Rich people rarely pay for their crimes. It essentially is a monarchy, just with different justifications for us to serve the ruling class.
I would say it essentially is an oligarchy, not a monarchy.
We've never really seen an American President as criminal as Trump before. There is some precedent with Nixon and Clinton, but nothing to the level that Trump did.
That said, this needs to be done.
There's been precedent with nearly every president since Nixon. I'd maybe leave out Jimmy Carter, but even has skeletons in his closet. Reagan, Bush, Bush II, and Obama all had scandals and criminality that were minimized. I find it odd that people don't realize that Obama continued some of the worst aspects of the Bush administration. It's why I pegged it at sixty years. There was absolutely corruption before Nixon, too, but it became more egregious after him.
EDIT: Getting downvotes because I guess people have rosy memories of Obama? Obama told me whose team he was on the second he said "We need to look forward, not backward" at not prosecuting anyone in the Bush admin for lying to the world about WMD's and leading us into an illegal and wasteful war in the middle east, a war that Obama ramped up drone warfare in. As if that wasn't a precedent of ignoring Republican crimes that lead us to exactly where we are fucking now with everyone treating Trump with kid gloves. Bush and Cheney are literal fucking war criminals, and people cooed over how cute it was that Bush shared candy with Michelle Obama. Give me a break. That shit is precisely what lead us here, treating war criminals with kid gloves.
Honestly, it seems like just the Republicans and right-wing media are on the fence.
Any other media person and non republican is "charge his ass and if guilty, throw him in a hole"
Hard disagree. Far more than anything else, this is about audience capture and the failure of Burke's "fourth estate." What it shows is the efficacy of segregated information ecosystems that have near total audience capture. None of this would be even remotely possible if all Americans lived and swam in the same information ecosystem.
But we don't, and we are seeing what this means for the health of democracy and the rule of law.
Conservatives, having the luxury of an unquestioning audience that's fully captured by an information ecosystem that's fully on-board with anything they say, are not constrained in any way by the truth.
The Press, with a capital P, no longer serves as a check against conservative lies because, due to the nearly complete segregation of information ecosystems, any facts that run count er to the conservative agenda can simply be ignored or twisted, and will accordingly never be seen by a conservative audience at all.
All of which is just to say that while our justice system is imperfect, the real problem is the corruption of Burke's fourth estate which was always conceived of as necessarily existing in opposition to, or at least as a check against, governmental and private commercial power.
But we don't, and we are seeing what this means for the health of democracy and the rule of law.
If you're going to blame multiple news sources/commentators (that all Americans do not swim in the same information ecosystem), wouldn't it then become a matter of whether or not democracy itself is a viable system?
As in, if the only way a democracy can remain healthy is if all citizen "lived and swam in the same information ecosystem.", Then how would it be possible to have a democracy? Like, how do we have a free healthy democracy, and enforce the existence of a singular "information ecosystem" at the same time? That sounds impossible.
thanks for using Leebra!
go to feed...
I'll be honest, the fact that our "justice" system is on the fence about whether or not we should prosecute a former President just shows how much of a fucking sham the entire fucking system is. The fact that the DOJ sat on it at first and only decided to go forward because he kept committing fucking crimes because he can't help himself is fucking disgusting. They did everything they could to let him go with a slap on the wrist. Fucking sickening.
We may as well still have fucking Monarchy if they're not willing to actually prosecute prolifically criminal motherfuckers like this.
In other words, yes, I agree with the title. It's the most important criminal prosecution in US history because finally after 60-some fucking years of non-stop corruption, we're finally even considering doing something about it.
save