Anonymous
Post 08/15/2023 15:28     Subject: GA Case

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:And it's state court. No corrupt SCOTUS to bail his orange a$$ out.


What? A president cannot pardon state charges. People appeal state charges all the way to the Supreme Court pretty frequently. That’s one of the reasons they exist. However I hope The Rapist dies in prison.


I am assuming he will die before he could be convicted of anything and this will all be for nothing.


Can you elaborate on your basis for saying this?
Anonymous
Post 08/15/2023 15:27     Subject: GA Case

Anonymous wrote:Harvard Law Professor Alan Dershowitz on Trump’s Georgia indictments:

“First of all, nobody should take seriously that there was grand jury indictment. The fact that it was agrand jury indictment, it means nothing. It's the prosecutor who indicted. The best evidence of that is that it was on his website before the grand jury even voted. Now, the whole strategy of all these four casesis to get a conviction before the election, even if they're going to lose on appeal. I used to teach my students, many of them future prosecutors, if you bring a Rico case, that increases your chances of winning a trial and losing on appeal. The same thing is true with conspiracy and other cases involving mental states. And so all four of these cases are designed to get quick convictions in jurisdictions that are heavily loaded against Donald Trump.

And these prosecutors don't care as much as prosecutors generally do about having the convictions reversed on appeal, because that will happen after the election, which only goes to prove what I've been arguing now for months. If you're going after the man who's runningagainst your incumbent president, you had darn well better have the strongest case possible. And these are among the four, at least three of them, three weakest cases I’ve ever seen against any candidate. We don't know about the fourth, but it seems like it's very much like the DC case.

And if you're going after the man running for president against your person, you have to have the strongest case. Otherwise, it becomes a banana republic. Anybody can prosecute anybody.And we're opening the door to prosecutionof Democrats by Republicans, Republicans by Democrats. It's what Alexander Hamilton wrote in The Federalist isthe most dangerous threat to democracy, and we're seeingit unfold in front of our eyes.Very, very tragically.

I'm not a Republican, I'm not a Trump supporter, but I care deeply about the Constitution.I care deeply about preserving the rule of law. And we're seeing it being fritter away for partisan political purposes.


Partisan political purposes?!? Oh no!!! Like staging a coup? Those kind of partisan political purposes?!? That's terrible!
Anonymous
Post 08/15/2023 15:27     Subject: GA Case

Anonymous wrote:Harvard Law Professor Alan Dershowitz on Trump’s Georgia indictments:

“First of all, nobody should take seriously that there was grand jury indictment. The fact that it was agrand jury indictment, it means nothing. It's the prosecutor who indicted. The best evidence of that is that it was on his website before the grand jury even voted. Now, the whole strategy of all these four casesis to get a conviction before the election, even if they're going to lose on appeal. I used to teach my students, many of them future prosecutors, if you bring a Rico case, that increases your chances of winning a trial and losing on appeal. The same thing is true with conspiracy and other cases involving mental states. And so all four of these cases are designed to get quick convictions in jurisdictions that are heavily loaded against Donald Trump.

And these prosecutors don't care as much as prosecutors generally do about having the convictions reversed on appeal, because that will happen after the election, which only goes to prove what I've been arguing now for months. If you're going after the man who's runningagainst your incumbent president, you had darn well better have the strongest case possible. And these are among the four, at least three of them, three weakest cases I’ve ever seen against any candidate. We don't know about the fourth, but it seems like it's very much like the DC case.

And if you're going after the man running for president against your person, you have to have the strongest case. Otherwise, it becomes a banana republic. Anybody can prosecute anybody.And we're opening the door to prosecutionof Democrats by Republicans, Republicans by Democrats. It's what Alexander Hamilton wrote in The Federalist isthe most dangerous threat to democracy, and we're seeingit unfold in front of our eyes.Very, very tragically.

I'm not a Republican, I'm not a Trump supporter, but I care deeply about the Constitution.I care deeply about preserving the rule of law. And we're seeing it being fritter away for partisan political purposes.


I always see this guy quoted, but is he taken seriously by anyone?
Anonymous
Post 08/15/2023 15:26     Subject: GA Case

Anonymous wrote:Harvard Law Professor Alan Dershowitz on Trump’s Georgia indictments:

“First of all, nobody should take seriously that there was grand jury indictment. The fact that it was agrand jury indictment, it means nothing. It's the prosecutor who indicted. The best evidence of that is that it was on his website before the grand jury even voted. Now, the whole strategy of all these four casesis to get a conviction before the election, even if they're going to lose on appeal. I used to teach my students, many of them future prosecutors, if you bring a Rico case, that increases your chances of winning a trial and losing on appeal. The same thing is true with conspiracy and other cases involving mental states. And so all four of these cases are designed to get quick convictions in jurisdictions that are heavily loaded against Donald Trump.

