Impeaching Trump

President Gerald Ford once famously said, “An impeachable offense is whatever the House of Representatives says it is.” If I recall correctly, there have been twenty impeachment actions brought by the House of Representatives, most against judges. Results at trial have been mixed, especially regarding Presidents, in part because it requires a two-thirds majority of the Senate to convict. Four of the accused had charges dismissed, in all but one case because the accused had already left office. Eight were convicted, all judges. There has never been a President convicted at an impeachment trial.

Impeachment is meant to remove an official from office to prevent doing further harm. It is not intended to punish, except for removing the official from the Federal payroll. Its use should be rare and judiciously applied; in my opinion, that means with a view to the future so as to prevent further harm and discourage similar acts. All three of the presidential impeachment efforts have resulted in acquittal. The basis in each case seems to be a jockeying for political position or advantage, not prevention of harm.

The first case, Andrew Jackson, was accused of violating the law by dismissing his Secretary of War from office without congressional approval. The constitution appears clear to me about separation of powers, and the law itself violated that principle. Of course, I am not an attorney; neither were most of the men who crafted the constitution.

The second case was Bill Clinton, accused of perjury and abuse of power. At trial, he was acquitted by the Senate, as the partisans in the House who brought the charges knew he would be. Robert Byrd, former member of the Ku Klux Klan a Democratic Senator from West Virginia, gave the speech of his career in announcing his vote to acquit. We would do well to ponder it. Here are some quotes by Senator Robert Byrd:

Mr. Clinton's offenses do, in my judgment, constitute an 'abuse or violation of some public trust.' Reasonable men and women can, of course, differ with my viewpoint.

Should Mr. Clinton be removed from office for these impeachable offenses? This question gives me great pause. The answer is, as it was intended to be by the framers, a difficult calculus. This is without question the most difficult, wrenching and soul-searching vote that I have ever, ever cast in my 46 years in Congress. A vote to convict carries with it an automatic removal of the President from office. It is not a two-step process. Senators can't vote maybe. The only vote that the Senator can cast, under the rules, as written, is a vote either to convict and remove or a vote to acquit.

The American people deeply believe in fairness, and they have come to view the President as having 'been put upon' for politically partisan reasons. They think that the House proceedings were unfair. History, too, will see it that way. The people believe that the Independent Counsel, Mr. Starr, had motivations which went beyond the duties strictly assigned to him.

In the end, the people's perception of this entire matter as being driven by political agendas all around, and the resulting lack of support for the President's removal, tip the scales for allowing this President to serve out the remaining 22 months of his term, as he was elected to do. When the people believe that we who have been entrusted with their proxies, have been motivated mostly or solely by political partisanship on a matter of such momentous import as the removal from office of a twice-elected President, wisdom dictates that we turn away from that dramatic step. To drop the sword of Damocles now, given the bitter political partisanship surrounding this entire matter, would only serve to further undermine a public trust that is too much damaged already. Therefore, I will reluctantly vote to acquit.

The full text of the speech is available here.

The current support by Speaker Pelosi for impeachment of Trump will make the Clinton debacle look like a Sunday church picnic. She is clearly seeking short-term political partisan advantage, by forcing Republicans to vote publicly on whether or not to impeach. That will drive further division in the country. I don’t approve of Trump’s remarks, but do they rise to the level of an impeachable offense? I don’t approve of mob violence as occurred in Congress, but is the best solution to tell half the country you’re now censored, deplatformed, not allowed in public, cancelled, and we’re here to shit on your grave?

The first thing I want to hear from President-elect Biden on Monday morning is that he urges Democrats to cool their jets. If the purpose is to remove Trump from office, that was done in November. If the purpose is anything else, it has no place in America

Continue ReadingImpeaching Trump

Progressive News Media Abandons Julian Assange

It's amazing to watch the "progressive" media slip away and abandon one of the biggest First Amendment threats of our time. Not too long ago, progressive media outlets gave full-throated support for Assange. Are there any progressive voices still speaking out for a pardon for Julian Assange? There would be, except that thinking has clearly become a team sport these days.

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Helen Pluckrose Discusses the Need to Push Back Against Critical Social Justice Activism (Woke-ness)

Earlier this year, British author Helen Pluckrose, also the Editor-in-Chief of Areo Magazine, co-authored a new book, Cynical Threories, with James Lindsay, who is the creator of the anti-woke website New Discourses.  The long title to their book is also their compact thesis: Cynical Theories: How Activist Scholarship Made Everything about Race, Gender, and Identity―and Why This Harms Everybody.  

