of the Ketanji Brown Jackson judicial hearing, in which she was asked to define what a woman is by the notable public intellectual (sinkhole) Marsha Blackburn. Rep. Good is being exceptionally foolish--if he understands very well what a woman is, he doesn't need to be a biologist to say so--isn't that supposed to be his point? And in any event, Speaker Pelosi has always gone by she/her pronouns. All he ever needed to do to be sure was ask

 Now, I offer an answer to the question of "What is a woman?" that you can all use if you like, free of charge: A woman is the term commonly understood to mean an adult female human, although the definitions of "female" may be disputed in terms of genetics, anatomy, socialization, politics or law. But under the Constitution in the US, all human beings are entitled to the protection of the law, without respect to gender. And I hope that helps. 

Thursday, November 11, 2021

The Driest Eye


 I'm obviously not the intended audience for Kyle Rittenhouse's time on the stand, because in my universe, I would never have entertained the idea that putting him on the stand would necessarily elicit sympathy, so it would have been best avoided. But it certainly happened, and somehow, news stories got written with "burst into tears" or the like in them. 

But I don't see any tears here. He looks like he swallowed a hot chip the wrong way. He looks like he tried for a snot bubble and it came up dry. He even looked over to see if anyone was responding to his "breakdown". And I feel very mean for saying this, and you know what? My eyes are dry, too. 

This kid was in a state that was not his, with a gun he had no right to carry, claiming he was offering medical aid which he wasn't qualified to render, in a place where he knew there was physical conflict which meant possible physical threat, but was scared even though carrying that gun. He chose all the things that put him in this circumstance, and his heavily and genuinely weeping mother helped.

The judge appears to be in Rittenhouse's corner. The farce was capped off by us hearing the ringtone of "God Bless the USA". And he also might have been doing some holiday catalog shopping during the trial. That's how much this guy seems to have already decided how the case should go. He doesn't see the people Rittenhouse slew as "victims"--they are the wrong kind of people to be calling "victims". Implying some people are, well. You know. Fine to kill. 

I wish this opinion was a bit more rare, but I see Supreme Court Justice Alito wondering why people shouldn't be armed on the "crime-ridden" city subways, because obviously, shit is just looking to go down in these big cities. Whoa.  We got us a Bernie Goetz fan here. A guy who doesn't miss an opportunity to watch "Death Wish" am I right? (This is a whole part and parcel of our national gun-toting religion.)

See, my problem with this scenario is when the so-called "law and order" people start waxing heroic about vigilantism and extrajudicial violence, when they are supposed to uphold the Constitution which is actually very much about due process and not--that sort of thing. This is why I wonder with a sinking heart how the nearly all-white jury will look at the killers of Ahmaud Arbery. Will they suppose this was a case of a fouled-up citizens arrest? Once again, we have people, with guns, making decisions they had no authority to make, that even duly constituted authorities can get entirely and regrettably wrong. 

I mean, consider this: in a political system built on a framework holding the innocence of the accused as a value until proven guilty, the fatal result of the Charlottesville free-for-all is that "poor" James Fields' fault lay in being the first to ram a car into protesters before elected officials tried to legalize such a thing. Regardless of those people's rights to do....anything at all, Express their First Amendment rights to speak freely or peaceably assemble.  

And so we get to the conservative/fascist problem: the idea that the the law protects some, but the others can have order. At any price. When do we universally acknowledge the price of order is too high if it comes with violent oppression and valorizes privileged lawlessness? 

Not a minute too soon, if you asked me. 


Monday, October 11, 2021

The Scalise Proposition

 

Rep. Steve Scalise once styled himself "David Duke without the baggage" because of course, in politics as in many walks of life, a reputation is your calling card. David Duke, of course, was an early backer of the virulently racist Trump that came down an escalator to discuss his 2016 candidacy in terms of stopping Mexicans and assorted Central Americans from coming to the US who were in all probability (as far as Trump knew) gangsters and rapists. Steve Scalise is a congressman who by now is basically David Duke with a taxpayer-funded job.

We should understand his baggage by now. He isn't different. He's just in office. That's all. 

Some people might point to his not so long ago traumatic shooting incident and I will note there is something that came out of that: many people face tragedy and decide that the outcome will be that they are better people. And Scalise resolved to just be himself, Which was so unnecessary on his part, but I digress. 

