Many of Trump’s proposals for his second term are surprisingly extreme, draconian, and weird, even for him. Here’s a running list of his most unhinged plans.

  • livus
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    407 months ago

    Ok that escalated. Starts with usual giving himself powers stuff but ends up with Federal “freedom cities” and flying cars.

    • @agent_flounder@lemmy.world
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      407 months ago

      Freedom to do what, murder LGBTQ+, lefties, people of color, and so forth? Because that’s what I have to assume he means by “Freedom.”

      • AggressivelyPassive
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        177 months ago

        Given the libertarian influences, I’d assume they’re supposed to be hyper-privatized free trade zones or special economic zones. That means low or no taxes, hardly any regulations, unhinged capitalism for everything.

        It’s the same bullshit libertarians have been praising for decades now and that’s been tried and failed again and again. Remember that crypto cruise ship?

      • livus
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        67 months ago

        Probably freedom to just sit there empty. He wants to build them from scratch.

      • Freedom to have every facet of your existence regulated to a homogenized set of conservative social values while also being totally free of any corporate oversight at all.

        Not sure who wants to actually live there. Conservatives like two places: cities that exist because educated, largely liberal, people create jobs she money, or the country where they can leach off the cities to fund their infrastructure without any of the social costs that come with it.

    • FuglyDuck
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      167 months ago

      Freedom cities sound like freedom fries.

      I remember back after 9/11 and France called us on the bullshit… the state legislature voted to call them freedom fries in the capital cafeteria. (I was in highschool and lobbying for some environmental stuff. My former math teacher was our rep, so, we went to lunch and talked about things.)

      In any case, those fries were not free, and they weren’t fried. (Orida frozen… stuffed in a microwave…)

      Also? As a side note, the reason flying cars are not a thing is because nobody has found a way to make free energy yet- anything that flies has to expend energy to counter gravity- on airplanes, the wings push air down and it moves forward. In things that hover it’s either the rotors/fans/jet engines pushing air.

      That expenditure just doesn’t exist on normal ground vehicles.

      • livus
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        7 months ago

        @FuglyDuck that’s so funny, I was literally telling people the freedom fries thing was real earlier today! Someone younger than us had thought it was just a myth or satire.

        (Over here - sorry not sure how to link it via your instance but you get the picture).

        • FuglyDuck
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          67 months ago

          Yeah. I remember being incredulous when I saw the menu, me and the other highschool kid. The Rep explained that they actually passed a bill for that to be renamed; in this tone of voice dripping with sarcasm. I’m not sure if it happened federally or in other states, but it happened here- it only applied to the state capital cafeterias, though.

          • livus
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            57 months ago

            Wikipedia seems to think it happened in many places. I don’t think people realize how bizarre some of that stuff was.

            • FuglyDuck
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              107 months ago

              Yeah.

              It was bizarre. The US lost it’s damn mind and went full on crazy. I remember asking what Iraq did and getting called a traitor. (They were mostly Saudis? And Saudis funded?)

              I also remember bejng asked why I wasn’t joining up… like, dude, let me graduate highschool first…

              • @nilloc@discuss.tchncs.de
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                7 months ago

                Knowing now that Bin-Laden had been in Pakistan and we kinda knew almost where for a long time really makes the Iraq invasion so much worse.

                I went and protested it in Copley Square the night before we invaded Iraq. I’m glad I did it, but it seemed to do fuck all. Possibly lead to Barack Obama’s presidency, which I’m happy about, but that in turn may have lead Trump’s as well.

                I can’t help wonder how different the world would have been with Gore as president. Even social media may have been regulated differently with a moderately (or even slightly) tech savvy administration, though that’s probably a stretch.

                Edit: Wft autocorrect; Batak Obamass? Really?

                • spaceghotiOP
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                  27 months ago

                  I can’t help wonder how different the world would have been with Gore as president. Even social media may have been regulated differently with a moderately (or even slightly) tech savvy administration, though that’s probably a stretch.

                  It’s not a stretch. The antitrust lawsuits brought by nine states and the Justice Department against Microsoft was made to simply go away under the Bush administration. Our technology would probably look very different today without Microsoft’s monopoly, and without that who knows what the rest of the map would look like?

                • FuglyDuck
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                  27 months ago

                  I can’t help wonder how different the world would have been with Gore as president. Even social media may have been regulated differently with a moderately (or even slightly) tech savvy administration, though that’s probably a stretch.

