Jamelle Bouie is one of the best opinion writers at the New York Times. In addition to reading his regular columns, I subscribe to the newsletter he writes, where he shares ideas, tells you what he is reading and what he is cooking.
In this post, he wrote persuasively about why Donald Trump is an insurrectionist and should not be allowed to run for the office he defiled.
Bouie wrote:
Last month the states of Colorado and Maine moved to disqualify Donald Trump as a candidate in the 2024 presidential election, citing Section 3 of the 14th Amendment. In response, Trump has asked the Supreme Court to intervene on his behalf in the Colorado case, and he has appealed Maine’s decision.
There is a real question of whether this attempt to protect American democracy — by removing a would-be authoritarian from the ballot — is itself a threat to American democracy. Will proponents and supporters of the 14th Amendment option effectively destroy the village in order to save it?
It may seem obvious, but we should remember that Trump is not an ordinary political figure. And try as some commentators might, there is no amount of smoke one could create — through strained counterfactuals, dire warnings of a slippery slope or outright dismissal of the events that make the Trump of 2024 a figure very different from the Trump of 2020 — that can obscure or occlude this basic fact.
In 2020, President Trump went to the voting public of the United States and asked for another four years in office. By 51 percent to 47 percent, the voting public of the United States said no. More important, Trump lost the Electoral College, 306 to 232, meaning there were enough of those voters in just the right states to deny him a second term.
The people decided. And Trump said, in so many words, that he didn’t care. What followed, according to the final report of the House select committee on Jan. 6, was an effort to overturn the result of the election.
Trump, the committee wrote, “unlawfully pressured state officials and legislators to change the results of the election in their states.” He “oversaw an effort to obtain and transmit false electoral certificates to Congress and the National Archives.” He “summoned tens of thousands of supporters to Washington for Jan. 6,” the day Congress was slated to certify the election results, and “instructed them to march to the Capitol” so that they could “‘take back’ their country.’” He even sent a message on Twitter attacking his vice president, Mike Pence, knowing full well that “a violent attack on the Capitol was underway.”
In the face of this violence, Trump “refused repeated requests over a multiple hour period that he instruct his violent supporters to disperse and leave the Capitol, and instead watched the violent attack unfold on television.” He did not deploy the National Guard, nor did he “instruct any federal law enforcement agency to assist.”
Trump sought and actively tried to subvert constitutional government and overturn the results of the presidential election. And what he could not do through the arcane rules and procedures of the Electoral College, he tried to do through the threat of brute force, carried out by an actual mob.
Looked at this way, the case for disqualifying Trump through the 14th Amendment is straightforward. Section 3 states that “No person shall … hold any office, civil or military, under the United States, or under any state, who, having previously taken an oath … to support the Constitution of the United States, shall have engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the same, or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof.”
As the legal scholar Mark A. Graber writes in an amicus brief submitted to the Colorado Supreme Court, “American jurists understood an insurrection against the United States to be an attempt by two or more persons for public reasons to obstruct by force or intimidation the implementation of federal law.” There was also a legal consensus at the time of the amendment’s drafting and ratification that an individual “engaged in insurrection whenever they knowingly incited, assisted or otherwise participated in an insurrection.”
We also know that the framers of the 14th Amendment did not aim or intend to exclude the president of the United States from its terms. In 1870 the Republican-controlled Senate refused to seat Zebulon Vance, the former Confederate governor of North Carolina. It strains credulity to think that the same Republicans would have sat silent if the Democratic Party had, in 1872, nominated a former Confederate leader for the presidency.
Under a plain reading of Section 3 — and given the evidence uncovered by the Jan. 6 committee — Trump cannot stand for the presidency of the United States or any other federal office, for that matter.
The real issue with disqualifying Trump is less constitutional than political. Disqualification, goes the argument, would bring American democracy to the breaking point.
In this line of thinking, to deny Americans their choice of presidential candidate would destroy any remaining confidence in the American political system. It would also invite Trump’s allies in the Republican Party to do the same to Democrats, weaponizing Section 3 and disqualifying candidates for any number of reasons. Disqualification would also give far more power to the courts, when the only appropriate venue for the question of Trump is the voting booth.
But these objections rest on a poor foundation. They treat Trump as an ordinary candidate and Jan. 6 as a variation on ordinary politics. But as the House select committee established, Jan. 6 and the events leading up to it were nothing of the sort. And while many Americans still contest the meaning of the attack on the Capitol, many Americans also contested, in the wake of the Civil War, the meaning of secession and rebellion. That those Americans viewed Confederate military and political leaders as heroes did not somehow delegitimize the Republican effort to keep them, as much as possible, out of formal political life.
