•  starrox   ( @starrox@lemmy.ml ) 
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    411 year ago

    Honestly, with all the shit this disgusting wannabe dictator has already gotten away with, I’ll hold on to celebrations until there is some kind of definitive verdict.

    And dont get me started on the sentence even IF they convict him for something. He’s old, he’s rich, he probably still has some buddies in higher places - I’d be absolutely surprised if he would go to a genpop prison. - Even though thats exactly what he would deserve the most.

    •  zhunk   ( @zhunk@beehaw.org ) 
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      191 year ago

      Charging him is still a big milestone, and setting the precedent that a former president can be charged is still important. But, yeah, sentencing will be the even bigger milestone.

      • What is crazy to me is that everyone is making it out like there HAD to be a precedent set, as if the baseline of being a U.S. citizen was not enough to already imply that they could/should be held accountable for breaking the law. That heavily implies what 99% of us already believed, there are CLEARLY two different standards for the rule of law, one for those with money and power, and another one for everyone else.

      •  starrox   ( @starrox@lemmy.ml ) 
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        51 year ago

        undefined> setting the precedent that a former president can be charged is still important

        absolutely. It is already a win, but I believe the US really need the BIG win which would be to actually sentence him for the serious crimes he commited. Literally every other US citizen would be a prisoner long since for doing a microscopic part of what Trump did. The damage that one person did in 4 years, and not just locally in America but also internationally, is sheer unbelievable.

        •  thilo   ( @thilo@lemmy.ml ) 
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          1 year ago

          Sadly this is not Trumps achievement, but the rising hostility of a collapsing ecology coupled with late stage capitalism (read survival-of-the-fittest-mentality). We don’t talk much about it but most people dying in the climate crisis wont die of heatstroke but by wars. It is a struggle to keep your humanity in the process. Sadly there are an increasing number of people who stop bothering.

          /edit grammar

          •  starrox   ( @starrox@lemmy.ml ) 
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            61 year ago

            You say a lot of sad truths there.

            Of course it is not Trumps responsibility that our planet goes to shit. That people get more alienated from each other in general. That hate and fear spread like wildfires while empathy and humanity is in short supply.

            But what IS Trumps accomplishment is that he is responsible for giving all those hateful, ignorant people a voice. He normalized saying shit that you’d only dared to share in the company of a few close friends in the past. He normalized the complete lack of empathy towards adversaries. He normalized acting like a complete moron against all evidence. He normalized distrust in science. He normalized abusing a political responsibility for selfpromotion. … I could go on.

            But what is really grinding my gears behind that context is, that he normalized all that shit not only in the US, but basically worldwide due to the insane reach he had as US president. Parties in my home country are beginning to do exactly the same shit, not on full-removed level yet but we will get there.

            /rant sorry

            •  thilo   ( @thilo@lemmy.ml ) 
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              41 year ago

              He used and improved on the populists playbook. All the neofascists worldwide seem to have one shared toolbox. Whereas liberals have more individualistic worldviews than active participants :(

        • Literally every other US citizen would be a prisoner long since for doing a microscopic part of what Trump did.

          While I agree with you 99.9% and emphasize that I strongly so do… as much as the “both sides” bullshit is, in fact, bullshit… the one small bit of it that is true is that our politicians do get away with these things, although most of them are only doing a microscopic part of what Trump has done. But plenty of them - both parties, even the one I always vote for - act poorly and get away with it for any number of reasons, including the fact that we hesitate to go after politicians because it’s seen as political.

          But let me finish by reiterating that Trump has been particularly and unprecedently egregious in his blatant criminal acts.

          •  starrox   ( @starrox@lemmy.ml ) 
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            1 year ago

            Beautifully said!

            But what is the solution on the political front then? Is it to get new blood in while forcing the “old garde” out? How do you do that through brigades of lobbyists that prevent according laws from even existing? From the outside, the whole system seems pretty fucked.

            You have two parties. Both are basically center right, one a bit more right than center maybe ( R ). The whole county is “gerrymandered” to the point where the actual voices of the citizens dont seem to matter anymore because some individuals decide for thousands.

            While it would certainly be possible to run as an independent 3rd party, the cost of that would be prohibitively high because of the established apparatus the two main parties already have.

            The leaders and high functioneers of the two main parties do their damndest to stay there because power is power and wealth is wealth.

            Then there is a gigantic lobbying industry, so buying votes seems not only tolerated, but even encouraged. (sidenote: how the fuck did that even happen? not only in America ofc.)

