The Justice Department under Biden is investigating and prosecuting crime.
Crimes by both Republicans and Democrats.
Guest Post author Jeffrey Laurenti is struck by the audacity of complaints by Republicans. They are claiming that Biden's Justice Department is weaponized against Republicans -- and implying it ignores crimes by Democrats.
Laurenti is from New Jersey, the home state of U.S. Senator Robert Menendez. Menendez, a Democrat, is the one with the hard-to-explain-away gold bars. Meanwhile, Laurenti notes that Hunter Biden is being prosecuted in federal court in Delaware for a rarely-prosecuted crime involving a false statement on a gun purchase. And In Texas, Democratic U.S. Representative Henry Cuellar is being prosecuted for bribery. Laurenti complains that Republicans are ignoring facts that are right before their eyes. "Such audacity," he writes.
Laurenti is a college classmate, a political scientist, and a former senior analyst with a boutique foreign policy think tank. He has been active in Democratic politics. He served as a New Jersey elector in the 2012 election, and cast his vote for Barack Obama.
Here is Laurenti with his wife Yuki at her 45th college reunion.Guest Post by Jeffrey Laurenti
Our Weaponized Justice System
It takes a special skill, which I in no way have, to hold two diametrically opposed positions at the very same time. It takes a special audacity to argue those same diametrically opposed positions publicly, without fear of embarrassment in the face of logical impossibility.
Such skill, and indeed such audacity, were both very much in evidence in the past week’s Republican offensive to paint the American justice system as “corrupt” based on a New York jury’s verdict against Donald Trump. It’s obvious, they insist, that President Joe Biden and his partisan hacks at the U.S. Department of Justice were the instigators of a case in state court in Manhattan.
Perhaps those partisan hacks in the Justice Department have misread the memo from the front office.
Around the corner from the now-famous drab courtroom where defendant Donald Trump declined to testify in his own defense, a powerful U.S. senator -- chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, and incidentally of the same political party as the current chief magistrate of the Republic -- is also on trial for breaching the law.
Do those who allege the criminal justice system is deeply corrupted view the senator's legal travails, gold bars and all, as further evidence of the system's bias?
Two hours south, in Wilmington, Delaware,another federal case is unfolding this very week, the trial of the current president's own son on gun law violations -- prosecuted, incidentally, by the very Justice Department headed by the same president's appointees.
Is this further evidence of the deep corruption and political bias of the justice system? (Amusingly, media headlines blare, "President's son on trial in case that Republicans plan to use as a political weapon.")
Those same partisan hacks in that corrupted Justice Department last month unveiled another criminal indictment, in far-off Texas, of an entrenched congressman who happens to be of the president’s own party and who holds a seat that is critical to that party’s hopes of wresting back majority control in the U.S. House of Representatives in this fall’s elections.
Are we seeing yet another instance of politically weaponized use of the law to persecute the president’s opponents? (The only public reaction by Republican leaders has been to put that congressman’s seat on their list of top targets for pickup in November.)
A top advisor to the former president has put the issue bluntly: “Is every Republican D.A. [district attorney] starting every investigation they need to right now?” Yet it seems that the Justice Department has already been doing that. So what’s the point?
The point, it turns out, is that the courts throughout the country should become an ongoing political battleground. The same advisor articulates the urgency of the moment, as seen through the former president’s lens: “Every facet of Republican Party politics and power has to be used right now to go toe-to-toe with Marxism and beat these Communists.” Huh?
Another advisor, himself about to begin a short prison term for contempt of Congress, seeks to mobilize legal minions in the glorious campaign against “Marxism” by holding out the hope of political glory: “There are dozens of ambitious backbencher state attorneys general and district attorneys who need to ‘seize the day’ and own this moment in history.”
I cannot say whether the charges and the evidence that were brought against the former president were based in reality; they persuaded twelve fellow citizens who were listening to every word. (Curiously, if I may repeat myself, the one voice they did not hear from the witness stand was that of the normally voluble defendant himself.) Presumably the appellate courts of the State of New York will review the trial record for possible errors.
But is the conservative cause in American politics so dependent on a single towering personality that its leading voices should call for plunging the country into a scorched-earth legal civil war? Cannot the one-time Party of Lincoln present a gold watch to the former president, donate to his legal defense fund, and find another candidate, unburdened by legal troubles, to carry on the conservative program?
You tell me Republican voters had that opportunity, and preferred to stick with the charismatic orator they came to know and adore eight years ago. Like the voters of Washington, D.C., three decades ago, who restored to power a mayor convicted in what his defenders said was a sham, the Grand Old Party sticks by its man.
Indeed, perhaps this slice of America looks forward to prosecuting a civil war to eradicate from public life the threat that Marxism or Communism or woke-ism or liberalism or environmentalism poses to their serenity, their traditional values, their way of life. Perhaps it takes an inspiring leader who breaks and makes the rules, rather than slavishly abides by them, to set a troubled society right.
Germans came up with a word for that. Führerprinzip.
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17 comments:
Very well said! What we’re talking about here is called cognitive dissonance, and the same attitude applies to elections. Republicans say they believe in free and fair elections and losing is proof the election was stolen, which justified their attempt to overthrow the government. As Voltaire said, “Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities.”
By the way, putting the former president on the witness stand and making him testify under oath would amount to entrapment: he’s a compulsive liar and couldn’t help committing perjury, as he did when he took his oath of office.
