Thursday, August 10, 2023

There is 'unrestrained political prosecution' which will plunge America into civil war and ultimately end the republic.

History is repeating itself.

"It is notable that, when Julius Caesar cast the die and made that fateful decision to march his legion on Rome, it was because the Senate refused to forego prosecuting him for crimes Caesar purportedly committed during the Gallic Wars (i.e., exceeding Senate authorization). Arguably, this unrestrained political prosecution is what plunged Rome into civil war and ultimately ended the republic."

Does that sound familiar?  


The following from The American Thinker:


Political Prosecution: A Constitutional Crisis In The Making

The sustained government attacks against Donald Trump have implications that extend far beyond his presidential campaign. They present a serious constitutional crisis that has the potential to destroy America.

On August 1, the Wall Street Journal revealed that Donald Trump’s legal bills are consuming his campaign coffers. The article contained a graph showing the rising legal expenses relative to non-legal expenses for Trump’s “Save America” Political Action Committee. These numbers are troubling.

By the end of 2022, Trump’s legal expenses had consumed half of the PAC’s campaign spending. By the first quarter 2023, they had consumed nearly 90% of the spending and, by the second quarter 2023, they had exceeded 90% of total spending.

This raises serious questions about election interference. We tend to think of election interference as a fraudulent or nefarious activity directly connected to the election itself, whether by manipulating voting machines, ballot harvesting, paying for votes, registering votes from incompetent or non-existent people, voter intimidation, vote-count manipulation, etc. But in the United States, we overlook the most obvious form of election interference that’s common throughout the world and throughout history: political prosecution.

Imagine you are the president of the United States, and you want to remain in power (or keep your party in power). Now imagine that you control the Department of Justice, the FBI, and a host of other intelligence agencies. What would stop you from bringing multiple criminal cases against your main political rival? And if you are being investigated by Congress for bribery and other crimes, what would stop you from bringing criminal indictments against those in Congress who pose a threat?

Political prosecution is the nuclear weapon of election interference. In the hands of a corrupt politician, anything is possible. In the United States, the only barrier we have had to the use of this powerful weapon is tradition. But now, that tradition of restraint is gone.

Image: Donald Trump meme.

After over 200 years of abstaining from political prosecution in presidential elections, how did we suddenly come to normalize the practice? The answer is simple: Hatred for Trump. There is likely no other figure in American history (and certainly nobody else in living memory) who has been demonized to such an extent. When people are conditioned to believe someone is evil, a status well beyond bad, then ends-oriented justice becomes acceptable. It becomes acceptable to break with norms. If Hitler is among us, then we must do anything and everything to stop him.

The Democrat party dipped its toes in the water in New York City when, on April 4, 2023, Alvin Bragg announced a 34-court felony indictment against Trump for allegedly falsifying business records. The alleged crimes were a compilation of convoluted and rehashed federal campaign finance accusations related to payment for a non-disclosure agreement with Stormy Daniels. Most legal scholars seemed to agree that the claims lacked credibility, but credibility was not the point. The point was instead to erode the norm against blatant political prosecution at the highest level. Can we actually indict a former President of the United States? Sure—why not?

On June 8, with precedent now on its side, the federal government jumped into the water with its own indictment, this time for document crimes. Many challenged the case for obvious reasons: the president’s plenary power over document classification; the applicability of the Presidential Records Act; the fact that Trump is the first president to be charged for something all other presidents and lesser politicians have done; Biden’s huge unsecured stash of records from his time in Congress despite never obtaining authorization to remove the records; and Hillary Clinton’s pass for destroying records after having received a subpoena.

However, no one gave serious attention to the most important questions: Can the sitting president’s Department of Justice prosecute a former president who is a leading political rival, and if so, under what parameters? Without a greater focus on these foundational questions, political prosecutions are presumed to be legal and appropriate.

With the presumption of validity, more political prosecutions are inevitable. Thus, it was no surprise last week when the Department of Justice brought its anticipated “January 6” indictment. This indictment accuses the former President of crimes related to his challenge of Joe Biden’s 2020 election victory. In short, the indictment accuses Trump of challenging the election result despite allegedly knowing that his challenge was unfounded.

Apart from it being a political prosecution, this latest indictment is especially troubling because it shows the federal government’s increased willingness to prosecute Trump (and others) for thought crimes—for being disagreeable. For perspective, recall that the governmental apparatus sabotaged Trump’s presidency for four years straight.

