‘What Do You Do When a Criminally Minded Person Is President?’

We are looking at the possibility of electing a criminal to be our president. So what do we do if or when that happens? We have been here before. And it has been the people who stopped the criminal.

‘What Do You Do When a Criminally Minded Person Is President?’

Corey Brettschneider’s new book couldn’t have landed at a more auspicious moment. The Presidents and the People: Five Leaders Who Threatened Democracy and the Citizens Who Fought to Defend It, went on sale last Tuesday — the day after the Supreme Court’s ruling in the election interference case against Donald Trump that gave presidents broad immunity for their “official acts.”

Brettschneider, a professor of politics and constitutional law at Brown University, writes about five past presidents who “posed great threats to democracy” by pushing the limits of legality — John Adams, James Buchanan, Andrew Johnson, Woodrow Wilson and Richard Nixon — and the citizens who responded by pushing back in an age-old American pattern of constitutional crisis and recovery.

Adams, after all, had prosecuted people who criticized him, Buchanan “colluded with the Supreme Court to deny constitutional personhood to African Americans,” as Brettschneider outlines. Johnson urged violence against his political opponents while heightening white supremacy in the wake of the Civil War, Wilson “nationalized Jim Crow” and Nixon, of course, committed criminal acts in the sprawling Watergate scandal. “When the president does it,” as the 37th president (in)famously said, “that means it is not illegal.”

In response to these executives’ attempts to weaken or outright eliminate the checks on their power, citizens fought back — from abolitionist Frederick Douglass to journalists Ida B. Wells and William Monroe Trotter to Pentagon Papers leaker Daniel Ellsberg and others — recommitting to the Constitution and stoking what Brettschneider calls “democratic recovery.”

Brettschneider reminds us that we were warned from the beginning this could happen.

“Revolutionary War heroes such as Patrick Henry predicted that the office was so powerful that a president with authoritarian ambitions could simply lay claim to the ‘American throne,’” Brettschneider writes, noting that “the power of the presidency has always been a loaded gun, one that threatens American democracy itself. Patrick Henry’s warning has always been relevant.” And it has arguably never been more relevant than it is right now.

www.msn.com/en-us/news/opinion/what-do-you-do-when-a-criminally-minded-person-is-president/ar-BB1pB31p?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=db329121e4384b0bb88b882b383e20c6&ei=51
Obviously nothing, Biden is still carrying the Seal
 
We are looking at the possibility of electing a criminal to be our president. So what do we do if or when that happens? We have been here before. And it has been the people who stopped the criminal.

‘What Do You Do When a Criminally Minded Person Is President?’

Corey Brettschneider’s new book couldn’t have landed at a more auspicious moment. The Presidents and the People: Five Leaders Who Threatened Democracy and the Citizens Who Fought to Defend It, went on sale last Tuesday — the day after the Supreme Court’s ruling in the election interference case against Donald Trump that gave presidents broad immunity for their “official acts.”

Brettschneider, a professor of politics and constitutional law at Brown University, writes about five past presidents who “posed great threats to democracy” by pushing the limits of legality — John Adams, James Buchanan, Andrew Johnson, Woodrow Wilson and Richard Nixon — and the citizens who responded by pushing back in an age-old American pattern of constitutional crisis and recovery.

Adams, after all, had prosecuted people who criticized him, Buchanan “colluded with the Supreme Court to deny constitutional personhood to African Americans,” as Brettschneider outlines. Johnson urged violence against his political opponents while heightening white supremacy in the wake of the Civil War, Wilson “nationalized Jim Crow” and Nixon, of course, committed criminal acts in the sprawling Watergate scandal. “When the president does it,” as the 37th president (in)famously said, “that means it is not illegal.”

In response to these executives’ attempts to weaken or outright eliminate the checks on their power, citizens fought back — from abolitionist Frederick Douglass to journalists Ida B. Wells and William Monroe Trotter to Pentagon Papers leaker Daniel Ellsberg and others — recommitting to the Constitution and stoking what Brettschneider calls “democratic recovery.”

Brettschneider reminds us that we were warned from the beginning this could happen.

“Revolutionary War heroes such as Patrick Henry predicted that the office was so powerful that a president with authoritarian ambitions could simply lay claim to the ‘American throne,’” Brettschneider writes, noting that “the power of the presidency has always been a loaded gun, one that threatens American democracy itself. Patrick Henry’s warning has always been relevant.” And it has arguably never been more relevant than it is right now.

www.msn.com/en-us/news/opinion/what-do-you-do-when-a-criminally-minded-person-is-president/ar-BB1pB31p?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=db329121e4384b0bb88b882b383e20c6&ei=51
Who else sees the irony of im#2 questioning the integrity of another?
 