And these prosecutors don't care as much as prosecutors generally do about having the convictions reversed on appeal, because that will happen after the election, which only goes to prove what I've been arguing now for months. If you're going after the man who's runningagainst your incumbent president, you had darn well better have the strongest case possible. And these are among the four, at least three of them, three weakest cases I’ve ever seen against any candidate. We don't know about the fourth, but it seems like it's very much like the DC case.

And if you're going after the man running for president against your person, you have to have the strongest case. Otherwise, it becomes a banana republic. Anybody can prosecute anybody.And we're opening the door to prosecutionof Democrats by Republicans, Republicans by Democrats. It's what Alexander Hamilton wrote in The Federalist isthe most dangerous threat to democracy, and we're seeingit unfold in front of our eyes.Very, very tragically.

I'm not a Republican, I'm not a Trump supporter, but I care deeply about the Constitution.I care deeply about preserving the rule of law. And we're seeing it being fritter away for partisan political purposes.


That guy needs to be put out to pasture. Notice that he thought the prosecutor in GA as a HE ("his website")!!

Not exactly au courant.
Anonymous
Post 08/15/2023 15:26     Subject: Re:GA Case

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Any leads on who the 30 unnamed co-conspirators are?

#1 appears to be Tom Fitton of Judicial Watch.

I grinch-smiled at this.


Me too and I for real smiled at your description. Perfect.
Anonymous
Post 08/15/2023 15:24     Subject: Re:GA Case

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Dems and “progressives” (regressives?) should be ashamed of what they are doing to Trump. You have all lost your minds and have become blind to the fact that you are the bad guys. You are doing legitimate damage, not to Trump, but to our country. I can’t imagine ever voting for a Democrat, or even at all, anymore. It’s shameful.


How does upholding the rule of law damage the United States?

It strengthens us and everything our nation stands for.


You are not “upholding the law”, dimwit. You are cheering on the destruction of a political enemy. You are terribly wrong if you think people are going to move on from this stuff. You are doing lasting damage to the confidence of a substantial portion of the population in the government and other institutions, all because you’re too brain dead to realize that the people on MSNBC telling you to be excited about this are themselves idiots.


If you break the law you face the consequences. He broke the law. And the feelings of a "substantial portion of the population" do not change that.

If he's not guilty, you have nothing to worry about. He'll be acquitted. Hell he might be acquitted even if he is guilty. This is Georgia.


No, moron. The prosecution alleges he broke the law. They have not proven that. If you had an IQ above room temperature, or any shred of intellectual honesty, you might get that.


Yes our lying eye did not see J6. This is the end. Bet he flees the country.


I live near the Capitol and saw lots. You know who I didn’t see there? Donald Trump.


He literally grabbed the steering wheel of the Beast to try to get there and the Secret Service refused to allow him. It wasn't for lack of trying.


OMG, seriously?


Yes, seriously

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/trump-steering-wheel-january-6-cassidy-hutchinson-testimony-mark-meadows/


Hand me CBS
Anonymous
Post 08/15/2023 15:22     Subject: GA Case

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I love when the left bares their behind. How deranged do you have to be NOT to see the over-reach here? The political persecution? What on EARTH are these leftists so afraid of? What have the done that’s so horrendous and what do they want from the American people so badly that 100+ charges are necessary to keep a man out of office?


Occam's razor.

How blind do you have to be to not see the total lawlessness of the people involved in a conspiracy to overturn and steal and election to remain in power.

Where is the overreach? Every single witness in this case, whether testimony, emails or texts, is a republican.

You are mad because there are AG's at the state and federal level who actually believe in the construct of "law"


Good thing you put law in quotes there
Anonymous
Post 08/15/2023 15:22     Subject: GA Case

Harvard Law Professor Alan Dershowitz on Trump’s Georgia indictments:

“First of all, nobody should take seriously that there was grand jury indictment. The fact that it was agrand jury indictment, it means nothing. It's the prosecutor who indicted. The best evidence of that is that it was on his website before the grand jury even voted. Now, the whole strategy of all these four casesis to get a conviction before the election, even if they're going to lose on appeal. I used to teach my students, many of them future prosecutors, if you bring a Rico case, that increases your chances of winning a trial and losing on appeal. The same thing is true with conspiracy and other cases involving mental states. And so all four of these cases are designed to get quick convictions in jurisdictions that are heavily loaded against Donald Trump.

