The presidential election this week marks a first in the history of the United States when Donald Trump defeated Vice President Kamala Harris while awaiting sentencing on 34 criminal charges. The president-elect has faced criminal indictments in three other cases as well.
Justice Juan Merchan is scheduled to sentence Trump on those 34 charges on Nov. 26.
In an op-ed published by the Kansas City Star on Friday, journalist Bill Dalton argued that Judge Merchan can honor “the rule of law.”
Dalton writes, “The American people did the unthinkable — they elected a convicted felon president. Judge Juan Merchan should now do what was once unthinkable — force a president-elect to take the oath of office in a jail cell.”
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Dalton continues, “That message needs to be sent because, after Inauguration Day, the rule of law will cease to exist for sitting presidents thanks to the U.S. Supreme Court’s immunity ruling. Trump proved Tuesday, aided and abetted by 72 million voters, that crime does indeed pay. He thumbed his nose at America’s once respected system of justice. He made a laughingstock of prosecutors and the judicial process. He turned what used to be a political liability for candidates into a political asset for fundraising.”
Dalton argued that Merchan “should sentence and jail Trump while he is still a private citizen, no better nor more privileged than any of the millions of people who voted for or against him.”
“Merchan should show the same courage that Vice President Mike Pence showed on January 6 when he stood for the rule of law, risking his life and destroying his political career in the process,” writes Dalton.
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I disagree. I am just a lowly worker bee, but I wouldn’t switch with any of the billionaires. I have lots of things they could never even dream of:
- I know my wife loves me for me. Cause we got together when I was unemployed and facing homelessness.
- I know who my friends are.
- I don’t have enemies.
- I can go outside and take a care-free walk in the sun wherever I want, not just in spaces I own.
Trump strikes me as a deeply unhappy man. Bezos and Musk, too.
All their money and influence can’t buy them the feeling of being loved and respected for who they are.
At a party given by a billionaire on Shelter Island, Kurt Vonnegut informs his pal, Joseph Heller, that their host, a hedge fund manager, had made more money in a single day than Heller had earned from his wildly popular novel Catch-22 over its whole history.
Heller responds, “Yes, but I have something he will never have — enough.”