• Quick note - the problem with Youtube videos not embedding on the forum appears to have been fixed, thanks to ZiprHead. If you do still see problems let me know.

Split Thread A second impeachment

A thought occurred to me about something better than impeachment.

Democrats should introduce a constitutional amendment shortening the lame duck period. Move inauguration day to December 15, or thereabouts, and the newly elected Congress up until the day before. It would have no practical effect on Trump, because it couldn't be passed in time, but it would be a serious, public, rebuke, and it's a good idea anyway.
 
It's a time to forgive and forget,

This needs both sides that are sane and want same thing. This is not case.

Cool to see so many idiots here thinking that not using deterrent/punishment for behavior that threatens democracy (well... what passes for democracy in murica) is great idea.
 
Why is it only the Dems who need to forgive and forget?
Where are the Republicans apologizing for claiming that Democrats just engaged in massive voter fraud?

Whether it is only democrats or not, apologizing for those claims is neither forgiving nor forgetting.

By not apologizing and ignoring them, they are indeed forgetting.
 
This needs both sides that are sane and want same thing. This is not case.

Cool to see so many idiots here thinking that not using deterrent/punishment for behavior that threatens democracy (well... what passes for democracy in murica) is great idea.

Do you have evidence that it would function as a deterrent?
 
Because the ultimate insult is to decline to lower yourself to their level.



See above.

It comes down to whether the Democrats would like to get some Republican voters to switch sides.
Impeaching Trump will do the exact opposite and harden those voters' opposition to what they perceive as a bunch of over-entitled elites.

The high ground is wide open and empty - why the hell wouldn't you occupy it? Impeachment right now is pathetic and acting as dumb as Trump.

It's the American Way.

Why would ensuring Trump’s crimes are illuminated stop someone moving from Republican to Democrat? I would have thought it would (to the non-die-hard lot) indicate that the Democrats are a party of law and order and don’t pay lip service to that phrase but take action. Something which is meant to have appeal to the traditional Republicans.
 
For the same reason it was up to Abraham Lincoln, instead of Jefferson Davis.



I wouldn't exactly say that it was time to forgive, and I sure as heck don't want to forget, but what I absolutely do not want is an opportunity for Trump to claim victory as his last act in office.

If the Democrats drop the impeachment crusade, Trump leaves office humiliated, blubbering, hiding away without even a Twitter account to turn to. If the Democrats pursue impeachment and lose, Trump leaves office a victim, who fought the deep state and an implacable foe right to the very end.

In an earlier post, I note that if you force people to go on record, they often go on record against you, because they are mad at being forced. The Democrats should understand that they aren't just forcing the Republican elected officials to go on record. They are forcing all citizens to "go on record" in every political discussion. The average person saw what happened on Wednesday and was disgusted, and the Democrats' hands were completely clean of it. Don't jump down into the gutter to wrestle with that pig.

If they drop it, that's a win for Trump and his faithful base- "you didn't even have enough of the courage of your conviction that he deserved impeachment to pursue it!" To them, he's a victim either way, just that not pursuing it makes him a victim of people who couldn't follow through. You have to take into account the mindless tenacity of that base- I remember thinking at the time that the "Access Hollywood" tape would surely be enough to finish him as a candidate, and we know how that turned out- if anything, it made him a stronger one with the proud deplorables. These people aren't going away because you let Trump off.

I have kind of gone back and forth on this in my mind, thinking that it might not be such a good idea from the "practical politics" standpoint, pretty much for the reasons you point out. But in the end- well, Kaylee used the word "duty" above; practical politics is fine up until the point that you need to make a decision on something that it doesn't cover, the actual principles that politics is supposed to cover somewhere, or it really is just all a game.

And then, of course, there's still even a practical reason for pursuing it- if you clear that 2/3 Senate majority bar for conviction (a big "if," I admit), then you have only a lesser simple majority bar to get over to prevent Trump from running again, and us having to do this all over again, in four years. Admitted that that won't stop a Trump wannabe from taking his place in the hearts and votes of the deplorables- but that's no reason to make it easier for them by never even requiring them to find one. It's too dangerous a game to play to assume that, with them behind him, Trump can't reach the prize again unless you act to put it out of his reach.

Short version- you can have principled politics in action through practical politics, and the only reason not to try for both is fearful politics.
 
Last edited:
Why would ensuring Trump’s crimes are illuminated stop someone moving from Republican to Democrat? I would have thought it would (to the non-die-hard lot) indicate that the Democrats are a party of law and order and don’t pay lip service to that phrase but take action. Something which is meant to have appeal to the traditional Republicans.
Your assumption that "law and order" slogan can be taken at face value is risky.

In fact, ruling party in my country, incidentally wannabe authoritarian rightwing one (sounds familiar?), has same slogan. And guess what, they are anything but.
 
