Not at all. If I incite someone, that's a teleological action on my part, irrespective of its consequences. If I inspire someone, that's an interpretation on their part. — Kenosha Kid
Yes, and I think that'll have to be the crux of the matter: Did Donald do what Donald did in order to set up a violent insurrection by his supporters in the Capitol? And the answer ought to be that this cannot be established, further is unlikely to be the case. — Kenosha Kid
Trump thrives on attention and adoration. He lives for it. He's a moron and a narcissist, which 100% explains his actions. He lost an election to a corpse, so he has to rationalise that both for himself and his millions of cult followers. So naturally it was a fraudulent election.
The impeachment is floating a very different version of Trump, one who is blessed with understanding of others and the cunning to use this to deliberately guide his mob into violent insurrection without ever explicitly stating that this is what he wants: Trump as master manipulator, shadowy Bond villain, astute strategist and a man of subtle means. That isn't Trump. He has none of those qualities. And yet if we wish to convict him on the impeachment charges, in the absence of an overt call to arms, we have to pretend that is what Trump is.
Incitement is what Rudy did: "trial by combat". — Kenosha Kid
I think that's a false representation. There is nothing intrinsic to the concept of "incite", which necessitates that the person who incites must intend the specific action which is incited. — Metaphysician Undercover
incite
to encourage someone to do or feel something unpleasant or violent:
She incited racial hatred by distributing anti-Semitic leaflets.
[ + to infinitive ] She was expelled for inciting her classmates to rebel against their teachers.
They denied inciting the crowd to violence. — Cambridge
Trump is guilty of inciting, because he clearly intended for his followers to take action, in the form of some sort of protestation. — Metaphysician Undercover
All that is necessary is to show criminal intent. — Metaphysician Undercover
Criminal law is designed so that ignorance cannot be used as a defense, because this would allow the criminal who is a proficient liar to walk free, under the pretense of ignorance. — Metaphysician Undercover
Seems pretty consistent with the dictionary definition to me: — Kenosha Kid
But protest is not insurrection. — Kenosha Kid
But ignorance that one's actions would lead to someone else being inspired to commit crimes is a perfectly reasonable defense, and the one Trump's people will employ. — Kenosha Kid
Indeed, how could he? — Kenosha Kid
If it can be shown that the outcome was a likely one, maybe. — Kenosha Kid
The inciteful, or inspirational (however you want to say it) activity was the false pretense of a stolen election. And that had been going on for months, so there was preparations made for the event.
— Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, and I think that'll have to be the crux of the matter: Did Donald do what Donald did in order to set up a violent insurrection by his supporters in the Capitol? And the answer ought to be that this cannot be established, further is unlikely to be the case. — Kenosha Kid
So, are you ready to demonstrate either that it was not this claim, made by the president, which incited the violence, or, that the claim was not a false pretense? Until you do, you're just blowing smoke, and the president is obviously guilty of inciting the violence.
Says the guys who's obviously smoking some serious shit.You’re blowing smoke. — NOS4A2
You are simply ignoring the concept of "criminal negligence". — Metaphysician Undercover
OED, incite: "urge or stir up". Where is there a mention of the need to intend the specific action resulting from the urging or stirring up? — Metaphysician Undercover
The outcome could be completely accidental, unforeseeable, and even improbable, as is often the case in manslaughter for example. — Metaphysician Undercover
His speech is not considered incitement by any American law, state or otherwise. So why would they keep claiming that he incited violence? Same thing with the trite phrase “undermining democracy”. These violations are made up whole cloth, inventions, fantasies, inapplicable to any set of rules or codes of conduct, legal or otherwise, and apparently only the president can be guilty of them. This is arbitrary persecution. — NOS4A2
I’d love to know who possesses enough magical powers to control your tongue and motor cortex. — NOS4A2
Het is not charged with the crime 'inciting violence' he is being charged with misconduct, namely the inciting of violence — Tobias
"incitement of insurrection" in urging his supporters to march on the Capitol building. The article stated that Trump had committed high crimes and misdemeanors by making a number of statements that "encouraged–and foreseeably resulted in–lawless action" that interfered with Congress' constitutional duty to certify the election and stated that Trump "threatened the integrity of the democratic system, interfered with the peaceful transition of power, and imperiled a coequal branch of Government," doing so in a way that rendered him "a threat to national security, democracy, and the Constitution" if he were allowed to complete his term. — Wikipedia
Trump was charged with: — Wayfarer
They're not my fellow citizens. — Baden
Milquetoast, feeble?In general, fine, but it's a kind of milquetoast response. Needs more. (They've been told the truth since the election results in November. Made no difference.) — Baden
At zero point did he tell rally-goers to commit violence or break the law. — NOS4A2
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