89 points

I mean, think of the chaotic implications of letting states determine who is eligible to be on their ballots by following a federal standard laid out in the constitution.

Dogs and cats living together! Mass hysteria!

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67 points

And if leading a riot into the capital to overturn an election counts as insurrection, then anyone could be taken off the ballet!

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18 points

I mean, you could exclude like half the Republican caucus. Imagine what a bunch of fresh blood would do to the place!

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6 points

Fixed it…

“I mean, you could exsanguinate like half the Republican caucus. Imagine what a bunch of fresh blood would do to the place!”

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18 points

The problem is that Republicans will obviously abuse this. They’ve wrecked our justice system across all levels.

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34 points

This is always such a spurious argument; Republicans will do what they’re going to do regardless of precedent. There was no precedent for their attempt to throw out the results of last election but they did it anyway.

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3 points
*
Deleted by creator
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15 points

Republicans straight up dont give a flying fuck about rules, laws or precedent. They will always do whatever the fuck they want to do. Damn the consequences.

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1 point

Oh no they do. Their strategy is to push a precedent that fits their agenda little by little. Once they’ve got that president set they can carry out their designs more easily, and spend efforts setting other convenient precedents.

Like, they are going to continue breaking the rules. But that doesn’t mean the rules aren’t still slowing them down.

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4 points

Ok I mean we can’t have no laws because some leader is corrupt.

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-5 points
*

⬆️ This is the correct answer.

If they allow individual states to make their own “objective” legal determinations regarding what is or is not an insurrection then you will never have a democratic candidate on the ballot in any Republican majority controlled state ever again. They will take that as carte blanche authority to say that every single Democrat is a traitor to the Constitution, and is unfit to hold office.

Edit: I am following up because I realize what a contentious and controversial position this is, and I agree. However, the important thing to note is that this is the exact logic that was repeatedly broached by the Supreme Court itself. We can argue ad nauseum about the legitimacy of that body, but the bottom line is this: they are not going to allow Donald Trump to be unilaterally removed from the ballot. They are afraid of the ramifications of that decision, that much is clear. So, regardless of anyone’s personal feelings on the matter you need to make peace with the fact that the Supreme Court is going to all but destroy the protections of Article 3 of the 14th Amendment. That is just the reality, and that means it is more important than ever that we make sure Donald Trump does not make it back to the White House. If he does, that is going to be the beginning of the end of the United States for the foreseeable future.

The worst case scenario that nobody wants to talk about is Donald Trump being able to pack additional justices onto the Supreme Court that are in their late 40’s who will be on the bench for another 40 years, and guarantee the further erosion of civil rights in a way that will permanently destroy any chance for reform for the rest of your fucking life. This is not a game, this is not a drill, the Supreme Court has made it clear they are not going to do the right thing. The only remaining choice is collective action through voting or mass civil disobedience. Get ready…

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30 points
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No. You’re literally advocating for letting Trump do unconstitutional things because Republicans are threatening to do unconstitutional things if we don’t.

Making legal rulings based on obviously fallacious reasonings because of what Republicans might do or how they’ll abuse that ruling is morally wrong and absolutely unjust. What SCOTUS should do (assuming they want to find Colorado correct, which… Roberts’ Court 🤷) is issue the ruling saying Trump shouldn’t be on the ballot, then when GOP fascist states try to remove Biden, take those inevitable cases and judge them on their merits, upholding or overturning them as the facts allow.

They’re judges. This is their job.

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3 points

Fine, then the civil war that’s been brewing finally kicks off and we can deal with fascists in the appropriate manner. That’s not a compelling reason to implicitly allow fascists to participate in elections after attempting a coup, which would be the message sent if this is denied.

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2 points

They would need proof.

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-1 points

I was thinking this too. But let’s suppose the Democratic run states decide to play dirty (I know, I know). Now nobody gets past the post in a presidential election… Now what?

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-12 points

Are you serious? So, every state in the country should just throw out whoever they wan.t…allowing their residents to ONLY vote for the people that the state government wants them too? Sounds very…communist.