How on earth is trying to make sure Trump is rightfully impeached for his actions, jumping into the gutter?

You are absolutely, 100%, correct, with one caveat. It isn't about being impeached. It's about being convicted.

Now, can you make sure that he is rightfully convicted?
 
Trump is a knife in the chest of democracy. Before the healing process that the Republicans have suddenly started hand-wringing about can even begin, the knife has to be removed without making the wound even worse.

Dave
 
Plus I suspect that he will lose his protection detail quite quickly when he will not take any of their advice or instructions. When he was President he could do what he wanted and the SS simply had to deal with it. Once he stops being president he will have to abide by the SS advice and instructions if he wants their protection, which we know he simply won’t be able to do.

You've got it backwards. The secret service remains at the will of the protectee, not the other way around. At best, they offer suggestions, not instructions. They still have to provide protection no matter what he wants to do. Otherwise, they would just keep in in a basic house arrest scenario. If he wants to go out, he goes out and they have to deal with it.
 
You've got it backwards. The secret service remains at the will of the protectee, not the other way around. At best, they offer suggestions, not instructions. They still have to provide protection no matter what he wants to do. Otherwise, they would just keep in in a basic house arrest scenario. If he wants to go out, he goes out and they have to deal with it.

When he was President they have to cope with whatever he decides to do, when he is not President if he won’t cooperate they can withdraw the protection on grounds of safety. (This came up a few weeks ago I went down the internet rabbit hole about this.)
 
I ask you, if his recent actions weren’t sufficient to justify impeachment, what the hell would?

If there were more than days left, you'd have a point.

As this stage of the presidency, it looks spiteful.

Let's face it - the 70 million people who voted Trump aren't all insane lunatics, and I think an olive branch to them would play a lot better than punishing a bloke who's already been cut off from his communication systems, repudiated by his party and VP, and is now a very small step from being Alex Jones II.

Take a look at Trump's approval rating. It will be under 30% once all the polls catch up with the attack on the Capitol. Some of the 10-15% support he's losing are there to be taken, and I don't believe impeachment will attract any of them.

What point is another impeachment other than a smug "Gotcha!"?

I’m just curious...

What motivated you to post that?

Nancy Pelosi is hated by Republicans more than any Democrat, and probably more than all the others added together.

Her net worth is $120M.

If you can't see how she is the perfect embodiment of privileged elite, I don't know who would be. We used to call people like her "champagne Socialists" (now prosecco, I believe) and they serve no purpose other than to be a target for Conservatives to point out the hypocrisy of the left.

I bet she spends a hell of a lot on shoes.

Why would ensuring Trump’s crimes are illuminated stop someone moving from Republican to Democrat?

History & human nature.

A huge swath of Trump votes were anti-establishment, anti-elite votes. Lots of the 70M who voted for Trump are actually decent people and would love to see a way out of the hole they've dug for themselves.

Honey v vinegar.

I would have thought it would (to the non-die-hard lot) indicate that the Democrats are a party of law and order and don’t pay lip service to that phrase but take action. Something which is meant to have appeal to the traditional Republicans.

The traditional republicans will never change and need not be targeted.

It's that 10-15% of all voters who voted Trump but aren't die-hard Republicans. The moderate christians, the educated people, hard-working Latino families - people who despise the left. If you manage to convince even 1% of the voters that the Democratic Party is worth voting for, you've probably guaranteed the next election.

It may not work, but what's been lost if it doesn't?

More importantly, what's been gained from impeachment?
 
They still have to provide protection no matter what he wants to do. Otherwise, they would just keep in in a basic house arrest scenario. If he wants to go out, he goes out and they have to deal with it.



Every cop I've ever known has told me that their organization has "punishment" details, those jobs that suck so much, they assign them to members who've screwed up, but not quite badly enough to be fired.

I suspect Trump, if not in jail, will become such an assignment for the Secret Service.
 
If there were more than days left, you'd have a point.

As this stage of the presidency, it looks spiteful.
Let's face it - the 70 million people who voted Trump aren't all insane lunatics, and I think an olive branch to them would play a lot better than punishing a bloke who's already been cut off from his communication systems, repudiated by his party and VP, and is now a very small step from being Alex Jones II.

Take a look at Trump's approval rating. It will be under 30% once all the polls catch up with the attack on the Capitol. Some of the 10-15% support he's losing are there to be taken, and I don't believe impeachment will attract any of them.

What point is another impeachment other than a smug "Gotcha!"?



Nancy Pelosi is hated by Republicans more than any Democrat, and probably more than all the others added together.

Her net worth is $120M.

If you can't see how she is the perfect embodiment of privileged elite, I don't know who would be. We used to call people like her "champagne Socialists" (now prosecco, I believe) and they serve no purpose other than to be a target for Conservatives to point out the hypocrisy of the left.

I bet she spends a hell of a lot on shoes.