Audacity and hypocrisy are their traits. It reminds me of many criminals who project their values onto others. The thief who believes and states that everyone steals if they can get away with it. [I have heard that one many times.} in a group the inmates are laughing at another inmate who is saying to his girlfriend on the phone “who were you f… during that 30 minutes you went from the store when I was talking with you to home. What were you doing during those 30 minutes?’ When asked why is he so suspicious, he responded “Well, that’s what I would have been doing if it was the other way around.”
Nixonprinzip? To David Frost: "Well, when the president does it, that means that it is not illegal".
As I recall, subject to being correcd, the former Presidents own Lawyer, it at least one of a seemingly endless chain of "lawyers" was the one who made the claim that letting Former Guy testify under Oath would amount to entrapment. Interestingly enough that same Lawyer, whose license has been suspended pending disbarment, is under multiple Indictments for a plethora if crimes himself.
Cognitive Dissonance, indeed.
This excellent post couldn't be more timely.
Last night I watched two hours of the House Judiciary Committee oversight hearing with AG Garland, and the tactic became crystal clear. (Thank you CSPAN!)
Democrats asked questions about gun violence, domestic terrorism, price gouging and other relevant topics. The contrast couldn't have been more vivid.
Republicans repeatedly asked questions about ongoing cases, to which the AG, as is policy, said he could not comment. Then the Republicans accused him of being "non-responsive" creating a FOX/OAN/Newsmax soundbite.
In addition, they made accusations of DOJ collusion with the Manhattan DA's prosecution of Trump, without evidence, coupled with angry protestations of unfairness toward the convicted felon who is their Presidential candidate.
All of them, every single one...can we say, orchestration?
The key point here is that Republicans support Trump, whose contempt for democracy and the rule of law are well documented, in order to protect their traditional values. But America’s most fundamental values are democracy and the rule of law. So, they’re destroying the republic in order to save it. Another word for this is madness, which is why Lindsey Graham was too right when he stated in 2016, “My party’s gone batshit crazy!”
Trump, on the other hand, will pardon any friend or ally, even if they had plead guilty. The rule of law means nothing to him, only how it affects him. All those January 6th “Patriots “ who are now in jail? The day he is elected, they will be set free. Hitler was a law unto himself. That’s how Trump sees himself.
Anyway, I am curious what his sentence will be. It depends on how angry the judge is. A fine won’t bother him because his followers will kick in the money. Jail? Too harsh. The only thing left is Community Service. How interesting would that be?
Sick criminal minds. That is one reason so many criminals can't stay out of the slammer.
Indeed, perhaps this slice of America looks forward to prosecuting a civil war to eradicate from public life the threat that Marxism or Communism or woke-ism or liberalism or environmentalism poses to their serenity, their traditional values, their way of life.
This slice of America considers Communism a threat, but grovel before a so-called leader who “fell in love” with Kim Jong Un and said of President Xi Jinping: “He runs 1.4 billion people with an iron fist. Smart, brilliant, everything perfect.”
They consider woke-ism a threat because they have no clue what it means – maybe something to do with being nice to gays. Fuggedaboudit.
Liberalism is responsible for desegregation, the civil rights act, social security, Medicare and the stolen election. Evil! Turn your American flag upside down!!
Environmentalism would have us believe that pollution is bad and fossil fuels are heating the globe. Hoax! Fake News!! Grab your pitchforks and AR-15s!!!
I don’t want Trump to win in November either, but i don’t see how any of this calling him and his supporters Nazis is supposed to help. I think rhetoric like this will be ineffective with low-information swing voters.
It seems to me that there are two possibly effective ways for the D’s to keep Trump from winning:
* a significant move to the center
* nominate some else (younger! not KH!) at the convention
Or, the D’s can cross their fingers and hope for a miracle.
If the Democrats seem further from the center, it’s because the center moved as the Republicans went far-right.
Winning an election involves positive and negative: depicting oneself as a more worthy candidate and the other as less so. Democrats have been touting Biden’s accomplishments and when Trump and his party act like Nazis, it’s totally appropriate to point that out. Unfortunately, there are a lot of people who like that about him. Let’s hope sanity prevails.
The center of gravity Democratic Party has been moving steadily to the left over the last decade, fueled by the rise of its woke fringe. This has not served the party well.
Democrats and the liberal mainstream media have been screaming about Trump being a Nazi for years. Any voter who was going to be swayed by that message has already been swayed. At best, it’s a waste of valuable time that could be filled with a message that might affect a voter who is still undecided.
Right, let's quit reminding people of the many parallels between Trump's and Hitler's rhetoric and rise to power. It can't happen here.
The conflation of Trump with Hitler is monumentally stupid, not least because unlike Trump, Hitler was not stupid, and unlike Trump Hitler had a coherent ideology, albeit evil. Trump is a golem. And even if we allow that Trump attempted to burn the Reichstag, his power ended despite himself. His efforts now are electoral. The nearest thing we have to Nazis in America are campus loons and fellow travelers like the ISIS thugs just arrested.
Hitler's evil was manifested incrementally. Trump's likewise. Project 2025 isn't written by campus loons. And ISIS thugs aren't the ones planning concentration camps for the millions of deportees.
Presidents have pardon powers. They all set people free.
It's not a republican or Democrat thing.
At this point all voters have seen TFG is a trainwreck.
As much as his followers bellow and threaten, they only get one vote (in spite of their efforts at voter fraud).
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