And these prosecutors don't care as much as prosecutors generally do about having the convictions reversed on appeal, because that will happen after the election, which only goes to prove what I've been arguing now for months. If you're going after the man who's runningagainst your incumbent president, you had darn well better have the strongest case possible. And these are among the four, at least three of them, three weakest cases I’ve ever seen against any candidate. We don't know about the fourth, but it seems like it's very much like the DC case.

And if you're going after the man running for president against your person, you have to have the strongest case. Otherwise, it becomes a banana republic. Anybody can prosecute anybody.And we're opening the door to prosecutionof Democrats by Republicans, Republicans by Democrats. It's what Alexander Hamilton wrote in The Federalist isthe most dangerous threat to democracy, and we're seeingit unfold in front of our eyes.Very, very tragically.

I'm not a Republican, I'm not a Trump supporter, but I care deeply about the Constitution.I care deeply about preserving the rule of law. And we're seeing it being fritter away for partisan political purposes.
Anonymous
Post 08/15/2023 15:16     Subject: GA Case

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:And it's state court. No corrupt SCOTUS to bail his orange a$$ out.


What? A president cannot pardon state charges. People appeal state charges all the way to the Supreme Court pretty frequently. That’s one of the reasons they exist. However I hope The Rapist dies in prison.


I am assuming he will die before he could be convicted of anything and this will all be for nothing.

At least the rapist will be kept busy having to grift donations to pay his legal fees and will have to live the rest of his rapist life under multiple criminal indictments if he dies before he is convicted. I can live with that.


question is - will he have a state funeral?

I mean - he already "lied in state (of GA)". but you get what I mean.

Maybe he’ll be embalmed and put on display like Lenin.
Anonymous
Post 08/15/2023 15:08     Subject: GA Case

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:And it's state court. No corrupt SCOTUS to bail his orange a$$ out.


What? A president cannot pardon state charges. People appeal state charges all the way to the Supreme Court pretty frequently. That’s one of the reasons they exist. However I hope The Rapist dies in prison.


I am assuming he will die before he could be convicted of anything and this will all be for nothing.

At least the rapist will be kept busy having to grift donations to pay his legal fees and will have to live the rest of his rapist life under multiple criminal indictments if he dies before he is convicted. I can live with that.


question is - will he have a state funeral?

I mean - he already "lied in state (of GA)". but you get what I mean.
Anonymous
Post 08/15/2023 15:05     Subject: GA Case

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:And it's state court. No corrupt SCOTUS to bail his orange a$$ out.


What? A president cannot pardon state charges. People appeal state charges all the way to the Supreme Court pretty frequently. That’s one of the reasons they exist. However I hope The Rapist dies in prison.


I am assuming he will die before he could be convicted of anything and this will all be for nothing.


No history will have all the evidence. Republicans are traitors.
Anonymous
Post 08/15/2023 15:04     Subject: GA Case

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:And it's state court. No corrupt SCOTUS to bail his orange a$$ out.


What? A president cannot pardon state charges. People appeal state charges all the way to the Supreme Court pretty frequently. That’s one of the reasons they exist. However I hope The Rapist dies in prison.


I am assuming he will die before he could be convicted of anything and this will all be for nothing.

At least the rapist will be kept busy having to grift donations to pay his legal fees and will have to live the rest of his rapist life under multiple criminal indictments if he dies before he is convicted. I can live with that.
Anonymous
Post 08/15/2023 14:59     Subject: GA Case

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:And it's state court. No corrupt SCOTUS to bail his orange a$$ out.


What? A president cannot pardon state charges. People appeal state charges all the way to the Supreme Court pretty frequently. That’s one of the reasons they exist. However I hope The Rapist dies in prison.


I am assuming he will die before he could be convicted of anything and this will all be for nothing.
Anonymous
Post 08/15/2023 14:53     Subject: GA Case

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:This situation reminds me of thr novel Moby Dick. Trump is the White Whale and Captain Ahab is the Democrats, who have been chasing Trump since 2016. In the book, the White Whale defeats Captain Ahab and in 2024 Trump will do the same.


So you are saying the Republican governor of Georgia is lying?



OMG, the rapist Donald is lunatic too!


It would be funny if he gave a press conference and no one attended. I know that won’t happen, but it would be hilarious.
Anonymous
Post 08/15/2023 14:52     Subject: GA Case

Anonymous wrote:Meadows has the easiest path to flip and avoid prison. He has only two charges, for being stupid enough to chime in during Trump’s “perfect calls” to pressure state officials and being even stupider and sending the false election claims from Rudy and the other fraud lawyers to the Georgia officials they were pressuring to overturn the election. He wasn’t charged for the fake elector scheme or the Coffee County data breach so he can get a deal if he agrees to testify against Trump and Rudy.


He might as well as he is dead in the water politically. He's flipped for the Feds and flipping for Georgia should be a "peach."!