Just an open, transparent, and detailed audit of the votes and voters in the contested jurisdictions. That you consider such a request to be extreme and unreasonable demonstrates that you're just a partisan
hack whose love, loyalty, and devotion is to the party.
If the shoe were on the other foot you would be demanding the same and I would SUPPORT it.
Bullshit.
I trust that the State of GA is satisfied with its election and won't give in to your baseless claims.
Try finding facts first.
As high as the costs of holding Mr. Trump accountable may be,
some think the costs of not doing so would be even higher.
“This whole presidency has been about someone who thought he was above the law,” Anne Milgram, the former attorney general of New Jersey, told Mr. Mahler.
“If he isn’t held accountable for possible crimes, then he literally was above the law.”
For many, the point of a national investigation into Mr. Trump would be much larger than the man himself, a means by which not only to seek justice for past harms but also to prevent future ones from being inflicted.
As Adam Serwer
has noted in The Atlantic, it was President Barack Obama’s decision to “look forward as opposed to looking backwards” on the George W. Bush administration’s
systematic use of torture that enabled Mr. Trump to appoint Gina Haspel, who
oversaw a
secret prison where at least one detainee was tortured, to head the C.I.A. in 2018.
“There is no reason for powerful people to follow the rules if they know they cannot and will not suffer any consequences for breaking them,” Mr. Serwer wrote at the time.
“A system in which only the weak are punished is not a two-tiered system of justice,
but one in which justice cannot be said to meaningfully exist.”
For that reason, Martin Flaherty, an authority on other nations’ struggles with state crimes, told Jane Mayer at The New Yorker that investigating Mr. Trump could have
“a salutary effect” for the country.
Mr. Biden has promised he would stay out of any prosecutorial decision the Justice Department might make about his predecessor.
But Renato Mariotti
argues in Politico that an investigation by a special counsel
— appointed by the attorney general, not Mr. Biden
— would be the best way to ensure the process’s independence.
After he leaves office, the country could face a dilemma between giving political elites a license to ignore the law and giving them an excuse to use it against their enemies.
www.nytimes.com