What unites Trump with the former secessionists under the disqualification clause is that like them, he refused to listen to the voice of the voting public. He rejected the bedrock principle of democratic life, the peaceful transfer of power.
The unspoken assumption behind the idea that Trump should be allowed on the ballot and that the public should have the chance to choose for or against him yet again is that he will respect the voice of the electorate. But we know this isn’t true. It wasn’t true after the 2016 presidential election — when, after winning the Electoral College, he sought to delegitimize the popular vote victory of his opponent as fraud — and it was put into stark relief after the 2020 presidential election.
Trump is not simply a candidate who does not believe in the norms, values and institutions we call American democracy — although that is troubling enough. Trump is all that and a former president who used the power of his office to try to overturn constitutional government in the United States.
Is it antidemocratic to disqualify Trump from office and deny him a place on the ballot? Does it violate the spirit of democratic life to deny voters the choice of a onetime officeholder who tried, under threat of violence, to deny them their right to choose? Does it threaten the constitutional order to use the clear text of the Constitution to hold a former constitutional officer accountable for his efforts to overturn that order?
The answer is no, of course not. There is no rule that says democracies must give endless and unlimited grace to those who used the public trust to conspire, for all the world to see, against them. Voters are free to choose a Republican candidate for president; they are free to choose a Republican with Trump’s politics. But if we take the Constitution seriously, then Trump, by dint of his own actions, should be off the board.
Not that he will be. The best odds are that the Supreme Court of the United States will punt the issue of Section 3 in a way that allows Trump to run on every ballot in every state. And while it will be tempting to attribute this outcome to the ideological composition of the court — as well as the fact that Trump appointed three of its nine members — I think it will, if it happens, have as much to do with the zone of exception that exists around the former president.
If Trump has a political superpower, it’s that other people believe he has political superpowers. They believe that any effort to hold him accountable will backfire. They believe that he will always ride a wave of backlash to victory. They believe that challenging him on anything other than his terms will leave him stronger than ever.
Most of this is false. But to the extent that it is true, it has less to do with the missed shots — to borrow an aphorism from professional sports — than it does with the ones not taken in the first place.

“American jurists understood an insurrection against the United States to be an attempt by two or more persons for public reasons to obstruct by force or intimidation the implementation of federal law.”
I may pull up that brief and look for the citation for that assertion. That’s a really broad definition of insurrection, and I could imagine a lot of bad faith actors making mischief with it if it were the operative definition.
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Very true, but mischief is afoot already.
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Gee. It seems to me that a definition of insurrection only needs to be broad enough to denote, you know, insurrections. Like those that Trump initiated and oversaw.
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Noah Webster’s definition from 1860, cited by the Colorado Supreme Court: “A rising against civil or political authority; the open and active opposition of a number of persons to the execution of law in a city or state. It is equivalent to SEDITION, except that sedition expresses a less extensive rising of citizens. It differs from REBELLION, for the latter expresses a revolt, or an attempt to overthrow the government, to establish a different one, or to place the country under another jurisdiction.”
I recommend reading the opinion, which is here: https://www.courts.state.co.us/userfiles/file/Court_Probation/Supreme_Court/Opinions/2023/23SA300.pdf
The discussion of the issues that most people are interested in starts about halfway through the opinion. I wouldn’t treat this as authoritative, obviously, since it’s still subject to review, but it gives a good account of the “yes” side of the issue, and it references the opposing views often enough to serve as a fair guide to the overall debate.
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Thanks for this, Flerp.
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The one thing we should all be able to agree on is that Biden will have the Constitutional right to do whatever the Supreme Court says was okay when Trump did it. And Biden should use it. The Supreme Court may decide that regardless of the outcome of the election, Biden should feel free to go ahead and declare himself the winner and incite violence to make sure no one but he gets to hold the office. Seems like a dangerous precedent, but the Supreme Court seems very determined to make a public ruling that presidents should be allowed to do so. Or maybe Alito will find some textual reference that the amendment was written by people who knew the messiah with orange hair would be coming along some 160 years in the future and it applies only to that messiah.
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Haaaaaaa!!!
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I assume that you are being satirical, NYC, and don’t actually mean any of that.
