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Thread: There Is A Liberal Roach In Trump’s Soup

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    Default There Is A Liberal Roach In Trump’s Soup

    put there by the Supreme Court.


    I put together the above observations taken from different threads about Chief Justice John Roberts because his highly-touted judicial magnificence is no longer fooling the American people. When all is said and done Roberts is another shyster lawyer that climbed to the top of the legal profession’s garbage heap.

    https://www.justplainpolitics.com/sh...36#post3332936

    Television mouths have been laying the ground work for a guilty verdict from the minute impeaching Trump became settled policy. Pencil Neck’s lies became truth. The opinions of witnesses became evidence. Every liberal on every panel show repeated the OPINIONS stated by witnesses at Schiff’s fake investigation as though it was indisputable evidence. As usual, nobody challenged Democrat Party talking points on-camera. As hard as liars and clowns tried to sell impeaching an innocent man a majority of Americans saw the truth of the matter.

    Democrats saw the problem caused by the public’s growing opposition so they came up with another lie —— Democrats will destroy themselves in a Senate trial. The morning line even says that Diarrhea Mouth Pelosi will find a way to avoid an impeachment trial.

    HOT TIP: Do not bet against a Senate trial.

    If you do bet on the outcome of a trial —— bet large on guilty. WHY guilty? ANSWER: Because the umpire is on the take:

    The Democrats have manifestly failed to build the national consensus necessary to remove a sitting president from office. The “impeachment inquiry” decreed by Nancy Pelosi in late September, combined with Adam Schiff’s inequitable conduct of the subsequent public hearings, have produced the reverse of their intended result. Several reliable voter surveys show that they weakened support for impeachment among Independent voters, particularly those in crucial swing states, while hardening support for the president among Republicans. Yet the Democratic leadership is clearly determined to pass articles of impeachment against Trump, without regard to the legal merits or the misgivings of “moderate” members of their own caucus.

    When the Democrats pass their impeachment resolution, the sordid spectacle will move to the Senate, where Chief Justice John Roberts must preside over a trial that will determine if the president has actually committed an offense that would justify his removal. This should worry the president and his supporters. Historically, the role of the chief justice in these proceedings has been somewhat symbolic. Yet it will be necessary for him to rule on a number of important motions. The weak Democratic case against President Trump, combined with the Democrats’ penchant for manipulating procedural rules, all but guarantees that they will inundate Roberts with a tsunami of parliamentary maneuvers that he may be ill-equipped to manage.

    During the Clinton impeachment trial, Chief Justice William Rehnquist was forced to spend entire days refereeing disputes over frivolous Democratic motions. Almost an entire day, for example, was squandered arguing over a motion to dismiss the two primary articles of impeachment. The Republicans objected, of course. Rehnquist consulted with the Parliamentarian and ruled, only to encounter another such motion and another objection. The transcript of that day (January 25, 1999) shows that the words “object” or “objection” appear 29 times before that motion was resolved. Throughout this episode Rehnquist remained unflappable and in control of the proceedings. Does Roberts possess such mettle?

    Moreover, even if the chief justice is fast enough on his feet to avoid some procedural blunder that harms the president’s case, it isn’t at all clear that he is immune to the general Beltway aversion to the homo novus. This is what Roman patricians called unwelcome outsiders who achieved high office and implemented unwelcome innovations. The most famous of these “new men” was Cicero, whose political enemies eventually contrived to exile. A similar impulse is behind much of the animosity that our political class feels for Donald Trump, and Roberts would seem to share that prejudice. He raised eyebrows a year ago by publicly rebuking Trump for referring to U.S. District Judge Jon S. Tigar as an “Obama judge”:


    We do not have Obama judges or Trump judges, Bush judges or Clinton judges. What we have is an extraordinary group of dedicated judges doing their level best to do equal right to those appearing before them. That independent judiciary is something we should all be thankful for.


    This was not merely a breach of decorum by the chief justice, who silently accepted far worse disrespect toward SCOTUS itself from Trump’s predecessor; the claim was also nonsense. As the president pointed out, “Sorry Chief Justice John Roberts, but you do indeed have ‘Obama judges,’ and they have a much different point of view than the people who are charged with the safety of our country.” Trump went on to remind Roberts that the Ninth Circuit is the venue of choice for open borders advocates hoping to halt enforcement of immigration law and that many of their rulings are overturned. A recent SCOTUS ruling in favor of Trump’s new asylum rules is a case in point involving the very judge the president criticized.

    Chief Justice Roberts is also susceptible to the social and political pressure that accompanies important questions over which the political class has major differences with the voters. The most famous example was his bizarre ruling in NFIB v. Sebelius involving Obamacare’s fine for failing to buy insurance. Everyone defending the mandate insisted that the fine was not a tax. Yet, caving to Beltway pressure to save the law, Roberts deemed it a tax nonethless. Justice Scalia wrote in his dissenting opinion, “To say that the Individual Mandate merely imposes a tax is not to interpret the statute but to rewrite it.” Three years later, in King v. Burwell, Roberts again rewrote the law to save it, and Justice Scalia’s dissent was scathing:


    This Court … rewrites the law to make tax credits available everywhere. We should start calling this law SCOTUScare.… Rather than rewriting the law under the pretense of interpreting it, the Court should have left it to Congress to decide what to do about the Act’s limitation of tax credits to state Exchanges.