                  I can’t even imagine. I think 9/11 would have still happened… I don’t think they’d have caught it; and I don’t think we’d have just… not responded.

                • livus
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                  17 months ago

                  @nilloc I went and protested too, there was a big march in New Zealand and we stayed out of the “coalition of the willing” who invaded. We were lucky we had a very strong centre-left leader at the time.

                  The Gore alternate timeline is interesting. Would we have had less pollution by now?

              • livus
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                17 months ago

                Yikes. The pressure must have been really intense. I’m in NZ and I lost a bunch of US internet friends (some I’d met irl) for not being enthusiastic about attacking Afghanistan.

                • FuglyDuck
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                  47 months ago

                  In the immediate family, it wasn’t too terrible. It was a certain uncle, that I never speak to any more thinking I should be signing up. (he’s as deep into MAGA world as anyone, the only reason he wasn’t at Jan 6 was he’s too broke to go.)

                  Most everyone else kind of would just… not talk about it? By the time i did graduate, all the fervor wore off into a kind of … refusal to accept we’d been lied to? I dunno weird times.

                  I will say this. It definitely colors my understanding of what’s going on with Palestine. Seems to be that history is rhyming again.

            • Tacomama
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              47 months ago

              Wikipedia is correct. I was 34 on 9/11. There was so much of this crazy bs. The freedom fries thing was rampant. I lived a few blocks from a mosque, and sadly there were several threats, picketers and vandalism for several years.

        • @braxy29@lemmy.world
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          57 months ago

          just checked with one of my teenagers, confirmed they didn’t know freedom fries. which makes sense of course, but i took it for granted they must have heard - it was such a bizarre thing to me at the time!

          • livus
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            37 months ago

            In NZ we have these things called Afghans (an iced biscuit/cookie with cocoa and coconut) and we would joke that if the US had them they’d have to rename them.

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    7 months ago

    he only managed to expel several hundred thousand people per year, which is similar to the number of deportations during other recent administrations

    Sadly, the Democrats have proven themselves to be just as fascistic when it comes to immigration. I got talked into voting Biden, but I’d be lying if I said that I don’t question that decision every day.

    One of the first things Biden did was to build more concentration camps, and one of the first things his supporters did was make excuses for that.

    Edit: Oh yikes, the fascism defenders and concentration camp explainers have appeared in droves in my inbox 😬

    Scroll down for exhibit A…

    • @MrVilliam@lemmy.world
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      947 months ago

      It’s fair to criticize Biden for not being better than he is but it’s fucking braindead, bordering on parody to suggest that Biden isn’t better than Trump. Only complete morons or people that aren’t paying attention would suggest such a thing, so I’ll just give you the benefit of the doubt and assume that you aren’t aware of what Biden has gotten done in his first two years.

      I can’t stand that he’s old, he fucked over rail workers, he’s still supporting Israel in their genocidal quest, and he has increased funding for police, but it’s hyperbolic af to say he’s just as fascist as trump, the poster child of American fascism. Dude literally attempted to overthrow democracy to stay in power. “The boss is not going to leave under any circumstances. We are just going to stay in power.”

      • @BassTurd@lemmy.world
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        357 months ago

        The Biden administration ended up getting the rail workers the sick days they were fighting for. Maybe it would have happened sooner had a strike taken place, but to say so would be pure speculation. While seemingly heavy handed, his actions prevented a huge logistical nightmare and I’m the end got three results being asked for. I agree with pretty the rest of what you said, but saying he fucked over rail workers is a bit disingenuous.

        • @goldenlocks@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          That’s a lie. They only got a small fraction of the sick time they demanded, and that’s only for some workers not all. Now you use those exploited workers as a political tool.

      • LinkOpensChest.wav
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        7 months ago

        I’m referring solely to immigration, which is the topic at hand. No one has claimed he is as bad as Trump overall, and I’m not sure how these links are supposed to make me feel better about how he’s actively persecuted immigrants and refugees. I mean, let’s be honest…

        Edit: “he’s old” is literally age discrimination. Of all the criticisms of Biden, “he’s old” is not relevant in the least.

        • @bostonbananarama@lemmy.world
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          137 months ago

          “he’s old” is literally age discrimination.

          I mean, it literally isn’t. Voters can choose any criteria to choose their political candidate.

          Of all the criticisms of Biden, “he’s old” is not relevant in the least.