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I don’t know if satirical is the right word. I certainly do not want the Supreme Court to give Biden (or any president) the green light to incite an insurrection in order to prevent their duly-elected replacement from taking office. But if the Supreme Court rules that insurrection is fine so that future presidents from the party that has no regard for truth, the Constitution or democracy (i.e. Republicans) may use this means to keep their sitting president in power, they should understand that Democrats will of course use the power the Supreme Court just certified as their right. And the Democrats just happen to currently hold the office that the Supreme Court could very well grant this ridiculously anti-democratic power to.
It seems that the right wing Supreme Court believes that the Democrats have the integrity none of them have, and won’t use the power the Supreme Court just gave to all presidents the way the Republicans will. It’s as if Putin had to step down and he was now at the mercy of an opposition leader who got to follow the “Putin rules” of democracy.
If Putin knew that every power he gave himself would be used against him next year when his strongest opponent is given those powers, he would certainly not be as quick to insist that giving leaders those powers must happen.
The right wing justices are certain that the Democrats have integrity and respect for democracy, so the Supreme Court feels free to find powers that only a corrupt, anti-democratic Republican party is fascist enough to use. The Court should be put on notice that Biden will use the powers their decision gives him, immediately.
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Uh, no.
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https://snyder.substack.com/p/courting-ridicule?utm_source=post-email-title&publication_id=310897&post_id=140451176&utm_campaign=email-post-title&isFreemail=true&r=3ljjp&utm_medium=email
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“an attempt by two or more persons for public reasons to obstruct by force or intimidation the implementation of federal law.”
That definition of insurrection would include Cliven Bundy and his armed supporters.
I also “could imagine a lot of bad faith actors making mischief with it if it were the operative definition.” That’s a given, since the bad faith actors with power in the Republican party already make mischief with laws (see William Barr’s handpicked sycophant John Durham prosecuting a Dem for giving a tip to the FBI!) But it’s just a brief, so no doubt there is an argument for narrowing the definition. But certainly even the most narrow definition of insurrection would include what Trump did. I’d hate to see a Supreme Court decision that gives a green light to Biden to stay in power regardless of the outcome of the election, just by having his supporters use violence to prevent his successor from being installed. Although of course if the Supreme Court gives their stamp of approval to Trump’s actions, then Biden should feel free to do what Trump did to remain in power and stop his successor from taking office as Trump tried to do. I hope the Supreme Court recognizes that whatever narrow definition they want to use to exclude Trump’s actions from being “insurrection”, they are also giving their stamp of approval for Biden to do what Trump did. If he loses, Biden should absolutely use Trump’s apparently now “legal” Supreme Court-approved method to stay in office to defend democracy. Or maybe the Supreme Court will surprise us all and identify insurrection as insurrection, even when a Republican does it.
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Section 3 would not bar Cliven Bundy from the presidency under any definition of insurrection.
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and identify insurrection as insurrection, even when a Republican does it.
yes!
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I agree that Trump attempted to negate the process by which we choose leaders in our government. Anyone who reads what I post here knows I consider him unfit to be a mole on the posterior of a horse, let alone President. But there is a problem he has, by virtue of his appeals to a frantic base, created in the American body politic.
Any political leader who has given him room to make his baseless claims about the election is similarly unfit to serve in any governmental capacity. Be it Haley or Jordan or Greene, their refusal to confront Trump and his lies makes them unfit public servants.
Trump has survived by breaking political norms that, while not written into the constitution, created civility and reason in public discourse. But he is not the first. Allow me to recall some others:
Richard Nixon apparently brokered a deal with South Vietnam that ruined chances for a peace deal in 1968. This was not only breaking a norm, it was illegal.
The Reagan campaign probably negotiated a deal with the Iranians to hold the hostages until he got himself elected in 1980.
Lee Atwater admitted publicly that he had engaged in public defamation right before he succumbed to cancer.
Newt Gingrich crossed more lines and destroyed more norms than anyone, and continues to support Trump’s falsehoods.
My point is that the Republican Party has been subverting the system for 40 years. If we rule that Trump cannot run, how can we allow anyone who is a member of this party, which is so mired in graft and corruption?
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There is still a legal process we have to go through no matter the wrongdoing. Tell me how we charge a good portion of the Republican party leadership with a crime and just which crime are we charging them with? Most of them were not involved in the insurrection. They were running from it!
Furthermore, do we not charge Trump with inciting an insurrection because all of our past failures to hold people accountable for their crimes? Can we concentrate on now and going forward? We must find some way to preserve the rule of law because what else is there between us and anarchy?
