You said the virus was a hoax. You said it was under control. You said it was like the flu. You said it would just go away, like a miracle. You said we wouldn't hear any more about the disease after the election. You admit you lied and played the virus down.
You said doctors should inject Clorox into patients, or shine their innards with light. You said we have so many cases because we test too much. You said you slowed testing down. You said we need to develop herd "mentality [𝘴𝘪𝘤]."
You've claimed that doctors, hospitals, and the CDC have all intentionally overstated the death toll. You've called scientists working to save lives "idiots." You mocked people for wearing masks. You held super-spreader events that caused people to die.
You got angry when asked what you would say to people who were scared. You said the virus "is what it is." You've never shown any empathy for anyone who had suffered from the disease, or for anyone with loved ones who suffered or died.
"Two people familiar with the matter say that in recent days, Trump has told advisers and close associates that he wants to keep fighting in court past Jan. 6 if members of Congress, as expected, end up certifying the electoral college results."
"'Must block Dem and [Republicans in Name Only],' one planning graphic posted on pro-Trump forum 'The Donald' read, showing a map of key streets around Congress that protesters want to obstruct. 'There’s 535 politicians and ~3500 guards.'"
"Protesters plan to meet in the northeast corner of the Capitol complex, where they’ll hear from a list of speakers that includes Rep. Paul Gosar (R-AZ), Trump adviser Roger Stone, and Rep-elect Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA), who has supported the QAnon conspiracy theory."
@BradMossEsq They're kind of forced into this position, because 3 U.S.C § 15 establishes that the electors' vote certificates are conclusive, given that the electors were certified by all the governors before the safe-harbor date, December 8.
@BradMossEsq So they have to assert that § 15 is somehow invalid under the Twelfth Amendment.
@BradMossEsq And since they don't have the votes in either house of Congress to get their way, they have to eliminate Congress's role in counting the votes.
I wouldn't doubt that he believes a lot of the false things he says, like the general proposition that he lost the election as the result of fraud.
But when he speaks of actual conversations that almost undoubtedly or certainly didn't happen, like this one and many others he has recounted (recall his ridiculous claim, for example, that he talked to former presidents about building a border wall), ... washingtonpost.com/politics/2019/…
It's important to remember that a presidential pardon reduces the ability of the recipient to invoke his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination.
If you have been pardoned for federal offenses, you can no longer invoke the possibility you might be prosecuted for those offenses as a basis for refusing to testify, since the pardon bars that possibility.
And the pardon of course cannot bar prosecution for perjury in testimony compelled after the issuance of the pardon.
"Many have been shocked by the silence —and even support—of so many elected members of the GOP in response to Trump’s increasingly outlandish claims. But their behavior isn’t at all surprising to social psychologists: ...."
"It’s a perfect demonstration of how toxic environments grow gradually, as problematic behavior starts with something small that then continues and expands."
"Real-world cases of corporate fraud provide similar evidence of the slippery slope of problematic behavior. Interviews with financial executives indicted for accounting fraud reveal that their conduct in virtually all cases escalated gradually." amp.usatoday.com/amp/3989411001…