Then, on the eve of an election that many believed was Trump’s for the taking, government agencies throughout the country significantly liberalized their voting procedures in the name of COVID, often suspending or violating their own laws.

Many states effectively removed important safeguards for voter integrity. Recall that Trump was the apparent winner at the closing of the polls but that Biden became the winner as counting continued behind closed doors into the night. Against this background, it is only natural to question the 2020 election results.    

The far more troubling aspect of this latest indictment is the free speech implication. If we can no longer speak out about problematic elections (whether founded or not), then we have effectively written the First Amendment out of the Constitution. If this accusation is permitted to stand, then we become a nation in which we are all mere subjects of the government.

With these indictments, we have finally “crossed the Rubicon.” It is notable that, when Julius Caesar cast the die and made that fateful decision to march his legion on Rome, it was because the Senate refused to forego prosecuting him for crimes Caesar purportedly committed during the Gallic Wars (i.e., exceeding Senate authorization). Arguably, this unrestrained political prosecution is what plunged Rome into civil war and ultimately ended the republic.

The critical question for Americans today is: What do we do about the problem of unrestrained political prosecution? How do we ensure political prosecution does not cause the fall of this republic? How is it that, despite having such a deep understanding of the Roman Republic, our founders did not include a check against this power in the Constitution? Why did they leave such an obviously destructive force to the whims of decorum? What exactly is the appropriate check against this abuse of power?

The obvious answer is that our Founders left it to us to figure out. So, to avoid what could be the greatest of all Constitutional crises, figure it out we must.  










The Governor of Massachusetts trying to defend the Democrat Party's agenda.

The Governor of Massachusetts is ill-informed....

Migrants are paid to infiltrate America and they arrive looking well fed with cell phones and some very expensive footwear.  They come not only from Mexico but from many South American countries, Europe, and Africa.  There are already Chinese preparing for their eventual takeover located within our borders. Most migrants are bused through Mexico and let off near the border to make it appear that they walked.


Caravan Arrives In Tijuana, As Migrants Prepare To Request Asylum

Central American asylum-seekers ride a bus to Tijuana on Wednesday, while passing through San Luis Rio Colorado along the U.S.-Mexico border. Hundreds of immigrants, the remnants of a caravan of Central Americans that began almost a month ago, set out on the last leg of their journey north in Mexico.




Why he must recuse himself...hell no he won't, he's a Democrat!

Tuesday, August 8, 2023

The Pledge of Allegiance at shareholders meetings...thats a good idea.

What I Wrote Then

25 years ago on the op-ed page

By Jeff Jacoby 

From "Patriotism and the Fortune 100," July 30, 1998:

[Ralph] Nader has been urging America's foremost corporations to make a voluntary show of support "to the country that bred them, built them, subsidized them, and defended them." How? By opening their annual shareholders' meetings with the Pledge of Allegiance.

Nader's suggestion is no doubt mischievous. I'm sure his motives have less to do with patriotism than with embarrassing the corporate directors and managers he has spent a lifetime battling.

But whatever his motives, on the merits his idea is unassailable. - Jeff Jacoby


Meanwhile  back at the ranch...

If it's unassailabe the Democrats will attack it simply  because it's  unassailable.

By the way; a bit of patriotism exhibited by corporate directors is long overdue and they shouldn't be embarrassed to do so.

No, I'm not trying to be mischievous. My motives are purely patriotic. -  Norm 

Monday, August 7, 2023

Hey Ron, do you remember we talked about this on your radio show over ten years ago and everybody thought we were nuts?

Well who's laughing now? 

I believe the following was recorded in 2009.

 



August 2023

Last 3 times I've talked to my incarcerated buddy, first thing he asks me is what's up with Tr¥mp? He says it looks like the government is after him and letting the other side get away with things. He's right. He says about 90% of the people in prison see what's happening and they support Donald Trump now. He says it's openly discussed among the population. He said that at first nobody would even mention T's name. Says now most think the current guy has made everything worse. You will never hear a word from the establishment media about this. Notice this: The people in charge of this current administration have basically abandoned the two party game at this point. They aren't interested in JUST keeping us divided and fighting each other. They are now moving forward to squash everything that's not them. If that wasn't true, they would still be playing the game instead of steamrolling the right at every chance. The "foolish" right is still trying to play the old game. (Or are they?) I think the fox is in both hen houses. This is clearly a takeover either way. Don't believe a word you hear from any establishment media at this point. We are not prepared for what's ahead y'all. But we CAN be. There are men and women out there who can organize and lead. I suggest you step forward and start getting that done for us. - Ron