Anonymous wrote:Robert’s already said “insurrection is in the eye of the beholder”. Deranged Jack Smith is gonna get smoked.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What happened to all the Twitter lawyers assuring us the colorado court's case is bulletproof, echoing Tribe, Luttig, etc.?
I think the question you should be asking is, why is the court immune to the plain language and intent of the 14th Amendment?
Anonymous wrote:This was a no-brainer. But he won't get immmunity.
Anonymous wrote:What happened to all the Twitter lawyers assuring us the colorado court's case is bulletproof, echoing Tribe, Luttig, etc.?
Anonymous wrote:What happened to all the Twitter lawyers assuring us the colorado court's case is bulletproof, echoing Tribe, Luttig, etc.?
Anonymous wrote:CO took the biggest L in court history.
State should be called LOLARADO now because they lost so bad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
He has been charged, but more relevant to this case, he was found to have engaged in an insurrection after a weeks-long civil court proceeding. Trump’s brief asked SCOTUS to throw that out and they did not.
When’s the trial?
It was last year. You missed it.
LOL, you and I both know it never happened because he has never been charged. Some finding from a lower level judge in a case eventually lost 9-0 is not a criminal conviction and you know it.
The 14th amendment does not require a criminal conviction, and a civil court proceeding determined that he engaged in insurrection, which is the standard set forth in the amendment. It was upheld by two levels of Colorado courts and the Supreme Court did not disagree although Trump asked them to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
He has been charged, but more relevant to this case, he was found to have engaged in an insurrection after a weeks-long civil court proceeding. Trump’s brief asked SCOTUS to throw that out and they did not.
When’s the trial?
It was last year. You missed it.
LOL, you and I both know it never happened because he has never been charged. Some finding from a lower level judge in a case eventually lost 9-0 is not a criminal conviction and you know it.
Did you read the opinion? The majority said that even if Trump was convicted of insurrection it still wouldn’t count. The y said congress has to pass a new statute that specifically outlines the procedures for determining if someone is disqualified and the existing insurrection statute isnt that.
None of that means that SCOTUS considers Trump to have been convicted.
But it does mean the dumb argument that “he wasn’t convicted” is totally irrelevant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
He has been charged, but more relevant to this case, he was found to have engaged in an insurrection after a weeks-long civil court proceeding. Trump’s brief asked SCOTUS to throw that out and they did not.
When’s the trial?
It was last year. You missed it.
LOL, you and I both know it never happened because he has never been charged. Some finding from a lower level judge in a case eventually lost 9-0 is not a criminal conviction and you know it.
Did you read the opinion? The majority said that even if Trump was convicted of insurrection it still wouldn’t count. The y said congress has to pass a new statute that specifically outlines the procedures for determining if someone is disqualified and the existing insurrection statute isnt that.
None of that means that SCOTUS considers Trump to have been convicted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
He has been charged, but more relevant to this case, he was found to have engaged in an insurrection after a weeks-long civil court proceeding. Trump’s brief asked SCOTUS to throw that out and they did not.
When’s the trial?
It was last year. You missed it.
LOL, you and I both know it never happened because he has never been charged. Some finding from a lower level judge in a case eventually lost 9-0 is not a criminal conviction and you know it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
He has been charged, but more relevant to this case, he was found to have engaged in an insurrection after a weeks-long civil court proceeding. Trump’s brief asked SCOTUS to throw that out and they did not.
When’s the trial?
It was last year. You missed it.
LOL, you and I both know it never happened because he has never been charged. Some finding from a lower level judge in a case eventually lost 9-0 is not a criminal conviction and you know it.
Did you read the opinion? The majority said that even if Trump was convicted of insurrection it still wouldn’t count. The y said congress has to pass a new statute that specifically outlines the procedures for determining if someone is disqualified and the existing insurrection statute isnt that.
None of that means that SCOTUS considers Trump to have been convicted.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
He has been charged, but more relevant to this case, he was found to have engaged in an insurrection after a weeks-long civil court proceeding. Trump’s brief asked SCOTUS to throw that out and they did not.
When’s the trial?
It was last year. You missed it.
LOL, you and I both know it never happened because he has never been charged. Some finding from a lower level judge in a case eventually lost 9-0 is not a criminal conviction and you know it.
Did you read the opinion? The majority said that even if Trump was convicted of insurrection it still wouldn’t count. The y said congress has to pass a new statute that specifically outlines the procedures for determining if someone is disqualified and the existing insurrection statute isnt that.