Spyke
lemmy.ml

At this point an indictment of Trump in the US has reached the same level as mass shootings and our dying planet. Which indictment, mass shooting or catastrophic environmental disaster are we talking about? I’m numb and have lost track amongst the desperate hopes for change.

203
noahmreply
lemmy.world

Exactly this. An arraignment of a former president has become a non-event. This is ideal for Trump, regardless of how MSNBC tries to spin it.

55
lemmy.world

This is definitely some of it. Although being in DC probably also helps to tone things down. DC is a pretty blue town outside of the federal buildings.

34
cipherpunkreply
discuss.tchncs.de

I can picture a world where Trump’s fervent supporters would descend upon DC and cause at least a little turbulence.

25

I believe you're referring to Antifa, Trump supporters would never ever never do anything like that.

6
Caminskyreply
lemmy.world

What i find interesting is that somehow in developing countries justice was slow but eventually it arrived. I can think of places like Peru with Fujimori. Presidents got away for a while but eventually their own justice systems made them pay. I would be surprised if somehow justice didn't prevail in this situation with Trump.

12
Anissemreply
lemmy.ml

Justice has to prevail on some level if the US has any hope of protecting its democracy. This was a direct attack on the most fundamental parts of the country.

9
ZzyzxRoadreply
lemm.ee

if the US has any hope of protecting its democracy.

I don't think that's a priority as far as our leaders are concerned. The facade of democracy is just getting in their way now.

-1
lemmy.world

Having 3, possible 4 indictments, some of it very damning, I'm convinced shit will happen. IF nothing happens out of 3 (4*) indictments, then I'd lose pretty much all hope at that point. I am at a point now where I have no yet lost all hope.

5
Anissemreply
lemmy.ml

At this point I’ll take a slap on the wrist for Trump if he’s barred from running for Presidency. I just want all this to end and for the country to move on.

6
lemmy.world

I've wanted this all to end since 2016, but this steamroller keeps on going. Barring him from holding office anywhere, should be given at a minimum. These indictments are very serious. If you're a mathematician, then you know by just the numbers, Trump is fucked and he knows it.

3
Anissemreply
lemmy.ml

I want to believe, I really do. It just feels like we’re stuck in a Twilight Zone episode.

3

It's going to take like 3-4 years between appeals for this all to play out within the courts. He NEEDS the Presidency again to even attempt to fix the courts in his favor. As it stands, right now he is royally fucked. It's Presidency or bust.

3
lemmy.world

I am at a point now where I have no yet lost all hope.

I'll save you a seat down here at rock bottom.

2
Son_of_dadreply
lemmy.world

It's never gonna happen. At most he'll become bogged down in lawsuits and charges till he dies. But there's no way they'll ever allow a u.s president to set foot in jail

11
Zettareply
mander.xyz

Hard disagree.

This stupid cuck is going to jail 100% if he does not win the next presidential election. Our legal system can be pretty fucked up sometimes but it's not that fucked up, this guy literally tried to overthrow our democracy.

18
sh.itjust.works

I'm not saying he's not going to jail, but I am saying our system is absolutely fucked. This dude is free years after openly trying to overthrow our democratic processes. The most blatant example (Georgia) isn't even one of the indictments he's currently facing.

14
lemm.ee

I was told in my local pub yesterday that someone with a criminal record can still be president. But I’m British, and drink with people who chat shit. The landlord in said pub also said that Oceangate was eaten by a megalodon, and landlords like to chat shit.

7
lemmy.world

Someone who is literally in jail can become President, technically. What the day-to-day reality of that would be, I've no clue. But it's technically possible, and we've had people (most notably Eugene Debs) run from behind bars.

6

Theoretically, on the federal charges, but not any state charges (such as the ones expected to be brought in Georgia)

Of course, a self-pardon has never been tested, and while the composition of the Supreme Court should be favorable to him doing so, it's not guaranteed that they would actually be on board. There would be a constitutional crisis if he tried to self-pardon, and the Supreme Court ruled that he could not (which could be nearly solved by impeachment of either the President or various Justices, but that will not happen under the present dysfunction of the Senate)

4

House arrest in Trump's giant resort mansion.

It makes sense, but it's more than a little unsatisfying.

Personally I'd love to see Trump in ADX Florence.

3
Warfarinreply
lemmy.world

Agreed the laptop should be plenty evidence how little they care

And the leaked call where they just used Ukraine to get more support? Actually disgusting

-22
rambarooreply
lemmy.world

Lmao the sheer projection in bringing ukraine into this when Trump literally blackmailed them and broke the law to try to score political points. Straight up traitor

10
Warfarinreply
lemmy.world

Not knowing the history of Nazi Ukraine is typical

-15
lemmy.world

Regurgitating Fox news talking points is also typical. Literally incapable of critical thinking.

1
discuss.tchncs.de

Most of the protesters aren't allowed near Washington DC government buildings due to their plea deals.

112
lemm.ee

I also read he said he’d get his supporters to boycott elections.

7

Well, the GOP is the party of personal responsibility, right?

17
lemmy.ml

The fascists aren't stupid. They see the writing on the wall so they're moving on. Completely expected and even if Trump gets the death penalty the threat is by no means gone. Trump is a symptom, not the disease itself.