Anyhow, he isn't worse than Kevin McCarthy or Mitch McConnell, and definitely no worse than Chuck Grassley, here. He's just so basically weak and inutile to any need of  his constituents that all he can do is perform for their biases. He doesn't serve the people. He serves power, and in his brain, Trump, the twice-impeached one-term wonder with lawsuits and debts clinging to his every waking moment, is still who Scalise thinks is in power, so he cedes him that for fear of what the Twitter-less social media sensation will say about him. 
 
Even if all Trump is chewing up now is the Mar-a-Lago wallpaper. 

Yes, that is amazingly servile and grotesque, a cowardice so mutated from basic human dignity that children should shudder and cling to their parents and plead with unseen angels that they would never be so gutless and miscalculating at once to think pretending Trump won is the winning thing. Rather than, I don't know, actually being a party leader who wants the government scheme outlined by a little old thing called the Constitution to be somehow popular with people for governance-related reasons, not vague culture war bullshit. 

His district should find another congressperson, because this one is clearly broken. And it wasn't Trump who broke him, he came here that way, and only wanted a reason to go full Renfield for the right authoritarian white supremacist shitlord. 


 


Sunday, November 17, 2019

When Originalists Say "Kings are Good, Actually"

I'm not even a "simple country lawyer" like Oxford-trained good ol' boy Louisiana Senator John Kennedy tries to pass himself off as, but I do have to say that when Trump's other personal lawyer AG Bill Barr tells me in his Federalist Society speech on originalism that our grade-school civics education regarding the anti-monarchism of the Founding Fathers is way off base, I kind of think back on that Declaration of Independence letter that was written during a hot Philadelphia summer and reads like a "Dear George" letter to run down the English monarch for all his abrogating of citizen's rights and think to myself: Who the fuck is Barr kidding here? 

Now, I don't doubt the fine education and vast experience Barr has at being a dogsbody for privilege. I'm just saying that even if claims of Washington refusing a crown were overstated, the founders were, doubtless, republicans. If they were not, why were oversight (as part of the implied powers) and impeachment (as part of the explicit powers) ever considered the constitutional remit of Congress, and why was a Bill of Rights a part of our Constitution? (Because, unless I'm really mistaken, calling yourself a Federalist and not actually understanding the limits of any government with respect to individual rights is just irony, no?) We've all learned our little lessons about "check and balanced" in grade school, and then you get to a certain level of "big boy" education and, as the gang at the Badda Bing say, "Fuhgeddaboudit"?

Ah, Billy, you slay me. Just admit that the whole "unitary executive" thing means you want all powers invested in a Republican president, and all taken away from a Democratic one out loud in simple language we all understand, and believe me, your audience will still approve, and you will not have said a single thing different from what liberals understood from that.

I've called this attitude "nihilism" previously. I still consider it so. Does it rely on truth, or outcomes, consider the future, respect tradition, take in the full scope of the past, answer to the demands of the present? Nope. He's just giving reasons why he's going to render unto Trump as if he were Caesar, even though he demonstratively gives lip-service to God.  After all, for the theocrat, are they not, in some ways, one and the same

In the same rough respect that the founders would have given limited space to religion, separating it from matters of state, they also would not have removed a president (a mere human with faults) from accountability. Would the people who decried "taxation without representation" have been satisfied with a government they paid for, but could not audit? What sense does that make? Where the hell was the money of our gentlemen farmers and mercantile ministers going--they would have asked! And they were people of civilization as well, they considered how their actions and decision would reverberate through history. This impact mattered to them; Barr's POV is short-sighted. 

As I read about this speech, I also read that Trump, who boasted about permitting torture and more, pardoned soldiers accused of war crimes, over the objection of the Pentagon.  He doesn't care about human rights or military discipline or how our actions are perceived by ally or enemy alike, so this means nothing more than a macho gesture supposedly aimed at gaining military support by giving them "liberty" to do what they like to "others". I read about the way migrant families were being separated at our border, perhaps for good. I remembered when researching to write about the camps migrants were kept in under Trump,  reading that the administration wanted migrant families to be kept at Gitmo, like some kind of enemy combatants.  A camp for migrants, to mirror a top adviser's appreciation of the racist novel Camp of the Saints

Sunday, October 27, 2019

TWGB: This Isn't Fifth Avenue, Though

One of the things that shouldn't escape notice from this week's news was that Trump's lawyers made an interesting claim that led to (I guess) to a reductio ad absurdam argument being read for real, which is that Trump really could shoot someone on Fifth Avenue, and not only not be indicted (a DOJ stylesheet item, courtesy of the OLC going back several years, not to be taken as law, mind you) but probably not even be investigated, thank yew very much, to which I would say "Really, out loud, where the people would hear, you said this argument, William Consovoy?"  Checks and balances, anyone? The separation of powers can't possibly mean that the law is powerless to stop an unlawful act of a president. That system would be bound for failure. 