I sound a little like I am contradicting myself. Wouldn’t it be nice if the law was easy to enforce? If nothing else, Trump’s various court cases have shown us how difficult it is to prepare for trial and get a conviction.
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Some members of Congress were clearly part of the various plots to overthrow the incoming government–Cruz and Jordan, for example.
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Yup.
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The bipartisan House Committee investigating the Jan 6 “event,” stated for Trump, the committee unanimously concluded there is enough evidence to convict, and therefore recommended the Department of Justice to make the following criminal charges:
• Obstruction of an official proceeding. The “proceeding” being the Jan. 6 meeting of Congress itself.
• Conspiracy to defraud the United States. The committee argued this happened in multiple ways, including Trump’s lies about the 2020 election, then-Vice President Pence’s role in certification, among other issues.
• Conspiracy to knowingly make a false statement. The committee said Trump broke this statute by participating in a plot to submit fake slates of electors.
• Assisting, aiding or comforting an insurrection. The committee believes Trump incited the U.S. Capitol attack, but notes he was impeached on that charge already. The report summary specifically concludes there is enough evidence to convict, and, therefore, charge him with “assisting, aiding or comforting” the insurrection. The focus here is on his actions as the attack unfolded — and his lack of action in not stopping it.
Trump is an insurrectionist, Congress has declared him so. Why is this so hard?
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I would point out that deliberately refusing to cooperate with the investigation of the Jan 6 affair made the entire Republican Party complicit in the insurrection. With the exception of Cheney and a few others, all are unfit for office.
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What if someone told you that “the bipartisan House of Representatives—i.e., the entire House—found by majority vote that President Clinton willfully corrupted and manipulated the judicial process of the United States for his personal gain and exoneration, impeding the administration of justice,” and then asked, “Why is this so hard?”
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I don’t understand. He was impeached, as he should have been. So was Trump. Neither was convicted but impeachment is a serious action.
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My point is that just because a “bipartisan” committee says something doesn’t mean it’s true. I imagine the Benghazi committee made some damning findings about Secretary Clinton.
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One difference I see is that very few Democrats defended Clinton’s behavior. Few thought he deserved to be removed from office, but no one suggested his innocence. By contrast, Republicans who fail to publicly defend trump are opposed in the next primary.
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My comment referred to Bill and his antics, not Benghazi
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I would say, “Yes. He did that.”
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Ha, Bob, probably true in that case. Benghazi probably a better example.
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If someone told me “President Clinton willfully corrupted and manipulated the judicial process of the United States for his personal gain and exoneration, impeding the administration of justice,” I would expect them to provide some clear evidence and argument for their findings.
As Steve Ruiz’s comment makes clear, the bipartisan House Committee gave an explanation of their findings and a brief summary of what Trump did – and that summary is very convincing.
The statement above about Clinton did not explain their charges at all. Probably because it would have to include things like “Clinton lied to cover up his sexual affair”, which of course is why people wondered what the fuss was about. Not so when you read the House Committee’s findings about Trump.
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You mean like a blue dress belonging to an intern with his semen on it? It’s in the Library of Congress, of all bizarre places.
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Mr. “I did not have sexual relations with that woman,” who said this under oath (when he wasn’t taking airplane trips with his buddy Jeffrey, gutting the welfare state, creating the national standards and testing movement, and starting foreign wars to distract from his sex scandal.
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Saying I did not have sex under oath is like a slew of Supreme Court justices saying they believed in upholding precedent under oath. I am fine with saying many right wing Justices, along with Clinton, committed perjury by that definition.
“Roe v. Wade is settled as precedent”*
“I promise to do that for any issue that comes up, abortion or anything else. I’ll follow the law.”**
“I did not have sex with that woman”***
*My definition of settled as precedent includes my being allowed to vote to overturn 50 years of precedent it in very near future.
**My definition of follow the law means that I can decide the law means something entirely different and overturn it.”
***My definition of sex is sexual intercourse and not blow jobs, as per many young women in the 1950s who believed they could engage in heavy petting and remain virgins who had not yet had sex.
If all these cases of possible perjury, only two of these had any import to our democracy. It wasn’t Clinton’s.
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Indeed
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This blog’s host and its regular commenters claim that a SCOTUS ruling by the conservative majority to keep Trump on the ballot would be a partisan decision. The reality is the complete opposite.