          How is age not relevant? The risk of dementia quintuples from 70s to 80s. The elderly are more susceptible to almost every disease. Not to mention that the presidency is one of the most stressful jobs, just look at the before and after photographs of presidents.

          As in other studies, the ADAMS analysis showed that the prevalence of dementia increases significantly with age. Five percent of people ages 71 to 79, 24.2 percent of people 80 to 89, and 37.4 percent of those 90 years or older were estimated to have some type of dementia. The estimated rate of Alzheimer’s also rose greatly with older age — from 2.3 percent of people ages 71 to 79 to 18.1 percent of people 80 to 89 to 29.7 percent of those age 90 and older.

          • @beebarfbadger@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            I mean, it literally isn’t. Voters can choose any criteria to choose their political candidate.

            I don’t want to pass any sort of judgement on whether it is or isn’t age discrimination, but your way of arriving at this conclusion is flawed. It’s like saying voters can choose all sorts of criteria to select their favourite, so going by the criterion of race can’t be racism. Those possible criteria can have different names and descriptors, independent of whether they are possible or not.

            How is age not relevant?

            His age does indeed put him into a risk group for possible dementia, true, but the criterion disqualifying him would be if he specifically does have dementia or not - not his age. Young people can develop dementia with a certain probability too, that does not exclude young people, it only excludes young people who actually do develop dementia.

            • @bostonbananarama@lemmy.world
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              17 months ago

              Possibly one of the most needlessly pedantic comments I’ve ever received.

              Age discrimination is typically, almost entirely, discussed as a legal issue, most often within the arena of employment. The reason being that most people realize and accept that age affects abilities. So taking into account the age of a candidate wouldn’t be age discrimination in the typical sense.

              His age does indeed put him into a risk group for possible dementia, true, but the criterion disqualifying him would be if he specifically does have dementia or not - not his age.

              And he’s going to take a cognitive test at my request and share the results? And those results will guarantee that he won’t develop dementia for the next five years? If the answer to either is no, then I need to make a decision based on probability. He’s far more likely to develop dementia than someone in their 70s, and I would guess hundreds to thousands of times more likely than someone in their 40s.

              Not to mention that life expectancy would hold that he’d be dead by now. He’s fairly likely to die in office, especially when considering the stress of the job.

              • @beebarfbadger@lemmy.world
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                17 months ago

                Possibly one of the most needlessly pedantic comments I’ve ever received.

                Why, thank you, but be aware that flattery will get you nowhere.

                Age discrimination is typically, almost entirely, discussed as a legal issue, most often within the arena of employment.

                Alrighty, then let’s look at your comment from the perspective of legality. Age discrimination involves treating an applicant or employee less favorably because of his or her age. That’s the definition. Now if we were to continue here and expand our scope, we could state that this is illegal in working environments because - short version - there are laws making it so in the workplace, but that does not touch what is or isn’t age discrimination. Since there are no laws declaring it illegal in an electoral context, age discrimination happening while voting is not illegal there, but it still very much is age discrimination. Just like in our previous example, not voting for a candidate because one doesn’t like their race is still racism, but like above, it is not illegal because no law says it is.

                True enough, not much difference in your conclusion because it is not a case of illegal age discrimination, but

                I mean, it literally isn’t.

                it literally is.

                • @bostonbananarama@lemmy.world
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                  17 months ago

                  By that definition, every choice is discrimination because any criteria you set necessarily excludes so other group.

                  You keep pivoting to race as your analogy, but it doesn’t fit. Look at the scrutiny courts give to race versus sex or age. Laws based on race receive strict scrutiny, gender gets intermediate scrutiny, and age is judged with a rational basis scrutiny.

                  So, yes, while discrimination can mean that, it certainly has a connotation that makes it a poor word choice. It is misleading as to what’s happening. Using age as a selection criteria is based on rational facts, selection based on race is based on hate. Poor analogy.

    • @Fades@lemmy.world
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      427 months ago

      just as fascistic when it comes to immigration

      Lmao no. Did Obama or Biden put immigrants in cages, separating children from parents? Did the dems implement literal death traps in an attempt to kill more would be immigrants? I could go on and on.

      They are nowhere near the same level. Take your reductive bullshit somewhere else

      • @troglodytis@lemmy.world
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        37 months ago

        To your first question, yes. Obama did and there were protests and court rulings against it. A court order in 2015 limited child detention to 20 days and lead the Obama administration to change its ways. The Trump administration worked to undo that court order.

