Donald

Was Trump ‘an Officer of the United States’?
A careful look at the 14th Amendment’s Insurrection Clause shows that it doesn’t apply to him.
https://www.wsj.com/articles/was-tr...d-states-constitution-14th-amendment-50b7d26#
To the extent its text is relevant here, the section in question denies to a discrete category of people—including those who have taken an oath “as an officer of the United States . . . to support the Constitution of the United States”—the right to serve as a “Senator or Representative in Congress, or elector of President and Vice President, or hold any office . . . under the United States” if they “have engaged in insurrection or rebellion against same.”

----The use of the term “officer of the United States” in other constitutional provisions shows that it refers only to appointed officials, not to elected ones. In U.S. v. Mouat (1888), the Supreme Court ruled that “unless a person in the service of the government . . . holds his place by virtue of an appointment . . ., he is not, strictly speaking, an officer of the United States.” Chief Justice John Roberts reiterated the point in Free Enterprise Fund v. Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (2010): “The people do not vote for the ‘Officers of the United States.’ ”


you are very afraid

that's good.
 
Looks like Trump attended a football game in Iowa today. Let's see what the fans thought.

A clearer picture...

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https://www.yahoo.com/entertainment/former-trump-fan-explained-why-134849017.html

A former Trump fan explained why he stopped supporting him, and people are praising him for his 'self-awareness' and 'humility'

Lindsay Dodgson
Updated Fri, September 8, 2023 at 11:41 PM GMT+2·3 min read

  • Danny Collins, a former Trump fan, shared why he stopped supporting him.

  • He said being a Trump supporter made him realize "how horrible of a person" he was.

  • He said he used to agree with Trump's words, then realized they reflected the "worst" of himself.
A former Trump fan has gone viral after explaining why he stopped supporting the former president in a TikTok.

Danny Collins said he used to agree with Trump's words, then realized they reflected the "worst" of himself.

Collins responded to another creator who was asking Trump's critics why they "hate him so much."

"It's simple for me," Collins said in his video, which has been viewed over a million times. "Because he made me realize how horrible of a person I really was."

Collins said he "drank the juice" and "joined the cult."

"I was on the Trump train, baby," he said.

Collins said when Trump would speak about building a wall around Mexico and keeping immigrants out of the US and that Muslim people were a threat to the US, he agreed.

"All of those internalized beliefs, the worst of me that I used to keep suppressed, he brought to the surface," he said. "He showed me how much of a racist, homophobic, transphobic, xenophobic, misogynistic, woman-hating, Christian white nationalist I truly was."

He said he felt Trump's slogan, Make America Great Again, with "every fiber" of his being.

"And he made me believe as a white, straight Christian male, that I was under attack, that I was being discriminated against in America today," he said.

Collins said he was an inmate in the Florida Department of Corrections for 10 years and was never tempted to join a gang until he was convinced that "the white man was under attack."

In 2021, he was an inmate at the New River Correctional Institution and was "cheering" on the crowd during the January 6 US Capitol attack while in the TV room. He said at that time, he believed people were taking their country back.

Collins said he was released in June 2021 and had "every intention of telling the world how great Trump is."

"You know what I hate most about Donald Trump? Is that I actually believed the lie," Collins said. "I believed that he actually cared about me, the poor, common folk. I hate that he brought out the worst in me and everybody else that I was closely associated with."

Collins started to change his perspective thanks to a friend he made in prison, who was a Black Muslim man. He realized that everything he identified in Trump was reflected in something in himself.

"He didn't make me be a bad person — he just emboldened me to be the person I already was," he said. "Donald Trump appeals to the worst of America. In 2024, we need to bring out the best of America."

Collins' video hit a nerve with thousands of people, who thanked him for his "self-awareness" and "humility."

"Sir, this level of self awareness, personal growth and humility is something most people never achieve," one person wrote. "Much respect. Thank you for making this video."

Another said the video was "the single most inspiring thing I've seen all year."

"We can all do better," they said. "Bless you for your journey."

Read the original article on Insider
 
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"He didn't make me be a bad person — he just emboldened me to be the person I already was," he said. "Donald Trump appeals to the worst of America."

Is it realistic to think people like Mercor who likely didn't simply go against a better upbringing but never had one can change? No, they won't, once a bad parent has ruined a boy usually only a slow process of incremental changes made over to make any lasting improvement. A Mercor will always revert to type unless being decent is bedded well.

Being a good person, is like a skill, some are naturals and some must learn and practice.
 
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