"We do not trust our liberty to a particular branch. We need one branch to check the others."
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"We know the nature of impeachment. We have been talking about it awhile now." 2/
"It is chiefly designed for the president and his high ministers" to somehow be called into account. It is designed to 'bridle' the executive if he engages in excesses. "It is designed as a method of national inquest into the public men." (Hamilton, Federalist,no. 65.)
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"Earlier today we heard the beginning of the Preamble to the Constitution of the United States, We, the people. It is a very eloquent beginning. But when that document was completed, on the seventeenth of September in 1787, I was not included in that We, the people." 4/
"I felt somehow for many years that George Washington and Alexander Hamilton just left me out by mistake. But through the process of amendment, interpretation, and court decision I have finally been included in We, the people."
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"Today I am an inquisitor. I believe hyperbole would not be fictional and would not overstate the solemness that I feel right now. My faith in the Constitution is whole, it is complete, it is total.
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"I am not going to sit here and be an idle spectator to the diminution, the subversion, the destruction of the Constitution."
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"'Who can so properly be the inquisitors for the nation as the representatives of the nation themselves?'" (Federalist, no. 65)
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"'The subject of its jurisdiction are those offenses which proceed from the misconduct of public men.' That is what we are talking about. In other words, the juresdiction comes from the abuse of violation of some public trust."
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"It is wrong, I suggest, it is a misreading of the Constitution for any member here to assert that for a member to vote for an article of impeachment means that that member must be convinced that the president should be removed from office. The Constitution doesn't say that."
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"The Constitution doesn't say that. The powers relating to impeachment are an essential check in the hands of this body, the legislature, against and upon the encroachment of the executive."
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"In establishing the division between the two branches of the legislature, the House and the Senate, assigning to the one the right to accuse and to the other the right to judge, the framers of this Constitution were very astute."
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"They did not make the accusers and the judges the same person.
We know the nature of impeachment. We have been talking about it awhile now."
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"It is chiefly designed for the president and his high ministers" to somehow be called into account. It is designed to "bridle" the executive if he engages in excesses. 'It is designed as a method of national inquest into the public men.' (Hamilton, Federalist,no. 65.)"
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"The framers confined in the congress the power if need be, to remove the president in order to strike a delicate balance between a president swollen with power and grown tyrannical, and preservation of the independence of the executive." 15/
"The nature of impeachment is a narrowly channeled exception to the separation-of-powers maxim; the federal convention of 1787 said that. It limited impeachment to high crimes and misdemeanors and discounted and opposed the term 'maladministration.'"
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"'It is to be used only for great misdemeanors,' so it was said in the North Carolina ratification convention. And in the Virginia ratification convention: 'We do not trust our liberty to a particular branch. We need one branch to check the others.'"
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"The North Carolina ratification convention: 'No one need be afraid that officers who commit oppression will pass with immunity.'"
💭 I am afraid.
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"'Prosecutions of impeachments will seldom fail to agitate the passions of the whole community,' said Hamilton in the Federalist Papers, no. 65. 'And to divide it into parties more or less friendly or inimical to the accused.' I do not mean political parties in that sense."
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"The drawing of political lines goes to the motivation behind impeachment; but impeachment must proceed within the confines of the constitutional term 'high crimes and misdemeanors.'"
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"Of the impeachment process, it was Woodrow Wilson who said that 'nothing short of the grossest offenses against the plain law of the land will suffice to give them speed and effectiveness...'"
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"...Indignation so great as to overgrow party interest may secure a conviction; but nothing else can.'"
💭(Thanks Cuz😘)
22/
"Common sense would be revolted if we engaged upon this process for insurance, campaign finance reform, housing, environmental protection, energy sufficiency, mass transportation." 23/
"Pettiness cannot be allowed to stand in the face of such overwhelming problems. So today we are not being petty. We are trying to be big because the task we have before us is a big one."
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"This morning, in a discussion of the evidence, we were told that the evidence which purports to support the allegations of misuse of the CIA by the president is thin. We are told that that evidence is insufficient." 25/
"What that recital of the evidence this morning did not include is what the president did know on June 23, 1972." 26/
"The president did know that it was Republican money, that it was money from the Committee for the Re-Election of the President, which was found in the possession of one of the burglars arrested on June 17." 27/
"What the president did know on June 23 was the prior activities of E. Howard Hunt, which included his participation in the break-in of Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatrist, which included Howard Hunt's participation in the Dita Beard ITT affair,..." 28/
"...which included Howard Hunt's fabrication of cables designed to discredit the Kennedy administration." 29/
"We were further cautioned today that perhaps these proceedings ought to be delayed because certainly there would be new evidence forthcoming from the president." 30/
"The comittee subpoena is outstanding, and if the president wants to supply that material, the committee sits here."
