Garland Has to Prosecute Trump for January 6 to Restore Faith in the Justice Departme

signalmankenneth

Verified User
It’s often said that the attorney general has two goals—keep the DOJ apolitical and prosecute the former president—but the aims, says a noted historian, are complementary and essential.

As the January 6 Committee hearings reveal shocking evidence about Donald Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election, pressure is mounting on Attorney General Merrick Garland and the Department of Justice to prosecute the former president. The public conversation has revolved around what are often thought to be two competing interests:

Garland’s efforts to depoliticize the DOJ and his duty to uphold the law.

This framing pits the two aims against one another. But historic parallels demonstrate that this is the wrong way to think about the DOJ’s future. Garland cannot restore the integrity of the department without prosecuting Trump and his allies.

When President Joe Biden considered candidates for attorney general, he selected Garland to “restore the honor, the integrity, the independence of [the] Department of Justice in this nation.”

Trump’s politicization and machinations had badly undermined the department. We knew about his firing of Jeff Sessions because the former Alabama senator recused himself from the Russia investigation and his dismissal of William Barr for his assertion that there had been no meaningful fraud in the 2020 election.

The January 6 Committee has revealed further details on Trump’s efforts to install a mid-level environmental attorney as attorney general because he would go along with the efforts to overturn the election. Biden understandably wanted an end to politicization and named the widely respected Garland as his nominee.

But the president-elect did so the day after the January 6 attack, meaning Garland would be tasked with prosecuting those who had attempted fraud against the U.S. government, culminating in the insurrection.

Garland is particularly well suited for the first goal. He embodies the values that make up judicial temperament, defined by the American Bar Association as “compassion, decisiveness, open-mindedness, sensitivity, courtesy, patience, freedom from bias and commitment to equal justice.”

Since taking office, he has made major strides in improving public respect for the DOJ and morale within the department. He has restored many norms that were broken during the Trump presidency, including avoiding political rhetoric, leaving line prosecutors to do their jobs, and defending career staffers. Garland’s prosecution of the Oklahoma City bombing case led to his DOJ tenure during the Bill Clinton years.

His time on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals, the nation’s second-highest court, earned him plaudits as a moderate voice by Republicans and Democrats alike, which is why President Barack Obama nominated him for the Supreme Court. Garland was the victim of brute politics and surely wants to avoid it as attorney general.

https://washingtonmonthly.com/2022/...6-to-restore-faith-in-the-justice-department/

xPxRoIMDqrCq.jpeg

sJxUM_OEheigwXgFzjhB1J5vPuuu3_5miiw5LZ34vpw.jpg


Bottom line: If Garland has not acted by the second anniversary of the Trump inspired insurrection, Biden should replace him, with someone who will act?!!
 
It’s often said that the attorney general has two goals—keep the DOJ apolitical and prosecute the former president—but the aims, says a noted historian, are complementary and essential.

[FONT=&]As the January 6 Committee hearings reveal shocking evidence about Donald Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election, pressure is mounting on Attorney General Merrick Garland and the Department of Justice to prosecute the former president. The public conversation has revolved around what are often thought to be two competing interests:

Garland’s efforts to depoliticize the DOJ and his duty to uphold the law.
[/FONT]

[FONT=&]This framing pits the two aims against one another. But historic parallels demonstrate that this is the wrong way to think about the DOJ’s future. Garland cannot restore the integrity of the department without prosecuting Trump and his allies.
[/FONT]

[FONT=&]When President Joe Biden considered candidates for attorney general, he selected Garland to “restore the honor, the integrity, the independence of [the] Department of Justice in this nation.”

Trump’s politicization and machinations had badly undermined the department. We knew about his firing of Jeff Sessions because the former Alabama senator recused himself from the Russia investigation and his dismissal of William Barr for his assertion that there had been no meaningful fraud in the 2020 election.

The January 6 Committee has revealed further details on Trump’s efforts to install a mid-level environmental attorney as attorney general because he would go along with the efforts to overturn the election. Biden understandably wanted an end to politicization and named the widely respected Garland as his nominee.

But the president-elect did so the day after the January 6 attack, meaning Garland would be tasked with prosecuting those who had attempted fraud against the U.S. government, culminating in the insurrection.

Garland is particularly well suited for the first goal. He embodies the values that make up judicial temperament, defined by the American Bar Association as “compassion, decisiveness, open-mindedness, sensitivity, courtesy, patience, freedom from bias and commitment to equal justice.”

