– #Quick Reminder on a Man[1] behind bars … sorry … behind the curtain still playing The Supreme Court of Donald Trump[2]–
By the end of Trump’s single term as president in January 2021, nearly 30 percent of all federal judges were Trump appointees. (Britannica, The Supreme of Court of Donald Trump)
TO WHOM CRITICAL CONNOTATIONS MAY CONCERN
Got (less than) a minute?!
It ‘s Easter Monday and at this very moment, quite a number of Americans are probably being busy engaging in all kinds of pleasant leisure time activities. The author ‘s also been enjoying The Day with his family – nonetheless, rust never sleeps!
I mean, you don't have to take my word for the fact that you can't count on these elected Republicans to defend the Constitution. Every time they go out and give an interview. They demonstrate it themselves. (Face The Nation, Liz Cheney on whether Supreme Court will rule to disqualify Trump: "We have to be prepared" to defeat him at ballot box)
That ‘s pretty much it, thank you.
Kind regards,
Cal Caleido
Frame of Reference
TrumPutinian Tango & Th‘ Russian Mafia
Repubs vs Democs | A Nation Going Paranoid
An American Idiot’s Helter Skelter
When Trump said: "We're going to the Capitol!"
Ink Eradicators of The US Constitution
A Counterfeit World: Not only Trump’s
[1] Manafort in Talks to Return for the Republican National Convention - The New York Times (nytimes.com) ––– Paul Manafort | American lobbyist and attorney | Britannica ––– The Origins of Paul Manafort, Trump's Former Campaign Manager - The Atlantic ––– Investigations relating to Paul Manafort/Trump, Russia and Ukraine as follows: Ukraine scandal | Origins, Events, Aftermath, & Facts | Britannica ––– Volodymyr Zelensky | Biography, Facts, Presidency, & Russian Invasion of Ukraine | Britannica ––– related (1) as follows: United States - The indictment of Paul Manafort, the guilty pleas of Michael Flynn and George Papadopoulos, and indictments of Russian intelligence officers | Britannica ––– Mueller’s case against Paul Manafort, explained | PBS NewsHour ––– Paul Manafort: why Trump's old ally could hold the key in Mueller's Russia hunt | Paul Manafort | The Guardian ––– related (2) as follows: Trump’s Presidency: The trials of Paul Manafort | International Bar Association (ibanet.org) ––– Donald Trump - Russia investigation | Britannica ––– Special Counsel investigation | United States [2017-2019] | Britannica ––– Mapping Donald Trump's Many Ties To Vladimir Putin's Russia - YouTube
[2] Donald Trump - Supreme Court, Politics, Business | Britannica: In January 2017 Trump made good on his promise to place conservative justices on the Supreme Court by nominating Neil Gorsuch, a judge of the Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit, to fill the seat that had become vacant with the death in February 2016 of Antonin Scalia. ... In July 2018 Trump nominated another conservative appellate court judge, Brett Kavanaugh of the District of Columbia Circuit, to replace retiring Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy. ... In September 2020, eight days after the death of Associate Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Trump announced his nomination of judge Amy Coney Barrett, whom he had appointed to the Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit only two years earlier, as Ginsburg’s replacement. Notwithstanding the justification they had offered for refusing to consider Garland’s nomination four years earlier, Senate Republicans declared their intention to confirm Barrett quickly. ... Trump also successfully appointed a record number of district and appellate court judges, having inherited more than 100 federal bench vacancies resulting from the refusal of Senate Republicans to confirm most of Obama’s judicial nominees during the last two years of his presidency. Trump’s judicial appointments, almost all of whom were drawn from recommendations by the conservative Federalist Society, were mostly white and male; they were also generally young (less than 50 years old), ensuring that they would serve for several years or even decades. Their usually quick confirmations on party-line votes helped to further the Republican Party’s longstanding project of transforming the federal judiciary, particularly at the appellate level, into a conservative bulwark against liberal legal initiatives and policy making. By the end of Trump’s single term as president in January 2021, nearly 30 percent of all federal judges were Trump appointees.
[3] Liz Cheney on whether Supreme Court will rule to disqualify Trump: "We have to be prepared" to defeat him at ballot box - CBS News ––– Transcript: Former Rep. Liz Cheney on "Face the Nation," Jan. 7, 2024 - CBS News
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