IS SCOTUS LISTENING TO THE ALARMS

The former President of the United States of America, Donald J. Trump, lives in an otherworldly fantasy where he was King or at least Authoritarian Fuhrer while in office (2016-2020), which would then, also, according to his altered thinking, allow such imagined powers – like being above the law, to exist indefinitely as a civilian former President.

No surprise that others might have different views; such as signing on to amicus briefs warning the Supreme Court that Donald Trump’s claims of absolute “presidential immunity” from criminal prosecution tied to Jan. 6 is an “assault” on the “foundational commitments” underpinning democracy and if his argument is allowed to succeed before them later this month, it threatens “to subvert the careful balance between the executive and legislative branches struck in the Constitution.”

Petitioner’s theory that the President is absolutely immune from criminal prosecution, if accepted, has the potential to severely undermine the Commander-in-Chief’s legal and moral authority to lead the military forces, as it would signal that they but not he must obey the rule of law.

Adopting Mr. Trump’s arguments would encourage Presidents to violate federal criminal statutes by employing the military and other armed federal personnel to overturn presidential election results.

‘Profoundly ahistorical’: 4-star generals side with Jack Smith, tell Supreme Court Trump’s immunity claims are ‘assault’ on democracy

Law and Crime

 

Top Former Military Personnel urge Supreme Court to reject Trump Immunity Question

MSNBC

 

Ex-lawmakers warn Supreme Court over Trump immunity claims

Roll Call

 

Trump immunity bid opposed by 19 top former defense officials in brief filed with Supreme Court

Stars and Stripes

 

US historians file brief with supreme court rejecting Trump’s immunity claim

The Guardian

And these at KaneSpeak.com

United States And Weimar: Two Republics, One Failed One Failing

from 2021-07-16

One week after Election Day 2020, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General Mark A. Milley took a call from “an old friend” warning him that Trump and his cadre of sycophants were trying to “overturn the [newly elected] government”. The old friend was deadly serious.

Milley called Trump’s radicalised supporters “Brownshirts in the streets” and warned that the United States was having its own “Reichstag moment” – he was referring to the Nazi- supporting Brownshirts’ arson attack on Germany’s Parliament that Hitler used as a pretext to destroy the Weimar Republic’s attempt at democracy and assume absolute power.

Already on alert over Trump’s firing of the Secretary of Defense a day earlier, Milley responded to his friend’s threat assessment with what might be called his own DEFCON-1 warning: “They may try, but they’re not going to fucking succeed. You can’t do this without the military. You can’t do this without the CIA and the FBI. We’re the guys with guns.”

 

Lies, Stupidity, Cowardice. Oh, The Irony.

from 2021-07-18

Does History Repeat Itself? Well, Kinda

On 18 July 1925, part one of “Four and a Half Years (of Struggle) Against Lies, Stupidity and Cowardice” was published in Germany. The book did not see rewarding sales numbers.

The author was in prison when he composed this ‘autobiography’; it was the original title of the work published as Mein Kampf.

The author, failed artist Adolph Hitler, had been convicted of treason and sentenced to five years for his role in the Beer Hall Putsch.

The ‘Putsch’ was an attempted coup by Hitler and his assortment of allies to take control of the government in the southern state of Bavaria, a growing centre of the Nazi Party.

The coup did not go well. In fact, it was a disaster. Some of Hitler’s allies deserted, some were grabbed up by authorities – and some of those ‘allies’ sought to make deals.

And Hitler served only five months of the five year sentence.

Does History Repeat Itself? Well, Kinda

 


Ed Note: General Casey in featured photo is among the four star Generals and Admirals who sign the amicus brief.


 

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