Perjury is usually defined as "lying under oath". That is not quite right. The original meaning was "violation of one's oath (or affirmation)".
The word "perjury" is usually defined today as "lying under oath about a material matter", but that is not its original or complete meaning, which is "violation of an oath"
The oath of office would be meaningless if there were no repercussions for violating it. Removal from office by impeachment is the repercussion. — Michael
We can't see into Donald Trump's heart so as to know if he's intentionally abandoned allegiance to the US. — frank
The Senate has a lower approval rating than President Trump and so who are they to judge?Impeach, then Senate to remove. — Michael
Why do you say that? — frank
His running mate, Pence, publicly opposed the Obama administration's repeal of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell. “There’s no question to mainstream homosexuality within active duty military would have an impact on unit cohesion,” Pence wrote on his website. He added that“Congress should oppose any effort to recognize homosexuals as a 'discrete and insular minority’ entitled to the protection of anti-discrimination laws similar to those extended to women and ethnic minorities."
President Pence is a very scary idea so please, be very careful what you wish for and strive for litigiously. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
Hitler the autocrat
After taking power, Hitler and the Nazis turned Germany into a dictatorship. Time and again, they used legal means to give their actions a semblance of legality. Step by step, Hitler managed to erode democracy until it was just a hollow facade. Things did not end there, though. During the twelve years that the Third Reich existed, Hitler continued to strengthen his hold on the country.
https://www.annefrank.org/en/anne-frank/go-in-depth/germany-1933-democracy-dictatorship/ — annefrank
I respectfully choose to disagree with you that it is in anyway "off topic".That is really off topic. — Athena
Once again, my cited point made by our current Vice President's position, is not something I agree with at all. I am 100% against it and to not be able to see the far reaching implications, of what regressing back to when ALL of our citizens rights were not protected is VERY short sighted.The topic here is what Trump is doing to our democracy and I hope that is where the discussion stays. — Athena
We really need a "head spinning" emoticon. If MY standing up for the right of every citizen expressing their own free will is an "agenda" to you? Than have at it. My position is reason based and will remain so until facts are presented to the contrary and then I will reconsider my position.Please do not derail it with your homosexual agenda. — Athena
I am very comfortable with my logic, though I am not in a position to say the same for yourself, that is for you to deal with.Seeing the two subjects as the same thing is what is destroying our democracy! Our logic is all messed up! — Athena
Andrew Johnson, as I said earlier. One article of impeachment for bringing disgrace to the Presidency and one for trying to disgrace Congress. — Michael
Michael, to begin a trial without evidence would signal that a blatant show trial is pending. — frank
Generally, debate over the phrase high crimes and misdemeanors has split into two camps. The minority view is held by critics who undertake a literal reading of the Constitution. They maintain that high crimes means what it says—criminal activity—and argue that the Framers wanted only criminal activities to be the basis for impeachment. The generally accepted viewpoint is much broader. It defines high crimes and misdemeanors as any serious abuse of power—including both legal and illegal activities. Supporters of this reading believe that because impeachment is a public inquiry, first and fore-most, it is appropriate to read the phrase broadly in order to provide the most thorough inquiry possible. Thus, a civil officer may face impeachment for misconduct, violations of oath of office, serious incompetence, or, in the case of judges, activities that undermine public confidence or damage the integrity of the judiciary.
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