Since taking office, he has made major strides in improving public respect for the DOJ and morale within the department. He has restored many norms that were broken during the Trump presidency, including avoiding political rhetoric, leaving line prosecutors to do their jobs, and defending career staffers. Garland’s prosecution of the Oklahoma City bombing case led to his DOJ tenure during the Bill Clinton years.

His time on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals, the nation’s second-highest court, earned him plaudits as a moderate voice by Republicans and Democrats alike, which is why President Barack Obama nominated him for the Supreme Court. Garland was the victim of brute politics and surely wants to avoid it as attorney general.

https://washingtonmonthly.com/2022/...6-to-restore-faith-in-the-justice-department/

[/FONT]
xPxRoIMDqrCq.jpeg
[FONT=&]
[/FONT]
sJxUM_OEheigwXgFzjhB1J5vPuuu3_5miiw5LZ34vpw.jpg


Bottom line: If Garland has not acted by the second anniversary of the Trump inspired insurrection, Biden should replace him, with someone who will act?!!

If he does it will prove what we already know; that we live under a two tiered justice system and the DOJ/FBI are branches of the DNC and need to be dissolved along with every alphabet agency that comprises the permanent unelected administrative state made up of career bureaucrats.

But you fuckers go for it, if you try to arrest the opposition to try to prevent Trump from running like this is fucking Venezuela then we start shooting, full stop, end of.
 
If he does it will prove what we already know; that we live under a two tiered justice system and the DOJ/FBI are branches of the DNC and need to be dissolved along with every alphabet agency that comprises the permanent unelected administrative state made up of career bureaucrats.

But you fuckers go for it, if you try to arrest the opposition to try to prevent Trump from running like this is fucking Venezuela then we start shooting, full stop, end of.

You want fascism.
 
It’s often said that the attorney general has two goals—keep the DOJ apolitical and prosecute the former president—but the aims, says a noted historian, are complementary and essential.

[FONT=&]As the January 6 Committee hearings reveal shocking evidence about Donald Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election, pressure is mounting on Attorney General Merrick Garland and the Department of Justice to prosecute the former president. The public conversation has revolved around what are often thought to be two competing interests:

Garland’s efforts to depoliticize the DOJ and his duty to uphold the law.
[/FONT]

[FONT=&]This framing pits the two aims against one another. But historic parallels demonstrate that this is the wrong way to think about the DOJ’s future. Garland cannot restore the integrity of the department without prosecuting Trump and his allies.
[/FONT]

[FONT=&]When President Joe Biden considered candidates for attorney general, he selected Garland to “restore the honor, the integrity, the independence of [the] Department of Justice in this nation.”

Trump’s politicization and machinations had badly undermined the department. We knew about his firing of Jeff Sessions because the former Alabama senator recused himself from the Russia investigation and his dismissal of William Barr for his assertion that there had been no meaningful fraud in the 2020 election.

The January 6 Committee has revealed further details on Trump’s efforts to install a mid-level environmental attorney as attorney general because he would go along with the efforts to overturn the election. Biden understandably wanted an end to politicization and named the widely respected Garland as his nominee.

But the president-elect did so the day after the January 6 attack, meaning Garland would be tasked with prosecuting those who had attempted fraud against the U.S. government, culminating in the insurrection.

Garland is particularly well suited for the first goal. He embodies the values that make up judicial temperament, defined by the American Bar Association as “compassion, decisiveness, open-mindedness, sensitivity, courtesy, patience, freedom from bias and commitment to equal justice.”

Since taking office, he has made major strides in improving public respect for the DOJ and morale within the department. He has restored many norms that were broken during the Trump presidency, including avoiding political rhetoric, leaving line prosecutors to do their jobs, and defending career staffers. Garland’s prosecution of the Oklahoma City bombing case led to his DOJ tenure during the Bill Clinton years.

His time on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals, the nation’s second-highest court, earned him plaudits as a moderate voice by Republicans and Democrats alike, which is why President Barack Obama nominated him for the Supreme Court. Garland was the victim of brute politics and surely wants to avoid it as attorney general.

https://washingtonmonthly.com/2022/...6-to-restore-faith-in-the-justice-department/

[/FONT]
xPxRoIMDqrCq.jpeg
[FONT=&]
[/FONT]
sJxUM_OEheigwXgFzjhB1J5vPuuu3_5miiw5LZ34vpw.jpg


Bottom line: If Garland has not acted by the second anniversary of the Trump inspired insurrection, Biden should replace him, with someone who will act?!!