            And then there is the media. I do believe free speech is a good thing. But I honestly believe that what eg. Fox News is allowed to send is more like “incitement of the people” than “information”. And I know they get away with it due to calling it “entertainment”. Well, a good third of the country is certainly “entertained” to the point of starting revolts.

            To me it seems, the only way would be to get in good (as in, ethically) new blood at the local level, feed and groom them, then rise to regional, then national level. While simultaneously waiting for all of the old garde to die. LoL.

            I bet I missed a thousand things but that seems to be the gist of it to me. What are your all opinions?

            *edited with paragraphs for readability and fixed the minor mistakes

      • It’s also not for cases where the accused is an immensely-wealthy former POTUS. I’ll be shocked if he suffers any substantial punishment.

        I’ll be shocked if they even manage to assemble a jury, for that matter. Pretty much everyone in the country either loves him with religious fervor or despises him and everything he stands for.

      • Right? Call me a cynic but we all know nothing will actually happen. Dude was impeached twice and has been on record with plenty of crimes and he’s still running for president.

        Pretty sure he can run for president from jail. From a. Jail cell he would still be the front runner and his base would be donating to him. So he could pardon himself

        • I also saw somewhere that if he is convicted and doesn’t end up as the nominee for the Republicans, the nominee could run on a platform of “I’ll pardon Trump” so that the trump supporters vote for the nominee. I could see this happening.

  • I’m so over this game show host.

    Why did anyone ever give a fuck about this guy?

    He was a bottom of the barrel choice for a gameshow and was super lucky to get the Apprentice.

    Any fuckstick could’ve taken that role and run with it

  •  nbailey   ( @nbailey@lemmy.ca ) 
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    381 year ago

    It’s important to remember at this point that being bad at crime is not a valid defense.

    If you mug a guy and immediately drop the wallet down a storm drain, you’ve still committed robbery. If you steal a car but lock the keys in it, it’s still theft. If you attempt to overthrow your own government and can’t organize people to actually pull it off, you’ve still committed treason.

    Trump, despite being a career criminal, is still really shit at being a criminal. Some people will construe his failure to execute with innocence - it is not. It’s incompetence.

      •  Gray   ( @Gray@lemmy.ca ) 
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        11 year ago

        Which is why Ron Desantis terrifies me. It doesn’t look good for him right now, but I wouldn’t have said things looked good for Trump in the summer of 2015 either. And all it would take is for one of these smart tyrants to win a freak election like 2016 and it would be Trump all over again, but much worse.

    •  starrox   ( @starrox@lemmy.ml ) 
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      21 year ago

      Not to say you are wrong with anything you’re saying… But I am asolutely confident that pigs will learn to fly before he gets convicted for treason. Did he commit it? A clear “yes” from me (non-American but I dont think that matters; it is basically an accepted fact among all that understand what “treason” usually means in a country-context). Will the prosecutors be able to prove it through a brigade of lawyers? I dont think so.

      •  JuBe   ( @JuBe@beehaw.org ) 
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        51 year ago

        I’m not a lawyer elsewhere in the world, but the United States has a very specific and very narrow definition for what is considered “treason.” Article III, § 3 of the Constitution states that

        Treason against the United States, shall consist only in levying War against them, or in adhering to their Enemies, giving them Aid and Comfort . . . .

        I’m not an expert in this area, but from some legal analysis I’ve come across, another hurdle to convicting on treason is that in order to have an “enemy,” there needs to be an official declaration of war.

    • yeah, this isn’t just some promise to “look into it”. he’s been indicted on some extremely serious federal charges… something IS finally happening. AT FUCKING LAST. Also, the DOJ will likely be prosecuted in the South Florida District, which means it wall all transpire in Trump’s back yard. He’ll hate that.

      This may finally be what we’ve all been waiting for.

        • Not a lawyer, but this is happening in federal court in Florida.

          If it happened in state court in Florida, then supposedly the executive branch (which the governor leads) is not allowed to interfere, but it’s the same government of people who might know each other, so it’s possibly murkier.

          But since it’s federal court, I believe if the state government started doing anything, it would be trivial for that federal circuit to consider it problematic and just move it to another state. So with that, I believe no, DeSantis couldn’t do anything even if he wanted to.

          That, and they are now political rivals competing for the Republican nomination, so I doubt DeSantis minds much of what’s going on with this anyway.

