No. I am unable to pass off someone else’s judgement with my own, especially a Washington jury. — NOS4A2
They are evidence that there was a plan to overturn the election results if Trump was losing or lost. Stone and Bannon were both confidants and advisors of Trump, and what they said in advance was exactly what Trump did on election night. This is in addition to Trump's own words leading up to the election. No one is saying Trump didn't have the right to doubt the election results or the fairness of the process, but he clearly had a plan ahead of time to declare victory regardless of the election results.
So what evidence would convince you that Trump did the things he is accused of? Or put differently - are you open to the possibility that Trump did the things he is accused of?
You’d have to prove he did so corruptly. Any quote or admission would suffice, given proper context. Inference by projection or conspiracy theory just doesn’t cut it. — NOS4A2
You’d have to prove he did so corruptly. Any quote or admission would suffice — NOS4A2
They continued to count votes after election day, — NOS4A2
They continued to count votes after election day, on days when there is no election, after the election was over, and magically Biden pulled ahead. — NOS4A2
Trump's team is preparing to falsely claim that mail-in ballots counted after Nov. 3 — a legitimate count expected to favor Democrats — are evidence of election fraud.
what evidence would convince you that Trump did the things he is accused of? Or put differently - are you open to the possibility that Trump did the things he is accused of? — EricH
You’d have to prove he did so corruptly. Any quote or admission would suffice, given proper context. Inference by projection or conspiracy theory just doesn’t cut it. — NOS4A2
Not quite following you here. Are you saying that the only thing to convince you would be if Trump himself acknowledged it he did so corruptly? Or would you be convinced if multiple direct eye witnesses testified that what he was doing was illegal? — EricH
The illegality of the charges is that he intended to corruptly defraud the United States or deny people their rights. No one proved he defrauded the United States or denied people their rights, and they certainly didn’t prove he did so corruptly. On top of that it isn’t up to the government to determine what is true or false, what people should believe, and what they can say about it. — NOS4A2
I'm looking for clarity on your response - must that be a quote from Donald Trump or can it be a quote from eye witnesses to the events?Any quote or admission would suffice, given proper context. — NOS4A2
The firing was secondary. He wanted them to LIE. How is that not corrupt, irrespective of the (il)legality?The president has the authority to fire who he wants, and for whatever reason. Zero corruption there. You have to show that he corruptly defrauded the United States or denied people their rights, all of which is piffle. — NOS4A2
No one proved he defrauded the United States or denied people their rights, and they certainly didn’t prove he did so corruptly. — NOS4A2
You're putting the cart before the horse. — Michael
That's precisely what the prosecution will try to do in court. They believe they have the evidence to do so, hence the indictment.
You seem to be suggesting that they must prove to the public their case before the trial even starts? That's not how the legal system works. You're putting the cart before the horse.
. Are you therefore predicting the charges will be dismissed? If not, why not?There is no evidence of any crime or criminal activity — NOS4A2
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