56
reddthat.com

Beard has a great quote from her book SPQR

“If the assassination of Julius Caesar became a model for the effective removal of a tyrant, it was also a powerful reminder that getting rid of a tyrant did not necessarily dispose of tyranny.”

39
lemmy.ml

An analogy I like: If you have a toxic, dangerous plant in your garden, like the Gympie Gympie maybe, do you remove it by snipping off the leaf bud at the very top, or do you pull it out roots and all?

10

I think that my problem is that I don't agree with the analogy between the tree between the human. Every human, I believe, have a context to find personal change. And GimpyGimpy trees do not. And that is why I disagree with the premise.

1
Klearreply
lemmy.world

The fascists aren’t stupid.

Citation needed

28
lemmy.ml

Never assume the enemy is stupid. That's how you lose. If they were truly stupid they wouldn't have gotten this far and wouldn't even be a threat.

19

There's a distinction to be made between the fascists—the people in power pushing fascism—and the people voting for it. The latter are ignorant and stupid. The former are wringing the country dry for money and power.

18
lemm.ee

This is a major problem with the right wing, there is no principles or loyalty or anything. It’s not the major problem, it’s just one.

16
lemmy.ml

Additionally, a leader is just a tool used by a collective. The collective is in power, not the leader. Trump is no longer useful to them so he is being replaced, just like how a medieval king who fails to please his court of nobles is overthrown for a king that can.

Whether you can overthrow a leader simply depends on if you're part of the collective they serve or not. The reason the general public can't get rid of corrupt politicians or near universally hated people like Bezos or Elon, is because the collective that appoints them is not the public, but much like the medieval king, they only have to answer to a small group of modern day nobles (AKA the corporations, investors, and ultra rich in general).

It's the ruling class, not the individual ruler, that calls the shots. Always. Because a single person can never enforce their rule alone, it requires a group that collectively has sufficient power to enforce their collective rule.

15
Hadriscusreply
lemm.ee

Absolutely. I was talking to a friend the other day and he suggested hiring a hitman through crowdfunding to shoot Macron. I told him, Macron is just a symptom. This hydra has a bunch of other heads ready to sprout, you'll get life for nothing

7
Smattreply
lemmy.ca

Lol well done.

I couldn't believe when that came out and had no effect. Like when George W would just misspeak or Clinton admitted smoking weed in college or whatever, it always seemed like there were huge political consequences.

8

An excited scream specifically when he was up on stage, at his own campaign rally, in front of a crowd cheering the hell out of him.

I truly believe that scream is no less than any single one of us would let fly if we found ourselves in front of a crowd that size, all waving signs with our name on them and cheering to our success.

4
Meldrocreply
lemmy.world

I don't know if you're looking at the same thumbnail I was looking at, but it's the pic of Trump under an umbrella, looking like he's about to cry!

3

I think the point is that usually there is a gaggle of hangers on, that think they can avoid being thrown under the bus. That group is shrinking.

Supporters are still supporters, but less inclined to make an effort to support. It's a sign of waning power as the emperor's new clothes are indeed missing.

16

What even is this article?

An itchy word-worm crafted to crawl under his thin orange skin

11

That's true he's the front runner now, but these things can change. I feel like we all have such a short memory with politics. I mean, Ted Cruz won the Iowa primary in 2016 and Trump only tied Rubio.

1

He's a frontrunner from lack of options, not from appeal. Other potential candidates are too intimidated knowing that if they run against him, he will shower them with insults and innuendo daily and try to bully them into backing out.

1
Subverbreply
lemmy.world

Maybe I'm just a cynical old man, but likely nothing is going to happen to him.

PS: I was alive for Watergate. Ford pardoned Nixon.

30

Watergate was a soft coup. He was taken down by the same structure that killed Kennedy. Your country is run by spooks, pretending to be a democracy.

1
SulaymanFreply
lemmy.world

And yet he still stiffed Rudy Giuliani.

Giuliani should have seen it coming though, it’s like someone who marries a known cheater and is shocked they got cheated on.

19

That’s one of the coolest things he’s ever done though. You’re redeeming Trump in my eyes right now

12
some_guyreply
lemmy.sdf.org

Well, Rudy had a number of embarrassing moments in public that I think caused Trump to lose any respect he might have had for the former mayor. Two that I can think of, the hair dye sweating down his face and the fart picked up on mic in a courtroom.

But his worst offense, in terms of how Trump views people: he lost. He's a loser.

9
lemmy.world

You forgot their perfect press conference at the lovely Four Seasons Landscaping company.

22

That was one of the funniest things ive ever witnessed on tv. I talked about it for weeks with friends.

4

Win or lose, Trump would never pay. He stiffs vendors for good or bad jobs.

6

keep donating to his reelection campaign. his lawyers appreciate it.

14

He has to be pissed that Jarvanka took the 3 billion and booked without kicking up to the head czar

18
lemmy.world

Why do news sites find it so hard to imbed a video that actually works smoothly?

5

It's hard to push video through 28 trackers and 54 ad overlays.

21

Not only were they guilty, their were probably others, but the FBI quit whole it was ahead....the opposite of a witch hunt.

4