"Garland’s efforts to depoliticize the DOJ and his duty to uphold the law."

You people are literally delusional, you live on another fucking planet if you believe this shit. Is this fucking satire? I really can't tell anymore.
 
"Garland’s efforts to depoliticize the DOJ and his duty to uphold the law."

You people are literally delusional, you live on another fucking planet if you believe this shit. Is this fucking satire? I really can't tell anymore.

There is a lot you do not understand.
 
"Garland’s efforts to depoliticize the DOJ and his duty to uphold the law."

You people are literally delusional, you live on another fucking planet if you believe this shit. Is this fucking satire? I really can't tell anymore.

So we allow anyone from the opposite party to do whatever they want, since any attempt to bring them to justice, is just politics in your world.
 
It’s often said that the attorney general has two goals—keep the DOJ apolitical and prosecute the former president—but the aims, says a noted historian, are complementary and essential.

[FONT=&]As the January 6 Committee hearings reveal shocking evidence about Donald Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 election, pressure is mounting on Attorney General Merrick Garland and the Department of Justice to prosecute the former president. The public conversation has revolved around what are often thought to be two competing interests:

Garland’s efforts to depoliticize the DOJ and his duty to uphold the law.
[/FONT]

[FONT=&]This framing pits the two aims against one another. But historic parallels demonstrate that this is the wrong way to think about the DOJ’s future. Garland cannot restore the integrity of the department without prosecuting Trump and his allies.
[/FONT]

[FONT=&]When President Joe Biden considered candidates for attorney general, he selected Garland to “restore the honor, the integrity, the independence of [the] Department of Justice in this nation.”

Trump’s politicization and machinations had badly undermined the department. We knew about his firing of Jeff Sessions because the former Alabama senator recused himself from the Russia investigation and his dismissal of William Barr for his assertion that there had been no meaningful fraud in the 2020 election.

The January 6 Committee has revealed further details on Trump’s efforts to install a mid-level environmental attorney as attorney general because he would go along with the efforts to overturn the election. Biden understandably wanted an end to politicization and named the widely respected Garland as his nominee.

But the president-elect did so the day after the January 6 attack, meaning Garland would be tasked with prosecuting those who had attempted fraud against the U.S. government, culminating in the insurrection.

Garland is particularly well suited for the first goal. He embodies the values that make up judicial temperament, defined by the American Bar Association as “compassion, decisiveness, open-mindedness, sensitivity, courtesy, patience, freedom from bias and commitment to equal justice.”

Since taking office, he has made major strides in improving public respect for the DOJ and morale within the department. He has restored many norms that were broken during the Trump presidency, including avoiding political rhetoric, leaving line prosecutors to do their jobs, and defending career staffers. Garland’s prosecution of the Oklahoma City bombing case led to his DOJ tenure during the Bill Clinton years.

His time on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals, the nation’s second-highest court, earned him plaudits as a moderate voice by Republicans and Democrats alike, which is why President Barack Obama nominated him for the Supreme Court. Garland was the victim of brute politics and surely wants to avoid it as attorney general.

https://washingtonmonthly.com/2022/...6-to-restore-faith-in-the-justice-department/

[/FONT]
xPxRoIMDqrCq.jpeg
[FONT=&]
[/FONT]
sJxUM_OEheigwXgFzjhB1J5vPuuu3_5miiw5LZ34vpw.jpg


Bottom line: If Garland has not acted by the second anniversary of the Trump inspired insurrection, Biden should replace him, with someone who will act?!!

FOR WHAT??
 
Garland has to prosecute the protestors at the homes of S.C. Justices, in violation of federal law.

And those who harass S.C Justices at restaurants.

"Those" being far left Democrat Socialist loons.

He won't prosecute federal violations...not to worry...Garland will be impeached after November.
 
So we allow anyone from the opposite party to do whatever they want, since any attempt to bring them to justice, is just politics in your world.

You mean like calling for peaceful protest? You mean like parents raising concern about their children's education? Oh you must mean like showing up to Supreme Court justices homes to intimidate and harass them in order to obstruct justice. Go goosestep off a fucking cliff.
 
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