I’m not focused on the here and now of this case. I’m very concerned about the future.
Will that not lead us into a cycle that destabilizes the functioning of our country as a democracy?
Who would be above the law? Almighty God? What do have atheists to say about that?Is there good reason why the Supreme Court should not have already quickly and unequivocally ruled that Trump is not above the law? — Fooloso4
By prolonging deliberation they are dragging their feet and in effect obstructing justice. — Fooloso4
If we’re really so stupid as to elect this guy again, then what difference does a Supreme Court ruling really make? — Mikie
The system is set up so that there are checks and balances, including checks against the tyranny of the majority and of a president without legal bounds. — Fooloso4
If it gets to that point then we are in deeper trouble than we are now. We must be on guard against the contagion of nihilism. — Fooloso4
If they get elected, then it really comes down to thing of the parliamentary support they have and finally the next elections. If the people elected don't abide with these rules, what they do is basically make an autocoup of self-coup.There will always be those who pay attention and are ready to step in to seize power if unopposed. — Fooloso4
Is there good reason why the Supreme Court should not have already quickly and unequivocally ruled that Trump is not above the law? If some of its members are, as they claim to be, originalists, then the overwhelming evidence leads them to only one conclusion, he is not. By prolonging deliberation they are dragging their feet and in effect obstructing justice. — Fooloso4
There's more at stake than just Trump. — RogueAI
There was concern that presidents were — or knowing that there's no immunity, might actually pardon themselves for everything before they leave office. — RogueAI
But, most importantly, I think there was concern about whether there would be a chilling effect on a president doing his or her duties if there is no immunity at all for official acts. — RogueAI
It's more important for SCOTUS to get this right than to ensure Trump goes on trial before November. — RogueAI
If Trump pardons himself the case against him will not proceed. If the case does not proceed the question of whether he has blanket immunity will not be addressed unless some other case arises before the court addressing this issue. — Fooloso4
The soonest Trump could pardon himself is January. SCOTUS will not take that long. — RogueAI
If you have to ask… — Mikie
They’re deliberately dragging it out so that the trial is postponed until after the election. — Mikie
This assumption assumes the conservative members of the Court share the Left's delusion that the trial or even a conviction would reduce Trump's support. — Hanover
If anything it should go in “Supreme Court (general discussion)” thread. — Mikie
It is not unreasonable to think that there is some segment of voters who may be sways by what might be uncovered in trial. Given how close the election is likely to be this could make a difference. There is a reason why Trump is doing whatever he can to postpone or prevent the trials from taking place. — Fooloso4
There is some amount of speculation always I agree as to what persuades people, but I don't think the strategy to prosecute Trump out of the race has been generally effective. — Hanover
The general strategy of criminal defendants is to delay, object, and refuse to cooperate — Hanover
I don't know that it's the election he's most concerned about as opposed to just getting convicted. — Hanover
No. What Trump says and does and what the Supreme Court says and does are not the same. — Fooloso4
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