The Impeachment Of Donald Trump

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Dear GOP, Some Scary Advice on How to Survive Your Impeachment Nightmare
Take it from the movies, denying reality is not going to slay the monster.
By CHARLES SYKES October 29, 2019

To: Senate Republicans

By now it should have dawned on you that there is no escape. You are going to have to render a verdict not just on Donald’s Trump’s policies, but on his personal conduct. For just the third time in U.S. history, the Senate will hold a trial on the impeachment and removal of a president.

You’ll have to vote up or down and your decision will have consequences that will linger long past this election cycle. The situation is already grim.

“It feels like a horror movie,” one senator recently told the Washington Post.

But it is all about to get worse: the evidence, the venue and the president’s conduct. There may be more smoking guns, the trial will be televised, and based on the past few weeks, Trump is likely to be more unhinged than ever.

In honor of the season, I offer you some unsolicited Halloween-themed advice to help you navigate the coming nightmare. If you take this advice, you have a chance of saving your party. Ignore it, and, well, you’ve seen what happens in those horror movies, right?

1. Don’t hide in the basement.

So far you and your fellow Republicans have been able to hide behind complaints about process and the claim that the impeachment probe is “illegitimate.” Your colleagues in the House actually stormed the secure hearing room in the basement of the Capitol and complained about the process even as a few dozen GOP lawmakers were inside being part of that process. It was juvenile and self-defeating. Sooner or later, you will have to confront the substance of case; and that is not likely to get any better.

You have to consider the possibility that there may be more transcripts, more tapes, more whistleblowers. The new evidence is not likely to be exculpatory, because the president’s conduct in pressuring foreign governments for dirt on the Bidens and obstructing justice has already been well documented.

The venue will also change. Republicans are complaining that the process has been secretive, but be careful what you wish for. The trial will be must-see television and not even Fox News will be able to keep much of the evidence from your constituents. Polls already suggest historically high support for the impeachment inquiry, and we have not even begun those public hearings. In short, pretending that the facts aren’t facts—that you’ll be safe behind your flimsy justification—is not going to help when everything is out in the open. Deal with it.

2. To kill the monster requires confronting how you made him.

As you watch this reckless and unleashed presidency it may have occurred to you how much you have contributed to this moment. You have convinced Trump that he can take you for granted. The president has bullied and berated you and, again and again, you have rolled over. And it has made things only worse.

Trump’s instinct is to escalate both his tactics and his language. The cascade of stories in just the last week—Ukraine, Syria, the G-7 and Doral, the launching of a criminal probe against his own Department of Justice, his reference to critics as “human scum”—are a microcosm of his presidency and where we are going.

Between now and the beginning of the Senate trial, that behavior could become even more erratic and you will be forced to defend an ever-widening gyre of inanities, deceptions, abuses of power, episodes of self-dealing and other assorted outrages. Imagine six months of Giuliani butt-dials.

The first step to saving your life is to recognize what the monster feeds on. In this case, it’s your fear of standing up to him.

3. You survive only if you fight back.

All the craziness might suggest that a policy of strategic silence is the best option. This includes not signing on to more resolutions like the one authored by Sen. Lindsey Graham condemning the House inquiry. Graham may be immune to humiliation and indifferent to history’s verdict, but you likely will not be.

You probably also think you can finesse this by finding a middle ground where you can acknowledge that the call to the Ukrainian president was inappropriate and Trump’s behavior questionable, but not impeachable.


But Trump may not let you. The president and his loudest supporters continue to insist that (a) the phone call with the Ukrainian president was “perfect,” (b) there was no quid pro quo, and (c) even if there was one, it was completely appropriate. Indeed, on Monday he urged to stop focusing on process and defend the merits of his actions. “I'd rather go into the details of the case rather than process. ... Process is good, but I think you ought to look at the case.”

The problem is that “the genius of our great president” demands total fealty. He will insist that acquittal be considered total exoneration, and he intends you to be a part of the whitewash. He wants you to embrace and ratify his conduct; and if you do, you will own it.

4. The sequel is often scarier than the original.

You need to consider the full implications of the precedent you will be setting if you vote to acquit the president. Imagine a second Trump term beyond the reach of credible constitutional accountability. Consider what that would mean for our political culture, constitutional norms and the future of your party.

