Nor, do I know hat he did not intend that.
That's not how it works. The burden of proof is on the one making the allegation.
Events and the actions and the words by Don Trump suggest he did intend for the EC vote to be disrupted.
To you.
Per the testimony at the J6 Committee hearings Don Trump knew some of his supporters were armed, he knew they were angry, he intentionally made them angrier, then he pointed them directly at our elected Representatives.
1.) What exactly was this testimony?
2.) If by
"..he pointed them directly at our elected representatives" you mean he expressed anger and resentment towards them, this does not necessarily mean he meant for the crowd to do violence.
3.) As I mentioned before, Democrats stoked anger and resentment towards Trump for four years.
That is context. That is circumstances.
Context is not evidence or proof. And
"That is circumstances" means it is circumstantial evidence which is usually rejected in our legal process. Circumstantial evidence is rejected because it only means that the allegations are one of several possible scenarios, only one of which could be that outlined in the charges. That's not enough.
It's not enough to say there was a rally, Trump gave an impassioned speech, that his supporters were angry, that he called for them to march to the Capital and that there was then a riot and the crowd broke into the building because this is all circumstantial. This means that it is entirely possible that even given this series of circumstances, Trump never intended for the crowd break into the Capital. Therefore, the exact opposite could in fact be true.
He wanted the EC vote to be disrupted.....first, by Pence, and when Pence refused....then, by any means necessary. Lest, any other responsible leader would have immediately asserted himself in media of any form in an attempt to mitigate the anger, mitigate the criminal behavior, the injuries, the damage to our Capitol.
1.) You don't know that.
2.) Democrats did the exact same thing in Seattle and allowed a bunch of punks to riot, vandalize, loot, burn and then take over an entire section of a major American city. Not only did they do nothing to stop it, some encouraged it. It wasn't until a couple of people got murdered that they decided to step in and put a stop to it.
Such was, manifestly, HIS highest duty. To protect America.
Perhaps. As I've already said, a case may be made for negligence after the fact, but none of this proves it was planned or that he meant for them to break into the Capital.
Instead, Trump, watched the criminals wearing his MAGA gear do the crimes.
He merely watched for too too long.
Dereliction of duty. At minimum
Criminal negligence? Sounds like it.
Again, perhaps.