whiterock said:
Sam Lowry said:
whiterock said:
Sam Lowry said:
Actually, if you look at all the evidence, it is clear that there was a strong desire to overturn the election results. I do not believe that it was a coincidence that the these demonstrations occurred at the same time that Congress was certifying the election results. When I originally viewed the people storming the Capitol Building I believed these people crossed a line of acceptable behavior. Since then I have learned of the planning that was occurring in the White house before this event occurred and it is pretty suspicious how it all came together, and how it all fell apart.
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Wanting to get votes thrown out because one thinks those votes are fraudulent isn't insurrection. It's something explicitly allowed by law!
The Trump lawyer who was behind the plan disagrees with you. He and Trump knew exactly what they were doing.
Eastman Told Trump That Pence Plan for Jan. 6 Was Illegal
Fighting certification of votes at the precinct level is not insurrection.
Fighting certification of votes at the county level is not insurrection.
Fighting certification of votes at the state level is not insurrection.
Fighting certification of votes at the federal level is not insurrection.
That the legal grounds for doing so at any given level might have been tenuous does not constitution insurrection.
That a robust debate occurred between the lawyers of POTUS and VPOTUS of what could and could not be justified under law does not constitute insurrection.
You are about to set precedent that most of US jurisprudence concerning elections is illegal.
neverTrumpism is an insidious disease of the mind which turns otherwise rational people into wild-eyed political nutjobs prepared to trash hundreds of years of legal and political tradition in order to obtain the scalp of a single golden haired POTUS.
This is the same illogical maneuver you tried to perform a few pages ago with the "no weapons = no insurrection" defense. This time you argue that there was no insurrection because the plan was allowed by law, and when that turns out not to be true, you substitute a new argument that US jurisprudence doesn't constitute insurrection. Of course it doesn't. No one here is suggesting otherwise. But again, there was no "robust debate" by the time January 6 rolled around. Everyone on all sides knew the plan was illegal.
Your comment about trashing hundreds of years of legal tradition would be a glaring irony, but at this point it's par for the course. You're defending the kind of people who'd rather plead the Fifth than endorse the peaceful transfer of power.
I am confused (not an unusual state for me), where did the alternate slate of Electors come from? The States submit the Electors, not the Executive Branch.
If there are more than one slate of Electors, the State determines which one is the official, correct? So, this works both ways. Pence has no choice but to accept the Electors submitted.
Where did the conflict come from and who submitted the slate of Electors Trump wanted selected? They had to come from somewhere and someone HAD to tell Pence which ones were official Electors.
If there was a conflict, last time in the 1800's, a Committee was put together to determine the correct Electors. That obviously did not happen, so somebody from these States verified the Electors. I am not seeing the conflict or how Trump has anything to do with it.
There was no actual conflict. Each state submitted only one official slate of electors. The "alternate" slates were submitted by state representatives acting at Trump's behest but with no real authority.
It is not insurrection to have that alternative slate ready to go in case the original slate is rejected at the federal level.
Except that the original slates weren't rejected at the federal level, and the Trumpists revolted anyway.
You have a comprehension problem when it comes to history and constitutional process. The original slates were in contention until the moment Pence to certify the electoral vote as complete.
And then there was no revolt.
Alternate slates had to come from somewhere. In the past (1876), there were competing slates and Congress could not decide there was a Constitutional Commission. It took until 2 days before inauguration to resolve. Inauguration was in March, which gave them time to come to a resolution. I believe this is the course Eastman believed was still possible.
Where I question that is the State Legislatures in the swing States all have "winner take all" provisions of electorates. Whoever wins the vote, gets all the electoral votes. It seems to be correct the State Legislature can change that provision, but they can't do it on the fly. They would have to change the State law and that didn't happen. So, Pence was correct to Certify. In my opinion, there does not seem to be anything illegal or even wrong. Trump legally can lead people to outside of Congress and chant for Congress to certify him, why not? It is all gaming as part of the political process. It is up to the Congress to certify.
The losing Candidate asked States to vote for him. They couldn't, except Nebraska and Maine, without changing State Law. So Pence certified. Even in Georgia asking to find votes, if it was a serious request and not rhetorical, is not illegal. The Governor could ask the Legislature for an emergency session and IF the Legislature wanted to change the law and do it they could. Nothing preventing them, it is their call. Naturally they didn't. But my point to Sam originally holds. It is political, not legal.
It is a given anyone that broke into Congress is wrong and should be prosecuted. But, I have not seen ANYONE defend those idiots.