In defense of Donald John Trump
Former U.S. President Donald Trump / AFPBy Emanuel PastreichThe lawyers employed by Donald Trump have amassed an impressive pile of arguments to defend him against charges that he incited a mob of his supporters to stage an armed insurrection in the Capitol and to murder people in an effort to stop the selection of his democratically elected opponent. It is not popular in the fickle fairyland of Washington D.C. to defend Donald Trump, let alone to praise him. But at this sad hour in our nation's history, that is precisely what must be done. Sadly, the impeachment trial scheduled for February 9th is unlikely to touch on either the true violations of the Constitution and of Federal law by the Trump administration, nor on Donald Trump's significant accomplishments in office. Like the last impeachment trial of Donald Trump, which focused on ambiguous and amorphous Russian collusion, and left untouched the criminality of the entire executive branch (over which Trump had little control), this trial has one clear purpose: warning all American politicians that the system is ready to tar and