    The most recent case in which Roberts produced one of his weird rulings involved whether a citizenship question could be added to the 2020 census. He got rolled by the ACLU pursuant to an irrelevant disconnect between the decision to include it and the Trump administration’s motivations. The ACLU produced “evidence” demonstrating that advisers to Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross discussed the question with a consultant and was thus inconsistent with the sworn testimony of department officials concerning the real purpose of the census question. Never mind that it isn’t unethical or unusual for political appointees to consult with outside experts. The idea was to make Roberts worry about appearances.

    This concern for appearances that plays such an important part in Roberts’ thinking is one of the primary issues, along with an oddly inconsistent record as chief justice, that should worry anyone who cares about President Trump’s ability to receive a fair impeachment trial in the Senate. The pressure that will be applied to Roberts pursuant to the Senate trial will dwarf anything he has experienced during his tenure on the court. And the friction that already exists between Trump and Roberts concerning the judiciary will affect the latter’s judgment whether he knows it or not. Indeed, the Washington Times reports that John Cardillo of Newsmax TV has called for Roberts to recuse himself from President Trump’s Senate trial:


    There is already a crisis of confidence among the American people that we have a fair system of justice. When you have a chief justice of the Supreme Court overtly making comments that are derogatory to the president of the United States, take all speculation out of the process.


    It’s unlikely that the chief justice will take that advice, but perhaps he should. The Democrats will pass an impeachment resolution, but their articles of impeachment will inevitably fail to warrant the removal of a president less than a year away from the next election. If the Schiff hearings are any guide, they will probably include such nebulous charges as abuse of power and corruption. If that is the case, the president’s attorneys will certainly request the chief justice to dismiss the charges as unconstitutional. Does John Roberts have the guts to do so and face ostracism by the political class? If not, it means he just isn’t up to the job.

    Is John Roberts Up To a Senate Impeachment Trial?
    by David Catron
    November 26, 2019, 12:09 AM

    https://spectator.org/is-john-robert...achment-trial/

    p.s. President Trump is foolishly calling for a Senate trial. If I had Trump’s ear I would tell him “Joan of Arc had a better chance of acquittal in a rigged trial than you.”
    The basic test of freedom is perhaps less in what we are free to do than in what we are free not to do. It is the freedom to refrain, withdraw and abstain which makes a totalitarian regime impossible. Eric Hoffer

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    I do not trust Lindsey Graham as far as I could throw John McCain when he was alive:

    Is the ghost of John McCain haunting Senator Lindsey Graham? The South Carolina Senator went on Maria Bartiromo’s Fox News show, Sunday Morning Futures, to throw a wet blanket on conservatives’ dreams of a Senate trial that would get to the bottom of the plot against President Trump. He wants to leave all those rocks in place, turning nothing over to see what crawls out. Instead, once the House managers present their case, he wants a quick vote, presumably ending in dismissal of the case.

    In particular, Graham ruled out calling Adam Schiff to testify.

    This is absolutely the wrong way to go. With only one side presenting evidence, and the Senate voting along party lines (with the possibility that Mitt Romney or Lisa Murkowski joining the Dems and Joe Manchin joining the GOP bloc), the Democrats will have succeeded in their goal of dirtying-up Trump in the highest-visibility forum possible, a Senate trial, with no counterpunching.

    What could be going on?

    Graham himself claims that he wants to get rid of this spectacle as soon as possible because it is harming the nation. He tells Trump, “If the Senate is ready to vote, and ready to acquit you, you should celebrate.”

    Sorry, but I don’t buy this logic. Senate trial would be a blessing, offering the chance to put on the spot Hunter and Joe Biden, the whistleblower who is a leaker, his attorney Zaid who announced impeachment was underway right after the inauguration, and other plotters.

    Sundance of the Conservative Treehouse sees Graham in cover-up mode:


    These comments by Senator Lindsey Graham are very self serving. Why?… Because Senator Graham participated in the exploitation of Ukraine for his own benefit. In essence Graham is fearful that too much inquiry into what took place with Ukraine in 2014 through 2016 will expose his own participation and effort along with former Ambassador Marie Yovanovich.

    Graham is attempting to end the impeachment effort because the underlying discoveries have the potential to expose the network of congressional influence agents, John McCain and Graham himself included, during any witness testimony.

    One theme emerging from the Democrats’ Ukraine excursion is that that corrupt country has received billions in foreign aid from the US with sketchy accountability at best. Many suspect that some of that aid finds its way to the hands of politicians or their election fund-raising arms. Another theme is that Burisma has helped finance the Atlantic Council, in which Graham’s late mentor, Senator John McCain was active.

    Something does not smell right.