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"The fact is that yesterday, the American people waited with great anxiety for eight hours, not knowing whether their president would obey an order of the Supreme Court of the United States."
💭Sounds familiar. 32/
"At this point I would like to juxtapose a few of the impeachment criteria with some of the president's actions." 33/
"Impeachment criteria: James Madison, from the Virginia ratification convention. 'If the president be connected in any suspicious manner with any person and there be grounds to believe that he will shelter him, he may be impeached.'"
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"Justice Story: 'Impeachment is intended for occasional and extraordinary cases where a superior power acting for the whole people is put into operation to protect their rights and rescue their liberties from violations.'" 35/
"We know about the Huston plan. We know about the break-in of the psychiatrist's office. We know that there was absolute complete direction in August 1971 when the president instructed Ehrlichman to 'do whatever is necessary.'"
35/
"This instruction led to a surreptitious entry into Dr. Fielding's office." 36/
"'Protect their rights.' 'Rescue their liberties from violation.'"
The South Carolina ratification convention impeachment criteria: those are impeachable 'who behave amiss or betray their public trust.'"
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"Beginning shortly after the Watergate break-in and continuing to the present time, the president has engaged in a series of public statements and actions designed to thwart the lawful investigation by government prosecutors."
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"Moreover, the president has made public announcements and assertions bearing on the Watergate case which the evidence will show he knew to be false."
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"These assertions, false assertions, impeachable, those who misbehave. Those who 'behave amiss or betray their public trust.'"
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"James Madison again at the Constitutional Convention: 'A president is impeachable if he attempts to subvert the Constitution.'"
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"The Constitution charges the president with the task of taking care that the laws be faithfully executed, and yet the president has counseled his aides to commit perjury, willfully disregarded the secrecy of grand jury proceedings, concealed surreptitious entry,..."
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"...attempted to compromise a federal judge while publicly displaying his cooperation with the processes of criminal justice."
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"'A president is impeachable if he attempts to subvert the Constitution.'"
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"If the impeachment provision in the Constitution of the United States will not reach the offenses charged here, then perhaps that eighteenth century Constitution should be abandoned to a twentieth-century paper shredder."
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"Has the president committed offenses and planned and directed and acquiesced in a course of conduct which the Constitution will not tolerate? That is the question. We know that. We know the question."
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"We should now forthwith proceed to answer the question. It is reason, and not passion, which must guide our deliberations, guide our debate, and guide our decision."
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"This short statement can be read in its entirety; as with most of Jordan's speeches, doing so is worth the effort.
One of the most common assumptions I see is that Democrats want to win the next election. The actions of some Democrats do not support that conclusion.
If you were an actor or politician and someone offered you tons of money to help big donors and/or the GOP, would you do it? Would you think about it? 2/
Could you even be persuaded to pledge your allegiance to a foreign government at the expense of the U.S. Capitol?
DO NOT CUT MEDICARE, @JoeBiden, end the filibuster and make #MedicareForAll happen if you truly want to be thought of as a modern-day FDR instead of a guy who took us further backward by cutting healthcare during a pandemic.
Joe Biden is no FDR. What an evil, scummy thing to do to the American people, especially during a pandemic. Massive cuts to Medicare because Democrats won't end the filibuster? Cuts to farm aid? With Democrats like these, who needs Republicans?
"The money is right there. It’s spent on bombs instead of homes. On cops instead of kids. On bailing out banks instead of families. Again the only argument against helping people is a lie." - @JoshuaPotash
Democrats have a majority, but Biden's cutting MEDICARE and FARM AID because of... Republicans? FUCK THAT! End the filibuster, you gormless <descending into incoherent and very unflattering mumbling> @SenateDems!
How dare they cut already sparse benefits from some of the most vulnerable people, especially during a pandemic! How dare they shrug away the mantle of a people's majority and pretend it's due to the Republicans' corruption instead of
their own greed and elitism. It's time to move forward and join other first world countries. It's time for #MedicareForAll.
"You all don't get it. I live in Trump country, in the Ozarks in southern Missouri, one of the last places where the KKK still has a relatively strong established presence."
"They don't give a shit what he does. He's just something to rally around and hate liberals, that's it, period."
"He absolutely realizes that and plays it up, they love it, he knows they love it, and the fact that people act like it's anything other than that just proves that liberals are idiots, all the more reason for high fives all around."
The U.S. needs a children's vote on issues relevant to them.
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Why? Because they're humans too, and they possess the wisdom of innocence from which we could become a kinder, safer, wiser nation. Their voices should be heard, and right now they're not.
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A children's vote would also educate upcoming generations on the basics of good citizenship in a representative democracy. They would practice these basics such that once they become adults, they will understand and better perform their roles as citizens.