Which is basically what was laid out when a federal district judge gave explicit voice to the idea that the idea that a president was immune for investigation and indictment made no sense over the issue of whether Trump's tax returns could be kept from local investigation. Of course, the president in his person shouldn't be above the law--we don't have kings here. It's also been determined that the Mueller grand jury testimony should be given to Congress. This settles (well, for now) the issue of whether the House proceedings are legitimate, and classified them as in effect, judicial and not political. The House has the power via the Constitution, without any direction as to process, which makes these process arguments out here look even dumber than they already were. 

But this is where we are in the current contretrumps: the great refutations. For example, it was not just Bill Taylor who explicated that there was a quid pro quo, but Ambassador Gordon Sondland did as well. Independent reporting from the news media indicates that Volodimir Zelenskyy felt pressured regarding what he should do with respects to Trump's apparent demands of an investigation into Biden even before taking office. We also know now that Ukraine was aware of the interruption in aid sooner than was previously indicated from Taylor's testimony. We also know Trump wasn't that concerned about corruption in general, because he cut funding to programs to fight corruption

It really looks like the president was extorting a bribe from another world leader. It really looks like he wanted to use taxpayer funds approved by Congress to elicit a personal favor benefitting his re-election campaign from Ukraine. More than this, though, trade help to Ukraine was also apparently being held up, reinforcing the idea that the White House (Trump) was using whatever power available to leverage an outcome Trump wanted. This would be something former NSA John Bolton would directly have knowledge of, which should prove for interesting questioning if/when his date for an impeachment inquiry deposition comes through. (I also am very interested in what we can get from Don McGahn regarding Trump's constant obstruction of justice and very bad ideas in these regards. I am sure Trump thought White House Counsel literally meant "taxpayer-funded in-house defense attorneys".)

In other, weirder news, Giuliani's butt dial indicates that the shadow foreign policy needs money and has something to do with Bahrain, which bothers me because of the human rights abuses in Bahrain, and also that Giuliani can just dial up someone for a hundred thousand or so dollars for whatever. Foreign policy ops that are so-called "American", but not with congressional approval, or any appointed person, and independent money, just the president's tacit approval? That's some straight up Logan Act shit, right? I don't think flashing a screenshot of texts with the State Department is going to fish Trump's personal lawyer out of the soup here. And I don't think we should consider Giuliani a great source or trust people who use sources like him, or diGenova and Toensing, as anything but propaganda, either. 

Despite how Trump wants to run his administration, we just aren't on Fifth Avenue, and no, it shouldn't be okay for him to shoot anyone, or even just think it's okay to shoot his mouth off. His actions are representing a great nation, and I think he's letting us down for his grift, like his brother's company's contract. Or big tax cuts for machers like Dan Gilbert or Mike Milken

I don't know exactly how Trump ran things from Trump Tower. But Pennsylvania Avenue isn't Fifth Avenue.  He needs to be held accountable. 



Wednesday, September 25, 2019

It is Time



It's not about the politics, it's about the abuse of office.

It's not about "accepting the results of 2016"--it's about holding the President of the United States to account.

It's not about Vice-President Biden; it's about the way Trump uses his office to benefit himself and punish perceived enemies, whether for his 2020 campaign, or any other reason.

It's not down to the Mueller Report (which never did exonerate Trump, but did establish many Russian contacts and ten instances of obstruction), it doesn't come down to a transcript of one dumb phone call, or an edited whistleblower report. It won't hang on some long-awaited testimony from one or two associates. It is about a pattern of behavior.

It's not about 2020 elections, although we need assurances that those elections are fair and lawful.

There is a big picture here; a man ran for high office, gave an oath to defend the Constitution, and then demonstrated a lack of respect for the law. He instructed other people around him to show the same disrespect. There is an argument that this impeachment process will somehow "damage the presidency"--it is far ore damaged by the abuse of power of a person unfit for that office. There is a far greater damage to the rule of law if laws are not enforced.

He is not above the law. It is time.

TWGB: It's Raining Shoes!

  It certainly has been a minute, hasn't it? So, what brings me out of self-imposed blogging exile, if not something very relevant to my...