@rbreich
They are the ones who bray about enforcing laws, but complain when it’s one of their own ignorant terrorists who face the consequences.
They believe the laws are for ‘them,’ but not for themselves.
Americans have way too much respect for the office of President.
Let the person inhabiting the office *earn* your respect.
( Free advice from Australia where a bit of healthy contempt for politicians is the norm.)
Yes, that too
@rbreich #TeamTRE45ON #PutinPuppets will argue that up = down, wrong = right, traitors = patriots, the constitution = unconstitutional, etc… but in the good ol‘ US of A, NO ONE is above the law! #LawAndOrder ✊🇺🇸⚖️
@Harald_Korneliussen True, but that’s not a reason not to prosecute Trump, or any politician credibly believed to have committed a crime.
If we fail to do so, we are just as dysfunctional a democracy as those who falsely prosecute political enemies.
If we don’t hold leaders to account, the illegal behavior will escalate. And anyone who thinks we can’t because it opens the door to future false prosecutions isn’t paying attention; sooner or later, the GOP will find an excuse either way.
@rbreich And, like, Ford pardoning Nixon is generally recognized as a massive mistake.
"We should do this again because we did it before and it turned out terribly" is just bad thinking.
Let's not repeat the mistakes of the past.
@rbreich Trump committed crimes and tore at the fabric of democracy, all to service his goofy ego and protect himself from accountability. He must be indicted or the rule of law is a cruel joke on the American People.
This is not hyperbole.
It's only unprecedented until it isn't. If the 🍊 gets away with his crimes, they will happen again. And again. And again.