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Money laundering and bilking folks out of their money at a bogus university for starters. The jerkwad is not even allowed to have a foundation at this point. Once Mueller is done the list will be extensive.
In order to impeach, the offense has to have happened while President.
Now, once again, show me the proof.
You libs are all the same, just flap your gums with useless dribble, and see which way the breeze will carry it.
In order to impeach, the offense has to have happened while President.
Now, once again, show me the proof.
You libs are all the same, just flap your gums with useless dribble, and see which way the breeze will carry it.
Bob.
"And pray tell, where is the "PROVEN criminal activity"? was your question and my response was to confirm how Trump is in fact a proven criminal so not much of a stretch to imagine that he never stopped being one. Now it will be the evidence in Mueller's report that will be added to that list, which will be quite extensive I'm sure. My bet is on money laundering and conspiracy to defraud the American people. Care to move the goal posts again?
In order to impeach, the offense has to have happened while President.
Well, maybe. But impeachment is a special case and I suspect that if enough people in Congress see that he is doing (or has done) damage to the country, or seriously fails to uphold the constitution as required in his oath, is seen to have colluded or served the interests of a foreign country, or attempted to convert or control government activities in a scheme to gain personal profit, his goose is cooked. Add witness tampering and obstruction of justice to that list if you want.
Whether or not he is re-elected, he will likely remembered as a candidate who was able to rally those elements of American society who were the most upset about demographic change, without of course being able to do anything to prevent that inevitable change.
A last hurrah.
Quote:
Here’s one way to think about the 2016 election. We are witnessing a great race in this country between demographic and economic change that’s driving a new America, and reaction to those changes. On November 8, with a tremendous burst of speed, reaction to change caught up with change and surpassed it.
But is that advantage sustainable over the long haul, as change continues and reaction has to run ever faster simply to keep pace? Probably not. Those old legs will give out eventually, though we do not know exactly when. In the end, the race will be won by change — as it always is.
Looking back from 2032, we are far more likely to view the 2016 election as the last stand of America’s white working class, dreaming of a past that no longer exists, than as a fundamental transformation of the political system.
Quote:
In the end, the Trumpian populism of the 2010s will likely have no more staying power than the agrarian populism of the 1880s and ’90s, which was similarly driven by demographic groups on the decline and similarly undercut by ongoing structural change.
Today, as well, the great race, with some twists and turns, will be won by change, not the reaction to it.
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