Meadmaker
Unregistered
- Joined
- Apr 27, 2004
- Messages
- 29,033
YesWhy? Does the word "crime" have some sort of magical powers like "Abracadabra" or "Simon Sez"?
YesWhy? Does the word "crime" have some sort of magical powers like "Abracadabra" or "Simon Sez"?
But her emails.
No, you dimwit. You weren't just impeached. You were impeached by Congress last month. Do keep up.Trump Tweets
I JUST GOT IMPEACHED FOR MAKING A PERFECT PHONE CALL!
Him, Giuliani and Trump make a good set.Man does Parnas ever set off my bull-****-o-meter. Everything he says seems sketchy.
Why? Does the word "crime" have some sort of magical powers like "Abracadabra" or "Simon Sez"?
Funny story: Obstruction of justice, bribery, extortion, and abuse of power are, in fact, crimes.
If you can convince the majority of the American people that DJT has committed real, honest to goodness, go to jail sorts of crimes, he will be convicted in the Senate, or at the very least there will be 10 or so Republican crossovers to vote for conviction, and his chance of re-election will be very slim.
It’d be surprising if the didn’t, as they are used in the articles of impeachment. Merely reiterating the charges will make it happen.Indeed they are.
Let's see if the House Managers mention it. (I think it's the House Managers that present the "prosecution" case, right?)
What I'm getting at is that so many people are absolutely certain that Trump has committed not just one, but multiple crimes. Let's see if the House Managers figure that's worth mentioning.
No one word is magic. There are many ways of saying the same thing. You are merely preemptively moving the goalposts. Fortunately, it’s not an issue, since the articles of impeachment include several crimes already, with plenty of publicly available evidence to support it.Because that word really is magic. If you can convince the majority of the American people that DJT has committed real, honest to goodness, go to jail sorts of crimes, he will be convicted in the Senate, or at the very least there will be 10 or so Republican crossovers to vote for conviction, and his chance of re-election will be very slim.
Short of a real, go to jail, sort of crime, it's a real uphill climb. Technically, you don't need a crime to convict, but if you don't have one, it's just a lot harder to persuade people that he ought to go.
So I guess the great American public will also accept that someone who is a thief, kidnapper, murderer or baby-raper is not really a "criminal" because the word "crime" may not be mentioned at any time in the legal proceedings of any of those offenses. Even though they are real, honest to goodness, go to jail sorts of crimes.Indeed they are.
Let's see if the House Managers mention it. (I think it's the House Managers that present the "prosecution" case, right?)
What I'm getting at is that so many people are absolutely certain that Trump has committed not just one, but multiple crimes. Let's see if the House Managers figure that's worth mentioning.
Because that word really is magic. If you can convince the majority of the American people that DJT has committed real, honest to goodness, go to jail sorts of crimes, he will be convicted in the Senate, or at the very least there will be 10 or so Republican crossovers to vote for conviction, and his chance of re-election will be very slim.
Short of a real, go to jail, sort of crime, it's a real uphill climb. Technically, you don't need a crime to convict, but if you don't have one, it's just a lot harder to persuade people that he ought to go.
Convincing people that refuse to listen is not an appropriate standard.
I have one further question (maybe it has been answered before).
Is the number of votes required to convict Trump different to the number of votes required to eject him from office?
For example, if the vote was 60-40 to convict, that is clearly a big majority of the Senate including Republicans convinced he is guilty of the charges. But it is not enough to have him ejected from the position of president. So in one sense, that would leave a convicted criminal legally in the Oval Office. (Trump, of course, would crow that he was "perfectly exonerated" or some such.)
So what happens then?
A totally pathetic spectacle would be, "We proved he's a crook, but the American people were too stupid to understand."