Post by axemen99Post by James WarrenWelcome United States of Americs, Inc, en Elon Musk company
registered in Texas. :(
Winning is easy from those who are blind and dumb.
I want to see how Trump can stop the death of people in Gaza, death in
Ukraine and resolves troubles he created around the world in 2019.
He only cares about things as to how they affect him. That so many are
dying in Gaza? Why would he care, he likes Netanyahu who is a crook
like him and who stays in power to avoid going to court.
It's scary that he likes Putin and all the other dictators, a wannabe.
It must be worse for you axe being in the USA :(
Opinion: America will regret its decision to reelect Donald Trump
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/politics/opinion-america-will-regret-its-decision-to-reelect-donald-trump/ar-AA1tCxZf
The Trump who will walk into the White House on Jan. 20 is a man steeped
in unsettled vendettas, who came within a hair’s breadth of a string of
federal felony convictions that he is now empowered to wipe away with a
self-pardon — as if those offenses and so many others had never even
happened. Trump will see his priorities as he has always seen them:
party over country and self over all.
A man with 34 felony convictions can’t win the presidency in a nation
where trust in institutions is high. It’s only in a culture where the
justice system has long since lost its legitimacy that a man with such a
thick criminal record as Trump glides by relatively unremarked. That one
man can so effortlessly game American institutions to his own benefit
says as much about the decrepit state of America’s institutions as it
does about the moral decrepitude of the crook.
The nine years of the Trump era have taken a bat to our democracy, and
Trump’s MAGA movement has exploited the nation’s systemic weakness at
every turn. Political misinformation flooded social media networks owned
by Trump’s key allies, or by Trump personally. Meanwhile, Trump and
compliant Republican lawmakers torched public trust in the courts —
first by appointing an ethically vacant Supreme Court, and later by
urging his followers to hate and distrust not only the judges who tried
him but the entire “rigged” justice system.
Trump is now set to return to the White House, and he’s made no secret
of his lofty goals for a second term: gutting the civil service,
destroying the independence of the Justice Department and seeking
political and legal revenge on his lengthy list of personal enemies.
Judging by yesterday’s election returns, a majority of Americans are
eager to see Trump do exactly that.
The former and future president now inherits a nation deeply weakened by
his own toxic brand of politics. Our divided and exhausted nation will
now need to fend off the constant extralegal whims of a president who is
also, thanks to the Supreme Court, functionally immune from prosecution
for any act he undertakes. If Trump’s first term was any indication, we
won’t need to wait long for our next constitutional crisis.
Believers in the rule of law are in for a rough four years, because
though Trump contradicted himself countless times during this marathon
campaign, he never wavered in his distaste for the rule of law or his
admiration for strongman autocrats. Members of the press can expect
Trump to at least try making good on his oft-repeated pledge to rewrite
the nation’s press freedom and libel laws. The rest of us will be along
for the bumpy and chaotic ride.
It matters that Trump won his office in a free and fair election. It
matters that free people voluntarily chose to cloak Trump in power he
will almost certainly abuse in far-reaching and destructive ways. Our
country made the choice to walk down the dark path of Trump’s
resentments and conspiracies. We will come to regret it.