Hey butt breath, Biden was President in 2021. And, that wasn’t the point anyways. The topic was keeping campaign promises. Trump did all that on the long list I provided and did it all in just one term.
the dates are just the publishing date. Analyzing data takes alot of work and time, several months. Biden's data isnt yet available on those dates.
You can see the details here.

but on the other subject of Trump's promises, there is a list of forty broken ones. Like more than half of people paying more taxes.
 
We are looking at the possibility of electing a criminal to be our president. So what do we do if or when that happens? We have been here before. And it has been the people who stopped the criminal.

‘What Do You Do When a Criminally Minded Person Is President?’

Corey Brettschneider’s new book couldn’t have landed at a more auspicious moment. The Presidents and the People: Five Leaders Who Threatened Democracy and the Citizens Who Fought to Defend It, went on sale last Tuesday — the day after the Supreme Court’s ruling in the election interference case against Donald Trump that gave presidents broad immunity for their “official acts.”

Brettschneider, a professor of politics and constitutional law at Brown University, writes about five past presidents who “posed great threats to democracy” by pushing the limits of legality — John Adams, James Buchanan, Andrew Johnson, Woodrow Wilson and Richard Nixon — and the citizens who responded by pushing back in an age-old American pattern of constitutional crisis and recovery.

Adams, after all, had prosecuted people who criticized him, Buchanan “colluded with the Supreme Court to deny constitutional personhood to African Americans,” as Brettschneider outlines. Johnson urged violence against his political opponents while heightening white supremacy in the wake of the Civil War, Wilson “nationalized Jim Crow” and Nixon, of course, committed criminal acts in the sprawling Watergate scandal. “When the president does it,” as the 37th president (in)famously said, “that means it is not illegal.”

In response to these executives’ attempts to weaken or outright eliminate the checks on their power, citizens fought back — from abolitionist Frederick Douglass to journalists Ida B. Wells and William Monroe Trotter to Pentagon Papers leaker Daniel Ellsberg and others — recommitting to the Constitution and stoking what Brettschneider calls “democratic recovery.”

Brettschneider reminds us that we were warned from the beginning this could happen.

“Revolutionary War heroes such as Patrick Henry predicted that the office was so powerful that a president with authoritarian ambitions could simply lay claim to the ‘American throne,’” Brettschneider writes, noting that “the power of the presidency has always been a loaded gun, one that threatens American democracy itself. Patrick Henry’s warning has always been relevant.” And it has arguably never been more relevant than it is right now.

www.msn.com/en-us/news/opinion/what-do-you-do-when-a-criminally-minded-person-is-president/ar-BB1pB31p?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=db329121e4384b0bb88b882b383e20c6&ei=51
You must know Joe Biden is a criminal, yet you voted for him.

Duopoly dupes never learn.
 
We are looking at the possibility of electing a criminal to be our president. So what do we do if or when that happens? We have been here before. And it has been the people who stopped the criminal.

‘What Do You Do When a Criminally Minded Person Is President?’

Corey Brettschneider’s new book couldn’t have landed at a more auspicious moment. The Presidents and the People: Five Leaders Who Threatened Democracy and the Citizens Who Fought to Defend It, went on sale last Tuesday — the day after the Supreme Court’s ruling in the election interference case against Donald Trump that gave presidents broad immunity for their “official acts.”

Brettschneider, a professor of politics and constitutional law at Brown University, writes about five past presidents who “posed great threats to democracy” by pushing the limits of legality — John Adams, James Buchanan, Andrew Johnson, Woodrow Wilson and Richard Nixon — and the citizens who responded by pushing back in an age-old American pattern of constitutional crisis and recovery.

Adams, after all, had prosecuted people who criticized him, Buchanan “colluded with the Supreme Court to deny constitutional personhood to African Americans,” as Brettschneider outlines. Johnson urged violence against his political opponents while heightening white supremacy in the wake of the Civil War, Wilson “nationalized Jim Crow” and Nixon, of course, committed criminal acts in the sprawling Watergate scandal. “When the president does it,” as the 37th president (in)famously said, “that means it is not illegal.”

In response to these executives’ attempts to weaken or outright eliminate the checks on their power, citizens fought back — from abolitionist Frederick Douglass to journalists Ida B. Wells and William Monroe Trotter to Pentagon Papers leaker Daniel Ellsberg and others — recommitting to the Constitution and stoking what Brettschneider calls “democratic recovery.”

Brettschneider reminds us that we were warned from the beginning this could happen.

“Revolutionary War heroes such as Patrick Henry predicted that the office was so powerful that a president with authoritarian ambitions could simply lay claim to the ‘American throne,’” Brettschneider writes, noting that “the power of the presidency has always been a loaded gun, one that threatens American democracy itself. Patrick Henry’s warning has always been relevant.” And it has arguably never been more relevant than it is right now.

www.msn.com/en-us/news/opinion/what-do-you-do-when-a-criminally-minded-person-is-president/ar-BB1pB31p?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=db329121e4384b0bb88b882b383e20c6&ei=51
So what is the answer to your question? “What do you do when a criminally minded person is president”? “Fight back”? How?
 
