Insane behavior. We wouldn’t accept those actions from any other functional adult. Trump is above the law and above basic social norms.
T33CH33R on
Who is he exactly asking to arrest them? Does the fucker not know that he is in control of the government?
SwvellyBents on
I wonder if he thinks this is his private diary?
That might explain the reckless expose’ of his innermost neurotic and obsessive thoughts and grievances.
Let’s hope someone is taking screen shots for evidence at the trial.
mycatisgrumpy on
It’s textbook sundowning. If he was my grandpa I’d take the car keys.
groovyinutah on
Oh I’m a pedophile and that’s ok I tweet all night and I sleep all day….
N4RQ on
“I call for my very WEAK DOJ to be incarcerated and executed for treason because they have not incarcerated and executed all my enemies for TREASON.”
scubawankenobi on
Been hearing that demand:
“25th Amendment Now”
Since 2016 election.
Ain’t happening. Why bother repeating it.
More/new unhinged tweets in a day?
This is “the new norm”. And by *new* I mean been consistently happening for a decade now.
DragonfruitOk2159 on
How can you arrest Obama when he has 100% total presidential immunity?
Really you need to lock up who ever gave him that much power.
Gekko8 on
25th amendment
ArtII.S4.1 Overview of Impeachment Clause
Article II, Section 4:
The President, Vice President and all civil Officers of the United States, shall be removed from Office on Impeachment for, and Conviction of, Treason, Bribery, or other high Crimes and Misdemeanors.
The Constitution gives Congress the authority to impeach and remove the President,1 Vice President, and all federal civil officers for treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors.2 This tool was inherited from English practice, in which Parliament impeached and convicted ministers and favorites of the Crown in a struggle to rein in the Crown’s power.
Congress’s power of impeachment is an important check on the Executive and Judicial Branches, recognized by the Framers as a crucial tool for holding government officers accountable for violations of the law and abuses of power.3 Congress has most notably employed the impeachment tool against the President and federal judges, but all federal civil officers are subject to removal by impeachment.4 The Senate has also concluded (by majority vote) on various occasions that an official impeached while in office remains subject to trial, conviction, and imposition of the penalty of disqualification even after he or she leaves office.5 The practice of impeachment makes clear, however, that Members of Congress are not civil officers subject to impeachment and removal.6
While judicial precedents inform the effective substantive meaning of various provisions of the Constitution, impeachment is at bottom a unique political process largely unchecked by the judiciary. While the meaning of treason and bribery is relatively clear, the scope of high crimes and misdemeanors lacks a formal definition and has been fleshed out over time, in a manner perhaps analogous to the common law, through the practice of impeachments in the United States Congress.7 The type of behavior that qualifies as impeachable conduct, and the circumstances in which impeachment is an appropriate remedy for such actions, are thus determined by, among other things, competing political interests, changing institutional relationships among the three branches of government, and legislators’ interaction with and accountability to the public.8 The weight of historical practice, rather than judicial precedent, is thus central to understanding the nature of impeachment in the United States.
Jessthinking on
Texting MAGA is the only thing he has. Every thing else he does is a failure. He lives in a private world seeking his parents approval and never getting it.
ASmallTownDJ on
I’m in my 30s and feel like I’m too online if I post, like, five things in one day.
secondsbest on
Sounds about how he would react to the warning of the inflation numbers that were just put out.
NancyGracesTesticles on
JD Vance and the entire cabinet: I love him. He’s my Daddy. My shoes don’t fit. NO.”
arwinda on
That’s a Tweet every three minutes. At least his hands are still working for solid three hours, and he didn’t fell asleep (much)…
wrongseeds on
This explains his falling asleep during press conferences and meetings.
spolio on
Did dementia don forget he went to the SC to make sure every president gets presidential immunity.. or did he think it was only for him…
Garlicluvr on
Mainstream media: “Hard-working President Trump gave his remarks on the current political affairs through his social network channel.”
[deleted] on
[removed]
morts73 on
Maybe his handlers can turn off wifi and give him a warm glass of cocoa instead.
jftirone on
He’s making the rich richer, so there will never be the 25th.