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4 points

Just so you know, that’s not what communist means.

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26 points

What happened to State’s Rights?

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19 points

Those are only for Republican-leaning states.

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-6 points

States should decide who can run for President?

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4 points

I think it was more a rhetorical point about how Feiblicans insist issues dear to them should be decided by each state, but are happy to forget about that when they want a certain policy nationally.

Anyway, yes. I thought states were free to choose how to run their own elections.

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16 points

It’s because trump hasn’t been found guilty of insurrection yet.

That’s likely to take longer than next election, which is one of many reasons our justice system moves too slow.

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32 points
*

Trump’s main argument, though he doesn’t admit to insurrection, is that he isn’t technically an officer under the united states and so technically the 14th amendment doesn’t apply.

He could be arguing, strongly, that he didn’t commit insurrection but he’s not. His lawyer basically said, “yeah, we don’t admit that but it doesn’t matter because of this technicality”.

Its a super weak argument. Trumps lawyer gave the scotus very little reason to find in his favor other than, “if you find against us there will be a tit for tat among the states leading to chaos” which, yeah, but that’s not a legal argument.

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11 points

That’s like sovereign citizen level bullshit. Crazy they’re going with that.

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6 points

Crazy but not surprising. Im sure Maga has many sovereign citizens in its roster.

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2 points

Yeah, but he hasn’t been found guilty yet …

He obviously should, and probably will.

But it hasn’t happened yet, and likely won’t before the election.

Which is why I’m complaining about how long our justice system takes for the rich, they can stall

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31 points

He was found by a court in Colorado to have engaged insurrection. A criminal conviction is not necessary. Just like there’s no conviction necessary for any other disqualification like age, citizenship, residency, and all the others.

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21 points
*

No. It isn’t. If you read the summaries I saw from today, it says the Justices didn’t even discuss whether he participated in insurrection. (Ed. nor anything about conviction. What have you been reading??)

Also if you look at the original Colorado ruling, it lays out in pretty great detail, based on the evidence presented, that Trump did, in fact, participate in insurrection.

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-4 points

It doesn’t matter if Colorado lays out that Trump is an insurrectionist.

It doesn’t matter if Trump in reality is an insurrectionist

It matters if he has been found guilty of insurrection, or an insurrection-like offense, through a final judgment on the merits

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4 points
*

It doesn’t matter if Trump in reality is an insurrectionist

That’s incorrect. It absolutely does matter if the candidate is an insurrectionist. It’s literally the only thing that matters.

Read Section 3 ( https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fourteenth_Amendment_to_the_United_States_Constitution#Section_3:_Disqualification_from_office_for_insurrection_or_rebellion ):

No person shall be a Senator or Representative in Congress, or elector of President and Vice President, or hold any office, civil or military, under the United States, or under any State, who, having previously taken an oath, as a member of Congress, or as an officer of the United States, or as a member of any State legislature, or as an executive or judicial officer of any State, to support the Constitution of the United States, shall have engaged in insurrection or rebellion against the same, or given aid or comfort to the enemies thereof. But Congress may, by a vote of two-thirds of each House, remove such disability.

The language is deliberately vague here. It doesn’t say a person needs to be convicted of anything, only that they committed the act. Colorado put forth an excellent case that the actions Trump engaged in count as insurrection.

During oral arguments in the court today, the justices hand-waved this aside and changed the subject, asking “what if” questions about them allowing Trump’s removal, speculating that any state could easily gin-up boloney insurrection arguments against any candidate and have them yanked off the ballot. “What would we do then?” they kept asking.

From home, I’m yelling “You do your fucking job.” Let the speculative bullshit charges be made, appealed, heard and rejected for the bullshit that they are, shaming the shit-slinging politicians for wasting the peoples’ time.

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2 points

It’s hilarious that you got this exactly wrong. Nowhere does it say he needs to be convicted. Prior uses of this amendment haven’t required convictions.