“The boundaries of acceptable presidential behavior are defined by which actions the political system tolerates or condemns,” writes Lawfare’s Benjamin Wittes.

We are already “perilously close to the point at which there may no longer be a national consensus that there’s anything constitutionally problematic about using governmental powers to advance one’s own pecuniary and electoral interests.”

Writes Wittes: “If a substantial group of members of Congress signals not merely that the president’s conduct does not warrant impeachment and removal but also that it does not even warrant branding as intolerable, such conduct will become normalized—at a great cost to previously unquestioned first principles of constitutional governance—even if the House impeaches Trump.”

This is why you should pay more attention to the Federalist Papers than Fox News.

On Fox News, the impeachment proceedings will be characterized as a “coup,” or an attempt to “overturn an election.” But they are neither.

5. Your ultimate weapon is always within reach.

Alexander Hamilton clearly envisioned impeachment as a constitutional check on “the misconduct of public men, or, in other words, from the abuse or violation of some public trust.” He understood that impeachment proceedings were, by their nature, political, “as they relate chiefly to injuries done immediately to the society itself.” He also had no illusions about how divisive the process would be, noting that impeachment “will seldom fail to agitate the passions of the whole community,” and that “in such cases there will always be the gravest danger that the decision will be regulated more by the comparative strength of parties, than by the real demonstrations of innocence or guilt.”

But the founders reposed their confidence in you; or rather in what they thought the Senate would be. “Where else than in the Senate could have been found a tribunal sufficiently dignified, or sufficiently independent?” What other body, asked Hamilton, would feel confident enough “to preserve, unawed and uninfluenced, the necessary impartiality,” between the accused “and the REPRESENTATIVES OF THE PEOPLE, HIS ACCUSERS?” (Emphasis Hamilton’s.)

There’s a good reason to listen to Hamilton here—for the sake of the GOP.


Consider this: What if, instead of breaking with Richard Nixon in 1974, Republicans had stuck with him, deciding that Nixon’s impeachment was a test of tribal loyalty? What would the consequences have been if they had voted to acquit him on charges of obstructing justice, lying to the public, contempt of Congress and abuse of power? Specifically, what would it have meant for the Republican Party had it embraced the defense of Nixon’s corruption? If it had been less Barry Goldwater and more Lindsey Graham?

We know what actually happened. Even after abandoning Nixon, the GOP was punished in 1974 and 1976, but it was able to otherwise wipe the stink off relatively quickly, winning back the presidency in 1980 and holding it for 12 years.

But what if the party had gone all Watergate-is-no-big-deal? If it had, it’s unlikely that Ronald Reagan would even have been elected, because the GOP would have been haunted by Nixon for a generation.

In your idle moments, you have perhaps wondered what your legacy will be. Here’s the answer; history will remember what you do over the next few months.

Short term, breaking with Trump will spark a nasty blowback. But imagine for a moment a post-Trumpian Republican Party freed from the baggage of Trumpist corruption. The choice is between a party inextricably tied to Trump, with all of his crudity, dishonesty, lawlessness and arrogance, and a party that has shown that it is capable of being a principled defender of constitutional norms.

At the end of this process, the simple narrative is likely to be that the president has abused his power, broken the law and sold out his country. You have an opportunity to hold him accountable by doing your constitutional duty. History will want to know whether you got scared and shirked it.
 

Budzbuddha

Well-Known Member
Trump was speaking to an aide. The aide told him, "Sir, I had a dream last night that you finally got the parade you deserved.
It was glorious, there were millions of people cheering along the parade route, and you were riding in the most beautiful carriage".

Trump asked, "Was I happy'?

