evillawyer
Kung Fu Kamala, B*tches!
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- Jan 16, 2010
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Would not surprise me if he did it either, but, it doesn't rise to the level of impeachment. Censureship maybe, but not impeachment. If roles were reversed and this was a Democrat, no way would you believe it rises to impeachment. Hell, you don't believe perjury reaches impeachment level, no way this does.
Sounds eerily similar to what I've been saying. But he doesn't ask the question as to whether it rises to the level of impeachment. It doesn't, by the way.
Apparently because polls showed Biden ahead of Trump ... if Biden was a candidate. Dim or MSM sponsored pools would likely have showed a local pedophile ahead of Trump if he were running against Trump. So apparently it all goes back to polls and fantasies that Biden was Trump's rival.
That's not political, that is life.You literally just admitted it’s all politics, you dolt.
I bet you can’t wipe without getting **** on your fingers.
Of course I know that.You do realize that’s a double edged sword with TWO very sharp edges right? There are millions of people on the right that think of the liberal candidates running for POTUS the same as you think of Trump . Sooner or later the House will go back to the GOP . That’s why impeaching for political gain is just cheapening the impact and process .
Many on your side decided just that with Clinton.Nope. The law isn't based on your feels, Luther. And you don't want it based on the feels of others. What happens when the right decides your candidate is "the most despicable person ever"? Everyone has opinions. Would you want someone you supported subjected to the same type of "justice"? We both know the real answer no matter what you say. You're unable to put aside your opinion and see facts. You believe your opinions are facts. That's just dangerous, and once again, delusional.
That's why they put it under the umbrella of "abuse of power", which is what I said in the beginning. They knew what they were doing. Everyone acknowledges that bribery is an abuse of power, abuse of power is just terminology that is more palatable.The term "bribery" makes congressional critters very, very nervous; I don't think you'll see them leveling that charge on much of anyone these days.
I'm sure you have commented on this story and I just missed it, please repeat so I can know how outraged you are on thisView attachment 256183
Remember back in the day when Rudy Giuliani was universally loved by nearly everyone?
The guy who stood strong during 9/11 and gave us all hope and faith when things were sad and bleak.
My how times have changed. Sad.
He's an empty husk of a human now. Pathetic, really. And corrupt to the core.
WELCOME TO THE AGE OF TRUMPISM.
Absolute power corrupts absolutely.
Appeals to authority is a logical fallacy, and a lazy form of argumentation. Ironic.
Two of the ad arguments have developed beyond how Locke originally conceived them. His characterization of the ad verecundiam is considered the locus classicus of appeal-to-authority arguments. When it is a fallacy it is either on the ground that authorities (experts) are fallible or for the reason that appealing to authority is an abandonment of an individual’s epistemic responsibility. It seems unlikely, however, that Locke thought we should never rely on the expertise and superior knowledge of others when engaged in knowledge-gathering and argumentation.
This leads us to consider what kind of authority Locke might have had in mind. In addition to epistemic and legal (command) authority there is also what might be called social authority, demanding respect and deference from others due to one’s higher social standing, something much more a part of seventeenth-century society than it is a part of ours. The language that Locke used in connection with the ad verecundiam, words like ‘eminency’, ‘dignity’, ‘breach of modesty’, and ‘having too much pride’ suggests that what he had in mind was the kind of authority that demands respect for the social standing of sources rather than for their expertise; hence, by this kind of authority a person could be led to accept a conclusion because of their modesty or shame, more so than for the value of the argument (see Goodwin 1998, Hansen 2006). Hence, we understand Locke better when we translate ad verecundiam literally, as “appeal to modesty.” Fallacies (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)