History & human nature.

A huge swath of Trump votes were anti-establishment, anti-elite votes. Lots of the 70M who voted for Trump are actually decent people and would love to see a way out of the hole they've dug for themselves.

Honey v vinegar.



The traditional republicans will never change and need not be targeted.

It's that 10-15% of all voters who voted Trump but aren't die-hard Republicans. The moderate christians, the educated people, hard-working Latino families - people who despise the left. If you manage to convince even 1% of the voters that the Democratic Party is worth voting for, you've probably guaranteed the next election.

It may not work, but what's been lost if it doesn't?

More importantly, what's been gained from impeachment?

Dude, we can't let a sitting President incite to riot. A strong message that we will not let a President incite unAmerican rioting at any time absolutely needs to be sent.

It didn't matter if there is only a week left to turn the dogs loose. The dogs can tear mother ******* up during that week.

Try to imagine if this mob actually had some balls. We could have our Representatives lying dead on the floor. This was not a protest. This was very serious crime.

Why do you think it's okay to commit a rape on the way out the door? It's still a ******* rape.
 
Last edited:
The problem with the previous impeachment was that it was too "political."

Much of America, and a very, very much of whatever remains of Trump's base, holds the idea that all politics is dirty and Trump is paradoxically cleaner because he is so open and honest about his dirt.

So the previous impeachment with its tales of back-channel political skullduggery and political hit jobs probably struck much of the public as nothing more than the Left whining about bog standardrr RealPolitik that happens every day in Washington and they were just whining because they lost. Remember how much "Trump's not uniquely bad" we heard from the Trumpers back in the heyday of that? Remember it being dismissed as "Mere process crime."

But standing there on National TV and ordering a violent mob to storm the Capitol, telling them that you have their back, and then THAT ACTUALLY HAPPENING? That's real. That's visceral. That's the kind of thing that if we said was going to happen a month ago we would have had "Dramatic hyperbole strawman!" yelled at us until the heat death of the universe.

That's most certainly not something "LOL that's just politics all sides are dirty he's just playing the game LOL"
 
Last edited:
Another thing: the people talking about allowing the healing process to start are assuming that the harming process has finished. We've had no concession from Trump, no backing down, nothing but a tweet saying that he's now committed to an orderly transition. What, in our experience of the man, leads anyone to believe a damned word of that? Every time he seems to have reached a low point, he somehow finds a way to get worse. What's he going to be doing during the inauguration, and what will he be encouraging his supporters to do? He is dangerous. He needs to be stopped. When a serial killer goes a couple of days without killing, law enforcement doesn't say "We must let the healing process take place now" in the expectation that he must be a reformed character. Trump has no conscience and no shame. Every time he gets away with something, he does something worse. For a brief moment he thought he'd finally get into trouble, but he's seeing now that maybe still nobody will stand up to him. If he isn't impeached, what will he try in the next few days?

Dave
 
If there were more than days left, you'd have a point.

As this stage of the presidency, it looks spiteful.

Let's face it - the 70 million people who voted Trump aren't all insane lunatics, and I think an olive branch to them would play a lot better than punishing a bloke who's already been cut off from his communication systems, repudiated by his party and VP, and is now a very small step from being Alex Jones II.

It's not spiteful.

Trump could resign; Pence could get the Cabinet to invoke the 25th Amendment.

Either of those acts would be drawing a line, and making it clear that inciting an insurrection would be unacceptable.

If those don't happen; then impeachment has to happen.

Remember what Clinton was impeached for? Do you think this is less worthy?
 
Another thing: the people talking about allowing the healing process to start are assuming that the harming process has finished. We've had no concession from Trump, no backing down, nothing but a tweet saying that he's now committed to an orderly transition. What, in our experience of the man, leads anyone to believe a damned word of that? Every time he seems to have reached a low point, he somehow finds a way to get worse. What's he going to be doing during the inauguration, and what will he be encouraging his supporters to do? He is dangerous. He needs to be stopped. When a serial killer goes a couple of days without killing, law enforcement doesn't say "We must let the healing process take place now" in the expectation that he must be a reformed character. Trump has no conscience and no shame. Every time he gets away with something, he does something worse. For a brief moment he thought he'd finally get into trouble, but he's seeing now that maybe still nobody will stand up to him. If he isn't impeached, what will he try in the next few days?

Dave

Exactly.

Impeach him - the senate won't even take it up until right around the inauguration. In the meantime, the crazies are planning crap for the week of the inauguration. Let the senate put him on trial after he's out of office. Whether they convict or not (2/3 of senate would have to vote to convict), it only takes a majority to prevent him from holding federal office.
 
Reports are there are 67 votes to convict.

Take this with a big grain of salt considering the source is George Conway.

He says that we now have the 67 votes necessary to convict Trump on the article of impeachment.
 

Back
Top Bottom