The aide replied, 'I don't know Sir, the casket was closed" :)
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Any body wanna give odds on Donald shutting down the government again? Impeachment in the middle of a government shutdown, that would be 4 for 4, four shutdowns in four years, it's a given that he will do it. That shutdown should be right in the middle of Donald's impeachment trial (Nancy will find it useful), this time there would be a way for congress to end a shutdown almost immediately. :D

I'll bet Trump has been constantly on Pence to sign a pardon for him before he leaves office so he can post date it. Pence would be Donald's only hope of weaseling out on federal charges, but I don't think he is that stupid. He will want a pardon himself from the next democratic POTUS and Nancy can help to provide it, for a price. Donald can't do anything for Pence other than fuck him (he already threw him under the bus), Pelosi and the democrats can however, he can also trust them to keep their word, about the pardon at least. He knows that after the Trump fiasco, the democrats will win it all in 2020
 
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Unclebaldrick

Well-Known Member
Any body wanna give odds on Donald shutting down the government again? Impeachment in the middle of a government shutdown, that would be 4 for 4, four shutdowns in four years, it's a given that he will do it. That shutdown should be right in the middle of Donald's impeachment trial (Nancy will find it useful), this time there would be a way for congress to end a shutdown almost immediately. :D

I'll bet Trump has been constantly on Pence to sign a pardon for him before he leaves office so he can post date it. Pence would be Donald's only hope of weaseling out on federal charges, but I don't think he is that stupid. He will want a pardon himself from the next democratic POTUS and Nancy can help to provide it, for a price.
There's a decent chance of this. Trump's people know he is sliding into the abyss, even if Trump (and his supporters) is too dumb to know. Expect a real shit-show.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
If I were an American, any relatives who supported Trump I had, would hate my guts, because I would call them fucking racist traitors to their face, fuck them. It's past time that patriots started calling out these assholes to their face and telling them what they are no bones about it, this battle is gonna be fought not just on the streets, but in the households of America too. This is far too serious to coddle these fools, the future of your country and the safety of your children is at stake. When Trump goes it will be just the beginning, not the end, racism is a national security threat and it has to be treated as such and racists must be regarded as traitors. All Putin has to do is support a more clever and explicit racist next time and he will own them again, just like he owns them now. Putin owns Trump and Trump owns them like they were his slaves, slaves bound with chains of greed, hate and fear.
 
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DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
There's a decent chance of this. Trump's people know he is sliding into the abyss, even if Trump (and his supporters) is too dumb to know. Expect a real shit-show.
It's already a shit show Baldrick, but your right, it's gonna get worse, everything is literally on the table including nukes, but the military will probably refuse orders (we hope). Donald would fly out of Washington and it might get suitcase nuked (with Vlad's help), Donald would do it if he could, it would end the impeachment business really quickly. A nerve gas attack on congress is another possibility (put nothing past Trump) to kill democrats and republicans alike, only the means to pull it off stand in the way, Donald would have complete control then.
 

kgp

Well-Known Member
If I were an American, any relatives who supported Trump I had, would hate my guts, because I would call them fucking racist traitors to their face, fuck them. It's past time that patriots started calling out these assholes to their face and telling them what they are no bones about it, this battle is gonna be fought not just on the streets, but in the households of America too. This is far too serious to coddle these fools, the future of your country and the safety of your children is at stake. When Trump goes it will be just the beginning, not the end, racism is a national security threat and it has to be treated as such and racists must be regarded as traitors. All Putin has to do is support a more clever and explicit racist next time and he will own them again, just like he owns them now. Putin owns Trump and Trump owns them like they were this slaves, salves bound with chains of greed, hate and fear.
You're not even american? Obsessed with american politics? You know security threats in america? Let me tell you something. There are millions of us who live and work together without any incident, peacefully. Everyday... Don't let the media control your thoughts.

Family over politics all day. Life is too short to destroy a family because of who they vote for. If you're against hate, practice what you preach.

As Michael Jackson once said "I'm starting with the man in the mirror, Im asking him to change his ways"
 

Justin-case

Well-Known Member
You're not even american? Obsessed with american politics? You know security threats in america? Let me tell you something. There are millions of us who live and work together without any incident, peacefully. Everyday... Don't let the media control your thoughts.

Family over politics all day. Life is too short to destroy a family because of who they vote for. If you're against hate, practice what you preach.

As Michael Jackson once said "I'm starting with the man in the mirror, Im asking him to change his ways"
Don't lie, you wouldn't remove your lips from Trump's asshole if it meant saving your own mom's life.
 

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
Mulvaney says he and Trump didn't discuss him resigning following defiant press conference


poor mick..outside the 'circle of trust'..

Mulvaney was left in the dark on al-Baghdadi operation


uhhhhhh, buh-bye, mick!
 
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