        And, yes, cages and camps still operate today, within that 20 day limitation.

        The Obama administration deported more people in its first term than the Trump administration did.

        When it comes to deportations the Trump administration, as with so many things, talked big, but was unable to effectively enact its stated goals.

          • @BassTurd@lemmy.world
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            117 months ago

            Mathematically, if Trump is the Republican nominee, and this person doesn’t vote for Biden, their vote only benefits Trump, so it’s basically the same thing.

          • LinkOpensChest.wav
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            37 months ago

            In fact, I actually said that I voted for Biden

            I’d rather die than support someone like Trump

        • Uranium3006
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          57 months ago

          right wing democrats have to resort to lies, like that not voting for trump is voting for trump (?) and then blame us when they lose

          • LinkOpensChest.wav
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            47 months ago

            Yeah, I get that a lot. And here’s the most hilarious part: Even if you admit that you voted for Biden, they will still somehow make that a “vote for Trump” if you’re not sucking sufficient cock. It’s weird as hell.

            • Uranium3006
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              27 months ago

              also they act like it’s your fault that people who are way less into politics than you or me might not feel like going all the way to the polls and wait 4 hours for a shitty cannidate they don’t even like. those are the voters hillary clinton lost that lost her the election, and what biden’s really risking losing next year

      • DessertStorms
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        7 months ago

        Yea buddy… That vote for one of two clowns who both support (and have been allowed to rise to the top by) the system that oppresses the rest of society will certainly make things better compared to realising the system is and always has been rigged and that your choice within it is nothing more than an illusion keeping you distracted while they continue to exploit you… 🙄🙄

    • @BmeBenji@lemm.ee
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      7 months ago

      I’m in no way here to defend Biden, but I literally have heard nothing about concentration camps related to Biden. To what are you referring?

      • LinkOpensChest.wav
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        57 months ago

        I half expected them to arrive, but part of me was hoping there wouldn’t be so many here on Lemmy. At least they’re showing their ass, and anyone should be able to see right through their excuses and lies.

  • @voracitude@lemmy.world
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    7 months ago

    Trump is already disqualified from holding any office, let alone that of the President, under section 3 of the Fourteenth Amendment.

    https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=4591133

    Page 17:

    V. The persons who framed Section Three of the Fourteenth Amendment regarded the President of the United States as an officer of the United States

    The President of the United States was among the officials who took the oath to the Constitution that under Section Three triggered disqualification for participating in an insurrection. As noted in the previous section, the persons responsible for the Fourteenth Amendment sought to bar from present and future office all persons who betrayed their constitutional oath. “All of us understanding the meaning of the third section,” Senator John Sherman of Ohio stated, “those men who have once taken an oath of office to support the Constitution of the United States and have Fourteenth Amendment distinguished between the presidential oath mandated by Article II and violated that oath in spirit by taking up arms against the Government of the United States are to be deprived for a time at least of holding office.” No member of the Congress that drafted the the oath of office for other federal and state officers mandated by Article VI. Both were oaths to support the Constitution. Senator Garrett Davis of Kentucky saw no legal difference between the constitutional requirement that “all officers, both Federal and State, should take an oath to support” the Constitution and the constitutional requirement that the president “take an oath, to the best of his ability to preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution.” Senator James Doolittle of Wisconsin declared that Congress need not pass laws requiring presidents to swear to support the Constitution because that “oath is specified in the constitution.”

    In fact, the exact question of whether the disqualification from public office covered the Presidency came up at the time the Fourteenth Amendment was being drafted: https://crsreports.congress.gov/product/pdf/lsb/lsb10569

    Specifically:

    One scholar notes that the drafting history of Section 3 of the Fourteenth Amendment suggests that the office of the President is covered:

    During the debate on Section Three, one Senator asked why ex-Confederates “may be elected President or Vice President of the United States, and why did you all omit to exclude them? I do not understand them to be excluded from the privilege of holding the two highest offices in the gift of the nation.” Another Senator replied that the lack of specific language on the Presidency and Vice- Presidency was irrelevant: “Let me call the Senator’s attention to the words ‘or hold any office, civil or military, under the United States.’”

    I’ll highlight that last bit again:

    Another Senator replied that the lack of specific language on the Presidency and Vice- Presidency was irrelevant: “Let me call the Senator’s attention to the words ‘or hold any office, civil or military, under the United States.’”