    Hat tip: Janet Levy

    December 9, 2019
    Lindsey Graham does not want Schiff or other Congressmen to testify at Senate impeachment trial
    By Thomas Lifson

    https://www.americanthinker.com/blog...ent_trial.html

    Quote Originally Posted by Flanders View Post
    HOT TIP: Do not bet against a Senate trial.

    If you do bet on the outcome of a trial —— bet large on guilty. WHY guilty? ANSWER: Because the umpire is on the take:

    Graham wants a speedy trial so the umpire can rule against Trump’s right to confront his accusers. Move the cursor to 13:00:

    Maybe this one works:

    VIDEO

    https://www.foxnews.com/shows/life-liberty-levin


    Pelosi and her trained monkeys on House committees were laying the groundwork for denying President Trump the Right to confront his accusers —— most notably the mysterious WHISTLE-BLOWER —— Lamont Cranston:



    “Who knows what evil lies in the hearts of Men?” Pelosi knows. That is why she bet on Chief Justice Roberts ruling for the Democrats at a Senate trial. Republicans like Mitt Romney, Lindsey Graham, Susan Collins, and Lisa Murkowski will certainly abandon ship the minute Roberts’ hands them life jackets. There is no telling how many more “Republicans” will jump in the lifeboat with the first four.

    Bottom line: Right about now Democrats and RINO mustering 2/3rds to remove President Trump is looking pretty good.
    Last edited by Flanders; 12-09-2019 at 09:31 AM.
    The basic test of freedom is perhaps less in what we are free to do than in what we are free not to do. It is the freedom to refrain, withdraw and abstain which makes a totalitarian regime impossible. Eric Hoffer

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    Quote Originally Posted by Flanders View Post
    Graham wants a speedy trial so the umpire can rule against Trump’s right to confront his accusers. Move the cursor to 13:00:

    Maybe this one works:

    VIDEO https://www.foxnews.com/shows/life-liberty-levin
    This one is the full show:

    SEE VIDEO


    https://video.foxnews.com/v/61141317...#sp=show-clips
    The basic test of freedom is perhaps less in what we are free to do than in what we are free not to do. It is the freedom to refrain, withdraw and abstain which makes a totalitarian regime impossible. Eric Hoffer

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    Quote Originally Posted by Flanders View Post
    If you do bet on the outcome of a trial —— bet large on guilty. WHY guilty? ANSWER: Because the umpire is on the take:
    The umpire called a strike a ball:

    Chief Justice Roberts blocked Kentucky Republican Sen. Rand Paul from posing a question during the Senate impeachment trial that would have named the alleged whistleblower at the center of the episode, Fox News is told -- and Paul may try to force the issue during the question-and-answer session that begins Thursday afternoon.

    Roberts, for now, has ball control because he actually receives the questions in note cards from senators, then reads the question aloud in the Senate chamber to be answered by either House Democratic managers or Trump's defense team. But, Fox News has learned Roberts may soon lose his grip on the proceedings amid a torrent of criticism both inside and outside the Senate.

    The Federalist co-founder Sean Davis condemned what he called Roberts' "arbitrary and unilateral censorship of senators and Senate business," and reported that Roberts had initially sought to block even general questions of the intelligence community whistleblower. When Republicans threatened a vote rebuking Roberts on the record, Davis reported, Roberts backed down and decided only to prohibit mentioning the whistleblower's name.

    Published 2 hours ago
    Last Update 11 mins ago
    Justice Roberts blocks Sen. Paul from naming whistleblower, source says -- and Paul may force the issue
    By Gregg Re | Fox News

    https://www.foxnews.com/politics/jus...orce-the-issue
    The basic test of freedom is perhaps less in what we are free to do than in what we are free not to do. It is the freedom to refrain, withdraw and abstain which makes a totalitarian regime impossible. Eric Hoffer

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    Roberts is a very conservative ,pro-corporate justice. The Robert's court is the most pro corp, anti-worker of all time. He is extremely conservative. He is exactly what the Federalist Society wanted.
    Rightys are afraid that he might be forced to make a decision. That is because the law and evidence scares them. If Roberts decides properly, the Repubs lose.
    The whole concept of whistleblowers is anonymity. I know to rightys that is secondary to them having a target to destroy for acting as his conscience directed.
    Case after case, Roberts has dragged us back in time and principles . He has done what the wealthy want. But just one vote the reds do not like and he is a liberal turncoat. Your purity requirements are strict as hell and abusive to anyone with a mind.
    Last edited by Nordberg; 01-30-2020 at 11:52 AM.

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    UPDATE

    Quote Originally Posted by Flanders View Post
    The umpire called a strike a ball:

    The umpire gave House Managers a walk while he whiffed:

    January 31, 2020
    Chief Justice John Roberts strikes out
    By Ed Timperlake

    https://www.americanthinker.com/blog...rikes_out.html
    The basic test of freedom is perhaps less in what we are free to do than in what we are free not to do. It is the freedom to refrain, withdraw and abstain which makes a totalitarian regime impossible. Eric Hoffer

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