All nine Justices are very smart, well-informed, politically aware people. I would bet my life that all of them believe that Trump would be much easier for any Democratic nominee to beat next November than would Nikki Haley or even Ron DeSantis. A recent Wall Street Journal poll has Haley leading Biden by 17 points in the popular vote. If that poll is anywhere close to accurate that means she would win the electoral college in a landslide and bring in Republican majorities in the House and Senate.
So if the conservative Justices are just partisan hacks as this blog always asserts, those six Justices will knock Trump off the ballot and make way for Nikki Haley and Republican control of the federal government in 2025.
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That would be the nondeluded partisan hack thing for them to do, as I have pointed out on this blog several times. However, the ability of these people to delude themselves is truly breathtaking. We have one “justice” who goes back to witch-hunting jurists to find precedents for his opinions and another who refuses to recuse himself even though his wife, during the insurrection, was texting the president’s Chief of Staff in support of the insurrectionists and telling him that it was time “to release the kraken.”
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A long comment is in moderation. In a shorter sentence, how can we hold Trump off the ballot when his entire party seems to be saying that his claim of a stolen election is legitimate? The entire party is repeating the massive lie that the election was stolen.
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Not everyone is qualified to run for the presidency. There are three Constitutional restrictions: the President must be at least 35 years of age, be a natural born citizen, and must have lived in the United States for at least 14 years.
And under Article 3, Amendment 14- cannot have partaken in an insurrection or rebellion against the same, or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof.
Congress, not the courts, can allow Trump to take the office by a two-thirds vote of each House. I doubt he can overcome that obstacle. Let’s not give credence to what the various sycophants shout from the rooftops. Many of them look forward to a Trump presidency to be pardoned for their own attempts against the nation.
Section 3.
No person shall be a Senator or Representative in Congress, or elector of President and Vice-President, or hold any office, civil or military, under the United States, or under any State, who, having previously taken an oath, as a member of Congress, or as an officer of the United States, or as a member of any State legislature, or as an executive or judicial officer of any State, to support the Constitution of the United States, shall have engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the same, or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof. But Congress may by a vote of two-thirds of each House, remove such disability.
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One funny thing about Section 3 is that it doesn’t apply to insurrectionists or weren’t previously members of Congress, officers of the U.S., a member of a state legislature, or an executive or judicial officer of any state. So, for example, the QAnon Shaman guy is eligible.
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That is indeed bizarre.
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Section 3 was written to keep former Confederate office holders from returning to government service. It’s one reason an originalist reading of the Constitution is not useful in our time.
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That’s probably what Alito and the other “justices” on the court’s Reich wing will rule.
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But there is no reason to think that such a purportedly Originalist interpretation is correct for this would entail believing that the drafters of the Amendment meant for it to apply ONLY to former Confederate officers and not to be the law of the land for everyone else going forward BUT FAILED TO MENTION THAT.
And that’s absurd.
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Right, Bob, I don’t think an “originalist” lens would or should preclude one from noting that Section 3 uses general language of broad applicability. Much the same as with the Equal Protection clause of Section 1.
Speaking of absence speaking, is it not odd that Section 3 specifically lists among the offices from which insurrectionists are barred Senators, Representatives, and electors, but does not specifically list the office of the President of the United States? Why would the drafters of Section 3 choose to capture the Presidency under the catchall of “any office, civil or military, under the United States,” when they made the decision to specifically identify those other offices? The strict textualist might not think it matters — what matters is what “office” means, they’d say — but I do think legislative intent can be relevant and instructive.
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Is it that they couldn’t imagine an insurrectionist like Trump running for president? I have no clue. It’s weird. It’s soooooo badly written.
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I don’t understand how Alito can possibly rule that Section 3 was written to keep former Confederate office holders from returning to government service, when there is nothing in the text that says it only applies to Confederates who sided with the South.
If Alito were to do this, he would have to rule that the 2nd Amendment applies only to “arms” manufactured before 1800 (or whenever it was passed).
Alito can’t claim that the 2nd Amendment applies to all types of assault weapons in the future, but the 14th amendment only applies to Confederates in the Civil War before 1865. I mean, he certainly will claim it, but it will simply show more of his hackery and corruption. He makes a mockery of the Supreme Court.
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He does. Don’t hold your breath waiting for him to be consistent.
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Now that I think of it, this probably was limited to former officeholders because to not limit it that way would disqualify almost every adult man in the confederate states. Which would not be a good thing for post-war reconciliation.
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Yeah. I would love for Fiona Hill to be president. Too bad she was born in England and so is barred from running.