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-4 points

“Colorado laid out in detail why someone shouldn’t be on their ballot…” So, by allowing this, any state in the country can do this…“Texas laid out in detail why Biden shouldn’t be on their ballot, therefore, he’s not…”

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2 points

Texas use word salad. Co used evidence from congressional hearings. These are not the same.

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1 point

Right, and so we end up with even more of a mess than usual with presidential elections. Because some judges will actually do their job while others will find any excuse to play dirty.

The flip side is someone who actually participated in insurrection, like Trump, gets to be elected to office until Congress establishes a new set of laws for eligibility. Which won’t happen with the current political parties. But… What can you do.

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19 points
*

A guilt verdict for insurrection was not required for any of the other people made ineligible by the 14th Amendment, why does a different standard apply only to Donald Trump?

Couy Griffin, for a recent example, was removed from office in 2022 based on the 14th Amendment; the only thing he was found guilt of was trespassing. And after the 14th Amendment was ratified thousand of Confederates who had been convicted of nothing filed amnesty requests with Congress to remove their disqualification under the 14th Amendment because it was well understood that a conviction wasn’t required.

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3 points
*

Go tell the SC.

I’m not saying I agree with it, I’m saying what the SC is using for an excuse.

Or this article:

https://www.npr.org/2023/11/18/1213961050/colorado-judge-finds-trump-engaged-in-insurrection-but-keeps-him-on-ballot

Where the judge explains why she ruled different for a president.

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0 points

She was then overruled in treating him differently.

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7 points

You don’t need to be. Why do u think otherwise?

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-2 points

Why do you think I’m a SC justice?

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0 points

I don’t. You obviously don’t have the reading comprehension to be one,based on your response.

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6 points

14A arguments have been used to DQ people many times in the past without court proceedings.

The Supreme Court is obviously going to put Trump on the ballot, but we shouldn’t pretend they have any justified reason to do so.

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2 points

Are you referring to 14A arguments outside of sec. 3? I ask because section 3 has only been applied to one non-confederate

Section 3 has been invoked since the Confederate issue was settled, but just once.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/history/2021/01/11/14th-amendment-trump-insurrection-impeachment/

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2 points

Let’s just ignore loopholes because Republicans would never use the same one twice!

/s

If we fight fascism with inaction, I do t like our chances.

We need to do shit not just say “it would happen anyways, nothing we can do”

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2 points

We need to do shit

And what would that be. Let me guess: peacefully protest? Yeah that’s going to surely change their minds.

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3 points

In a sense, yes. To be precise, the blame for this lies solely with inept, cowardly Merrick Garland, who took two and a half years to begin doing anything at all to hold Trump accountable. If not for Garland’s incomprehensible delays, the matter would have been settled well before ‘24 election season.

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2 points

No blame for the president who though Garland would be a good SC pick and then made him AG?

I’m not saying “don’t blame Garland” btw.

I’m pointing out one of the main reasons we’re losing so hard is we’re not even trying

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3 points

Considering holding the orange dotard accountable was essentially his whole campaign platform, yeah, plenty of blame for Biden on this one too. But it was Garland’s job to do the needful and he slept on it, until finally calling in Jack Smith at the 11th hour to do something.

Too little, too late, once again snatching defeat from the jaws of victory - the DNC.

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15 points

We all knew it wasn’t going to happen, right? Like no one actually believed he would be kept off the ballots, did they?

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5 points
*

More of an outside chance. The Supreme Court might decide that saving the Republican party is more important than helping Trump.

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1 point

Trump being kicked off the ballot wouldn’t save the Republican Party at all. It’s likely Trump would turn his ire toward them more than ever, and many of his voters would stay home

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-5 points

God forbid we have more than ONE political party in power right? I mean, hey, let’s just let Democrats decide and control everything!

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2 points
*

One of the two powerful parties have collapsed before. It doesn’t mean one party rule forever. At most, they dominate a couple of election cycles.

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10 points

Breaking: Constitution Ruled Unconstitutional

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