    •  GraceGH   ( @GraceGH@beehaw.org ) 
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      181 year ago

      I hate to say it, but I don’t think that day will ever come. Even in death, his die-hards will be slinging conspiracy theories about how he was assassinated or how he was jesus and he’ll ressurect soon to take on mega-hillary’s doomsday army.

      Hopefully we can at least confine it to its own section of the internet though.

  • I’m of mixed mind about this.

    Obviously the course of justice must go forward, and if prosecutors have a strong case, the should pursue it.

    On the other hand, given all that he’s done to undermine democracy, subvert elections, destroy civility, erode democratic norms and traditions, and find common cause with hostile foreign powers, I’m not really keen on the idea that 30 years later, when people say Trump, they’ll think “oh, the guy who mishandled classified documents?”

    It would be like if Ted Bundy got caught writing bad checks and was locked up for that.

    •  Thrashy   ( @Thrashy@beehaw.org ) 
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      391 year ago

      They famously got Al Capone on tax evasion, and nobody thinks of him as “the tax cheat” first and foremost.

      Besides, I suspect that this is a case where the floodgates are going to open up in terms of investigations and charges, once the first set sticks to him. There’s also the NY state fraud charges already filed, and the GA state election tampering investigation that is widely expected to lead to charges.

      • I suppose that’s a good point about Al Capone. Though he famously had people murdered in the streets and everyone knew it. With Trump, he has a whole army of deniers who will try bend history to make him a hero.

        If he were indicted and convicted on his most serious crimes (subversion, bribery, attempted extortion of foreign heads of state, etc), it would be harder for his cultists to rewrite history.

        Either way, I’m glad he’s facing the music on something, anything.

        • Alas, I think that history has some dismal lessons for us on how the die-hard MAGA crowd are going to keep carrying water for their guy, as (among other things) it’s been almost 160 years since the end of the Civil War and lost-causers are still out, loud, and proud. The best we can hope for is a thorough public reckoning for Trump via the court system, that will strip away as many of his persuadable low-information followers as possible.

    •  ropean   ( @ropean@beehaw.org ) 
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      1 year ago

      I agree with this to a point. To me the biggest reasons to celebrate world be convictions for conspiracy and incitement of the January 6 insurrection, and election interference in Georgia (and possibly other states that fronted fake electors). Those actions were the most damaging to our democratic process.

      However, these charges are also important because they serve as proof that no one in the United States is above the law. I have a glimmer of hope that accountability may help start to heal some of the damage our system has taken in recent years.

    •  HQC   ( @HQC@beehaw.org ) 
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      21 year ago

      Trump will be remembered for much more. He is still the only twice-impeached President and one of very few to not win a second term. Jan 6 is going to be an event touched on in history books. Who knows what we’ll learn about the last few years in terms of Russia and disinformation and other corruption angles in the next few decades?

      And don’t forget that there are more investigations still pending! This is just the most obvious, slam-dunk case out there so it moved the fastest.

      •  Clbull   ( @Clbull@beehaw.org ) 
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        1 year ago

        Yeah… sorry that I posted something a bit against Beehaw’s ethos.

        I am a British citizen. I have lived under this circus fiesta of a Conservative government for the past thirteen years and watched them slowly erode my rights. They have taken away so much from me and nothing has made my day more than watching Boris resign.

        If anything he and his cronies should be in prison.

  • I hope he’ll end up in an actual jail, but if he ever gets sentenced, I imagine it’ll be house arrest at Mar a Lago. He’ll keep living a comfortable life, just with somewhat limited freedom. His kids will continue his grifting empire and make sure daddy is able to keep influencing people.

  •  xradeon   ( @xradeon@lemmy.one ) 
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    151 year ago

    surprised_pikachu.jpg

    But no really, I get it may seem crazy to those on the right to indict a former president, but I would say it’s a good thing given one of the founding tenets of the United States was that the leaders were specifically NOT to supposed to be Gods.

    I mean, could you imagine how fast someone other than Trump, like some pleb intern or something, would be thrown in federal prison if they took all of those documents?

    • Yet we give them the ultimate power to pardon whoever they want. Who thought that shit was a good idea lol? Also how supreme court justices are put in power, this orange man chose how many? Like 3 supreme court justices who are currently in power, and now he’s being indicted! LOL

      • Damn that’s a great point.

        I feel like everyone is so used to Trump violating one sacred cow after another that this isn’t even registering for a lot of the country.

        Even folks who are anti trump have been conditioned to think he’ll just get away with this like always.