Pluckrose was recently interviewed by Jason Hill of Quillette. The topic was the brand of postmodernism embraced by modern Critical Social Justice activists. In recent years CSJ's version of postmodernism has been increasingly employed as a political strategy by the Woke Left.  What is "postmodernism"?  Pluckrose offers these four characteristics:

  1. Objective knowledge is inaccessible and what we consider knowledge is actually just a cultural construct that operates in the service of power.
  2. Dominant groups in society—wealthy, white, heterosexual, western men—get to decide what is and isn’t legitimate knowledge and this becomes dominant discourses which are then accepted by the general population who perpetuate oppressive power dynamics like white supremacy, patriarchy, imperialism, heteronormativity, cisnormativity, ableism, and fatphobia.
  3. The critical theorists exist to deconstruct these discourses and make their oppressive nature visible. This results in the breakdown of boundaries and categories through which we understand things like emotion and reason, fact and fiction, male and female.
  4. [Critical theorists] also produce a profound cultural relativism and a neurotic focus on language and language policing as well as a rejection of individuality and humanism in favor of identity politics. This is a problem because of the resulting threats to freedom of belief and speech, the divisive tribalism and the rejection of science, reason and liberalism.

Hill asked Pluckrose why it was necessary for Lindsay and Pluckrose to write Cynical Theories at this time? Pluckrose offered this response:

Continue ReadingHelen Pluckrose Discusses the Need to Push Back Against Critical Social Justice Activism (Woke-ness)

What I Want for Christmas: Skeptical Coverage of Joe Biden by Legacy News Media

It's not a good sign that NBC's Kasie Hunt is fawning over Joe Biden, despite Biden's long and well-established history of being dishonest, which can be easily confirmed through Google by anyone with an open mind. What does it take to remind the legacy news media that it is their job to cover the news by refusing to ever trust politicians and by always following facts wherever they might lead. It is not their job to be cheerleaders for either political party, but here we are in an all-too-familiar place, though the script is now flipped. Do I need to say that I am writing this article as a person who voted for Biden primarily because I saw Trump as a much bigger threat?

For Christmas, Santa, make sure that news reporters take their jobs seriously. They need to blow the whistle on Biden whenever they see anything that doesn't add up and there will be plenty of it, just as there are in all administrations.  I am also asking Santa to  make sure that Biden keeps his promise to look out for the interests of ordinary Americans. Bernie Sanders he is not. Santa, don't be fooled by Biden's diverse-looking cabinet choices--he is loading up his cabinet with a neoliberal Who's Who of war hawks and players from big financial firms.  Based on Biden's top ten contributors, Biden's favorite "clients" will likely be these big financial services corporations and you can bet they will be calling in their chips starting in January.  Again, I am asking Santa to keep President Biden on a short leash for the next four years.

Continue ReadingWhat I Want for Christmas: Skeptical Coverage of Joe Biden by Legacy News Media

Time for a new party?

This year, once more, I was not pleased with the choices. Absent a viable third party, we were faced with an impossible choice for president: An old white man who had appealed to his party’s darkest fringes and failed the most significant test of his presidency, allowing his ego to overwhelm him; or an old white man who had trouble speaking and remembering where he was, whose party had been taken over by the loons of the left. The electorate chose the forgetful guy, but otherwise turned its back on his party. For the other party, which had neared becoming a cult, it won the larger election but was handed notice that its leader was unacceptable to America.

After the 2016 election, Democrats refused to accept the results. After the 2020 election, Republicans refused to accept the results. The past four years have nearly torn us to shreds. It’s not clear to me that our country can endure another four years just like the last four.

In 2016 I was not pleased with the choices, and voted for the Libertarian candidate. Libertarian is the closest we have to a third party, but it can never win a nationwide election. Its appeal is its downfall. The party celebrates the supremacy of the individual over the group, which yields what most Americans seem to want: social liberalism and fiscal conservatism. The problem comes when departing from core principles to the nuts and bolts of policy. Put ten Libertarians in a room and you’ll get 23 opinions on any policy issue you put forward. And, party discipline is anathema to a group that celebrates the supremacy of the individual over the collective.

To compete, we will need to be a big-tent political party accepting anyone who can subscribe to individual liberty as the basis of our Republic. We are not a collection of group rights, we are a collection of equal, individual citizens. Libertarians can set the principles, but politicians will be needed to run a political party. I think I know where we can find them. [More . . . ]

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