Trump once said a president under felony indictment would grind the government to a halt and create a constitutional crisis
The Founders did what they could to safeguard the country against corrupting forces, but they couldn't have envisioned a straight up criminal.

And far worse, they would never have envisioned an America that just didn't care.
 
True.
Worst recession since 1936
Worst pandemic since 1920
Worst race riots since 1968
Trump did an awesome job of record braking results.
Groceries and gas were affordable during Trump.

People still vote their wallets. 12,000,000 unvetted illegals is a National Security disaster.
 
Groceries and gas were affordable during Trump.

They are affordable now. I don't have any problem buying them.

People still vote their wallets. 12,000,000 unvetted illegals is a National Security disaster.

You mean after you guys took apart the apparatus for vetting them?
 
The Founders did what they could to safeguard the country against corrupting forces, but they couldn't have envisioned a straight up criminal.

And far worse, they would never have envisioned an America that just didn't care.

All of the founders were criminals who signed a declaration of independence. They could never have imagined that we would have a pedo president in office right now.
 
We are looking at the possibility of electing a criminal to be our president. So what do we do if or when that happens? We have been here before. And it has been the people who stopped the criminal.

‘What Do You Do When a Criminally Minded Person Is President?’

Corey Brettschneider’s new book couldn’t have landed at a more auspicious moment. The Presidents and the People: Five Leaders Who Threatened Democracy and the Citizens Who Fought to Defend It, went on sale last Tuesday — the day after the Supreme Court’s ruling in the election interference case against Donald Trump that gave presidents broad immunity for their “official acts.”

Brettschneider, a professor of politics and constitutional law at Brown University, writes about five past presidents who “posed great threats to democracy” by pushing the limits of legality — John Adams, James Buchanan, Andrew Johnson, Woodrow Wilson and Richard Nixon — and the citizens who responded by pushing back in an age-old American pattern of constitutional crisis and recovery.

Adams, after all, had prosecuted people who criticized him, Buchanan “colluded with the Supreme Court to deny constitutional personhood to African Americans,” as Brettschneider outlines. Johnson urged violence against his political opponents while heightening white supremacy in the wake of the Civil War, Wilson “nationalized Jim Crow” and Nixon, of course, committed criminal acts in the sprawling Watergate scandal. “When the president does it,” as the 37th president (in)famously said, “that means it is not illegal.”

In response to these executives’ attempts to weaken or outright eliminate the checks on their power, citizens fought back — from abolitionist Frederick Douglass to journalists Ida B. Wells and William Monroe Trotter to Pentagon Papers leaker Daniel Ellsberg and others — recommitting to the Constitution and stoking what Brettschneider calls “democratic recovery.”

Brettschneider reminds us that we were warned from the beginning this could happen.

“Revolutionary War heroes such as Patrick Henry predicted that the office was so powerful that a president with authoritarian ambitions could simply lay claim to the ‘American throne,’” Brettschneider writes, noting that “the power of the presidency has always been a loaded gun, one that threatens American democracy itself. Patrick Henry’s warning has always been relevant.” And it has arguably never been more relevant than it is right now.

www.msn.com/en-us/news/opinion/what-do-you-do-when-a-criminally-minded-person-is-president/ar-BB1pB31p?ocid=msedgntp&pc=U531&cvid=db329121e4384b0bb88b882b383e20c6&ei=51
Vote him out and vote Trump in.
 
We are looking at the possibility of electing a criminal to be our president. So what do we do if or when that happens? We have been here before. And it has been the people who stopped the criminal
Just because a person has somehow escaped indictment and trial doesn't make them not a criminal. They just haven't been anointed yet. In the case of LBJ, a murdering corrupt party boy, we name streets and buildings for him, and "remember" him as the author of the Great Society and civil rights, the landscape we now live in. In the case of the Bushes and the Allen brothers, we name airports and foundations after them, and they never had to answer for any of their highly treasonous activities.
 
They are affordable now. I don't have any problem buying them.



You mean after you guys took apart the apparatus for vetting them?
How exactly do you vett millions upon millions of illegals not to mention the millions more that were get a ways? Biden opened our border to anyone that wanted to come in and a torrent of drugs like Fentanyl. So now we've got more people dying of Fentanyl overdoses than we lost in the Vietnam War and we're experiencing a migrant crime wave from one end of the country to the other. Joe Biden OWNS that!
 
They’re Not Sees.

Trump once said a president under felony indictment would grind the government to a halt and create a constitutional crisis​

Godwin's. You lose.
 
You do anything you can to beat Joe Biden and all the Democrats that have gone along with breaking immigration laws and the Constitution. You beat Joe Biden for committing treason for funneling money to Iran who gives money to our enemies and Israel's enemies and then they use Joe's money to fight and kill American soldiers and Israeli soldiers. Also, the bribery of Joe Biden with Ukraine and also China.
Along with using the DOJ to go after your political opponents
 

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