25 Comments
Insane behavior. We wouldn’t accept those actions from any other functional adult. Trump is above the law and above basic social norms.
Who is he exactly asking to arrest them? Does the fucker not know that he is in control of the government?
I wonder if he thinks this is his private diary?
That might explain the reckless expose’ of his innermost neurotic and obsessive thoughts and grievances.
Let’s hope someone is taking screen shots for evidence at the trial.
It’s textbook sundowning. If he was my grandpa I’d take the car keys.
Oh I’m a pedophile and that’s ok I tweet all night and I sleep all day….
“I call for my very WEAK DOJ to be incarcerated and executed for treason because they have not incarcerated and executed all my enemies for TREASON.”
Been hearing that demand:
“25th Amendment Now”
Since 2016 election.
Ain’t happening. Why bother repeating it.
More/new unhinged tweets in a day?
This is “the new norm”. And by *new* I mean been consistently happening for a decade now.
How can you arrest Obama when he has 100% total presidential immunity?
Really you need to lock up who ever gave him that much power.
25th amendment
ArtII.S4.1 Overview of Impeachment Clause
Article II, Section 4:
The President, Vice President and all civil Officers of the United States, shall be removed from Office on Impeachment for, and Conviction of, Treason, Bribery, or other high Crimes and Misdemeanors.
The Constitution gives Congress the authority to impeach and remove the President,1 Vice President, and all federal civil officers for treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors.2 This tool was inherited from English practice, in which Parliament impeached and convicted ministers and favorites of the Crown in a struggle to rein in the Crown’s power.
Congress’s power of impeachment is an important check on the Executive and Judicial Branches, recognized by the Framers as a crucial tool for holding government officers accountable for violations of the law and abuses of power.3 Congress has most notably employed the impeachment tool against the President and federal judges, but all federal civil officers are subject to removal by impeachment.4 The Senate has also concluded (by majority vote) on various occasions that an official impeached while in office remains subject to trial, conviction, and imposition of the penalty of disqualification even after he or she leaves office.5 The practice of impeachment makes clear, however, that Members of Congress are not civil officers subject to impeachment and removal.6
While judicial precedents inform the effective substantive meaning of various provisions of the Constitution, impeachment is at bottom a unique political process largely unchecked by the judiciary. While the meaning of treason and bribery is relatively clear, the scope of high crimes and misdemeanors lacks a formal definition and has been fleshed out over time, in a manner perhaps analogous to the common law, through the practice of impeachments in the United States Congress.7 The type of behavior that qualifies as impeachable conduct, and the circumstances in which impeachment is an appropriate remedy for such actions, are thus determined by, among other things, competing political interests, changing institutional relationships among the three branches of government, and legislators’ interaction with and accountability to the public.8 The weight of historical practice, rather than judicial precedent, is thus central to understanding the nature of impeachment in the United States.
Texting MAGA is the only thing he has. Every thing else he does is a failure. He lives in a private world seeking his parents approval and never getting it.
I’m in my 30s and feel like I’m too online if I post, like, five things in one day.
Sounds about how he would react to the warning of the inflation numbers that were just put out.
JD Vance and the entire cabinet: I love him. He’s my Daddy. My shoes don’t fit. NO.”
That’s a Tweet every three minutes. At least his hands are still working for solid three hours, and he didn’t fell asleep (much)…
This explains his falling asleep during press conferences and meetings.
Did dementia don forget he went to the SC to make sure every president gets presidential immunity.. or did he think it was only for him…
Mainstream media: “Hard-working President Trump gave his remarks on the current political affairs through his social network channel.”
[removed]
Maybe his handlers can turn off wifi and give him a warm glass of cocoa instead.
He’s making the rich richer, so there will never be the 25th.
Pepperidge farm remembers SCOTUS giving presidents immunity…
I figure these middle of the night posting sprees are him killing time while getting medical infusions.
And Americans just shrug and say, “bUt wHaT cAN wE dOoO?”
just playing the 5-d chess that we can’t undderstand
Also Republicans
Tone down the Rhetoric