    That is from this paper: https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3748639

    Some people seem to have a lot of trouble with figuring out what “or” means, in a list of things.

    • @BigMacHole@lemm.ee
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      97 months ago

      That doesn’t EXPLICITLY say they can’t be President. - a Judge in Colorado who probably would also rule the framers PROBABLY meant AR15s in the Second Amendment despite it not being explicitly said.

      • @voracitude@lemmy.world
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        7 months ago

        Yes, actually, that’s exactly what it means. He broke his oath of office. He is not fit to hold any public office including that of the President, and he is barred from holding office by the Constitution of the United States. Period dot, and of story.

          • @voracitude@lemmy.world
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            57 months ago

            Incorrect. The judge in Colorado ruled he broke his oath of office and engaged in an insurrection, which is what makes the ruling so coo-coo bananapants.

        • @dvoraqs@lemmy.world
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          27 months ago

          There are people in powerful positions who may try to interpret this as favorably to Trump as possible to let him off the hook for it, holding as much integrity for themselves as they can while still achieving the goal. Are you sure it will hold up? I’m not, unfortunately.

          • spaceghotiOP
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            37 months ago

            Not with the conservative shills on this Supreme Court, no. Not when it really counts. This is the product of several generations of conservative activism to stack the courts with partisan judges for conservative causes.

      • @EatATaco@lemm.ee
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        27 months ago

        I can’t really find fault with the ruling. The amendment specifically calls out very important positions like senators and representatives, and even electors for POTUS…but they just plumb forgot the even more important position of POTUS? It’s really hard to believe.

        I don’t know why they would exclude the POTUS, and few want trump off the ballot more than me, but the argument that the POTUS is not included is very reasonable.

          • @EatATaco@lemm.ee
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            7 months ago

            So why do you think they left POTUS out of the list when they listed out other important positions? Why not just say “any office” is that’s all inclusive?

            • @voracitude@lemmy.world
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              17 months ago

              Read the excerpt, then go read the rest of the paper at the link. The context of why is in the other sections, before and after 5 which I quoted above.

              • @EatATaco@lemm.ee
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                17 months ago

                I read the excerpt, and it makes no mention of why they explicitly call out senators but not the post, and vaguely referencing a 55 page paper just leads me to believe you have no explanation.

                If this is not the case, could you put the argument in your own words?

                • @voracitude@lemmy.world
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                  7 months ago

                  Oh, by all means. You see the President has to take an oath of office to defend the Constitution, and the Framers thought that nobody in their right minds could be stupid enough to think that the Fourteenth Amendment didn’t apply to the Office of the President, or the person holding that Office, because the Fourteenth Amendment applies to whether people who break their Oaths of Public Office get to hold Public Office. To wit, they do not. Not unless a quorum of the sitting government says they can with a vote to that effect, anyway.

                  As such, it was obvious to the Framers that this would also bar someone from the Presidency. As it says in the context I asked you to read.

      • @voracitude@lemmy.world
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        67 months ago

        It’s fine if you feel that way personally, but it doesn’t matter; that’s not part of the requirements for triggering Section 3 of the 14th Amendment. Read the text.

          • @voracitude@lemmy.world
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            7 months ago

            I agree that “we all know he did it” is a terrible reason to take procedural action of any kind, but again: your personal feelings don’t change the fact that the text doesn’t lay out any way to actually execute Section 3, it only states the requirements for triggering it. Go ahead and quote those requirements, verbatim and in full. I’ll wait; you will find they don’t say anything about being convicted of anything.

            I’m not saying that it wouldn’t set a dangerous precedent, only that the reasons given for throwing out these cases are so flawed they’re not even specious, they’re just plain wrong.

              • @voracitude@lemmy.world
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                7 months ago

                Maybe I’m not articulating MY point well enough. If someone breaks their oath of office (and by the way that has indeed now been found to be a fact in a Court of Law), they cannot be trusted to keep their oath of office. This is not my opinion, this is written into the Constitution of our country.

                The ruling in Court is necessary, of course, for the reasons you have given. But Section 3 of the Fourteenth Amendment does not require it. The text of the Amendment says nothing about convictions. That is what I am saying. If you think it does, show me the text. If you can’t quote me the text that says a conviction is required, then you still haven’t understood my point.

                Edit: bolded the part where I acknowledge what you are saying is correct, because that is important text you should pay attention to.