Wouldn’t it be refreshing to have someone like that in the office, after Joe, instead of someone like Donnie who thinks that China pays the tariffs we place on its goods, that the Continental Army captured the British airports, that we should shoot asylum seekers, that Putin is to be trusted over our own intelligence agencies, that there was a massive effort across the nation to steal votes from him, and that stealth airplanes are actually invisible?
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Some time ago, the GOP floated Arnold Schwarzennegger as a candidate for president, but came to the conclusion he wasn’t eligible. It’s simple.
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Here’s a newly released video from January 6. It’s chilling.
https://piped.video/watch?v=WI5G8WQxEmk
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If he walks like an insurrectionist, talks like an insurrectionist, is on video looking like a an insurrectionist, fails to stop an insurrection when he has the duty to do so, than by golly, he’s an insurrectionist. People who declare him not an insurrectionist are simply STUPID!
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The BS about January 6, 2021 not being an insurrection is another repeated BIG LIE. I think Traitor Trump believes if you tell a lie enough times people will believe you and it will become a fact that everyone will believe.
I wonder if Traitor Trumps mentor Roy Cohn taught him that.
“How Donald Trump and Roy Cohn’s Ruthless Symbiosis Changed America.
In 1973, a brash young would-be developer from Queens met one of New York’s premier power brokers: Roy Cohn, whose name is still synonymous with the rise of McCarthyism and its dark political arts. With the ruthless attorney as a guide, Trump propelled himself into the city’s power circles and learned many of the tactics that would inexplicably lead him to the White House years later.”
https://www.vanityfair.com/news/2017/06/donald-trump-roy-cohn-relationship
“A mentor in shamelessness: the man who taught Trump the power of publicity. Roy Cohn, the lawyer who embraced infamy during the McCarthy hearings and Rosenberg trial, influenced Donald Trump to turn the tabloids into a soapbox.”
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2016/apr/20/roy-cohn-donald-trump-joseph-mccarthy-rosenberg-trial
In the first pull quote, I’d change BRASH to BULLY.
In the second pull quote, I’d change SOAPBOX to TOILET SEAT.
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Trump IS an insurrectionist. He is also, of U.S. politicians, the most
abhorrent, amoral, angry, anti-democratic, arrogant, authoritarian, autocratic, avaricious, backward, base, benighted, bloated, blubbering, blundering, bogus, bombastic, boorish, bungling, cheap, childish, clownish, clueless, common, confused, conniving, corrupt, cowardly, crass, creepy, cretinous, criminal, crowing, crude, cruel, dangerous, demagogic, depraved, devious, dim, disgraceful, dishonest, disloyal, disreputable, dissembling, dog-whistling, doltish, dull, elitist, embarrassing, erratic, Fascist, foolish, gauche, gluttonous, greedy, grudging, hate-filled, hateful, haughty, heedless, homophobic, humorless, hypocritical, idiotic, ignoble, ignominious, ignorant, ill-tempered, immature, inarticulate, indolent, inept, inferior, ingracious, insane, intemperate, irreligious, kakistocratic, kleptocratic, laughable, loathsome, loud-mouthed, low-life, lying, mendacious, meretricious, monstrous, moronic, narcissistic, needy, oafish, odious, orange, outrageous, pampered, pandering, perverse, petty, predatory, puffed-up, racist, rapacious (literally, he’s a rapist), repulsive, rude, sanctimonious, semi-literate, senile, senseless, sexist, shady, shameless, sheltered, slimy, sluglike, sniveling, squeamish, stupid, swaggering, tacky, thick, thin-skinned, thuggish, toadying, transphobic, trashy, traitorous, treasonous, twisted, ugly, unappealing, uncultured, ungracious, uninformed, unprincipled, unread, unrefined, vain, venal, vicious, vile, vindictive, violent, vulgar, woeful, xenophobic, yellow-haired like a troll doll, and zymotic.
And given the rest of the party that he leads by the nose, that’s saying a lot. Trump aims to be best! In this he succeeds.
Putin leads Trump. Trump leads the Repugnicans.
I say above that Trump is irreligious. But ofc he does worship himself.
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Ah jeez. I left out envious and insecure.
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If Donald Trump is not an insurrectionist, what is he? If Donald Trump is not an insurrectionist, Donald Trump is a wimp who incites insurrection by lunatic, criminal, not wimps. So, an insurrectionist. And a wimp. Can we get a “Fighting the Wimp Factor” title on the cover of Newsweek, people?
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https://heathercoxrichardson.substack.com/p/january-9-2024
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