Media Search:



Welcome to MAGA Nation – by Jonathan V. Last – The Triad – The Bulwark

1. MAGA Nation

Prepare to hear a lot this week about the Glenn Youngkin Model after Georgia Governor Brian Kemp crushes Sad David Perdue. Trumps influence is waning! This is the future of the GOP! The page is being turned!

You may hear somewhat less about Charlie Baker.

Baker is the extremely popular Republican governor of Massachusettsdude has a 74 percent approval rating. Highest in America.

Also: Baker is not running for reelection because he could not win his own partys nomination.

So Baker is stepping away and the Massachusetts Republican party met this weekend to choose its nominee. Surprise! They picked an election conspiracy theorist who wants to send Bay State National Guard troops to the Mexican border.

Heres a summary of the totally normal Republican convention from the Globe:

Republican activists Saturday overwhelmingly endorsed a Donald Trump-backed conservative for governor at the Massachusetts GOP convention, where speakers leaned heavily into national themes and culture war debates, railing against abortion, characterizing Democrats as evil, and issuing vague yet vulgar warnings about the state of education. . . .

Geoff Diehl, a former Whitman state lawmaker whos trumpeted Trumps false claims the 2020 election was rigged, received 71 percent of the 1,194 votes cast by party delegates, winning the partys backing for governor. . . .

Diehl pitched himself as progressive Democrats worst nightmare, promising to hire back state workers fired by the Baker administration because they refused to be vaccinated against COVID-19 and dispatch members of the National Guard to the southern border to stop the lawlessness. . . .

Diehl and other statewide Republican candidates leaned into the idea that a one-party state could spur indoctrination of their children and schools. They promised to be bulwarks against what he called the threat of critical race theory. . . .

Rayla Campbell, the partys candidate for secretary of state, urged Republicans not to sit back and say, Maybe somebody else will take care of it. Thats not so nice.

I dont think its nice when theyre telling your 5-year-old that he can [perform a sex act on] another 5-year-old, she said, drawing gasps from the audience. Do you?

Because thats whats happening in your schools! she added. If this makes you uncomfortable, it should. . . .

Pressed by a Globe reporter, Campbell did not provide evidence of this . . .

But wait! Theres more!

That 74 percent approval rating that Gov. Baker has . . . who could possibly not like that guy?

Oh, his own party. The Republicans. They hate him.

Baker, the partys nominee each of the last three cycles, is not seeking reelection, and in a sign of intense friction between Baker and the partys conservative leadership, neither he nor Lieutenant Governor Karyn Polito attended Saturdays convention.

There was no mention of Baker on Saturday from the stage, though he was the target of veiled shots, with some Republicans slamming his administrations early COVID-19 policies. Outside the MassMutual Center, a delegate handed out packages of candy with the phrase Adios Chuckles and a caricature of Baker wearing a red clown nose.

Theres more. So much more:

Thomas Homan, the former acting director of Immigration and Customs Enforcement who Trump named his border czar in 2019, spoke for more than an hour, leading the crowd in a Trump! Trump! Trump! chant after he finished.

Former Trump campaign manager Corey Lewandowski, who is serving as an adviser to Diehl, weaved through the delegates throughout the day, occasionally getting stopped for a handshake or a selfie.

And all of this insurrection stuff isnt just backward-looking. Its the future these Republicans want:

Campbell, vying to be the states chief elections official, also charged that Republicans watched our elections be stolen . . .

We are going to crush and destroy these rotten devils that call themselves Democrats! she thundered into the microphone. This is a battle of good versus evil.

But hey, how about that Glenn Youngkin! And Brian Kemp! Everything is fine! Dont go asking Republicans to do anything crazy like fully repudiate Trump and devote themselves to protecting democracy, even if it means temporarily supporting a . . . [gasp] . . . Democrat.

Thats just West Wing-style fantasy politics.

I am only half (or maybe three-fifths) kidding when I say that Democrats ought to be embracing Mike Pence as the man who saved democracy by standing up to Donald Trump.

Pence refused to violate the Constitution when ordered to by the POTUS. And since January 6, Pence has:

Ive said it before and Ill say it again: Pelosi and Schumer ought to introduce resolutions praising Pence for saving the Republic and being a great American and then watch how many Republicans vote against them.

Hell, they ought to propose putting a plaque somewhere in the Capitol commemorating Pences stand.

Because heres a pretty likely scenario for where we could be two years from now:

Visit link:
Welcome to MAGA Nation - by Jonathan V. Last - The Triad - The Bulwark

Prosecuting Trump for the Insurrection: The Well-Founded Case for Optimism – Just Security

Since Jan. 6, 2021, a national debate has swirled around whether former President Donald Trump will be investigated and prosecuted for any crimes he may have committed through his efforts to remain in office despite his clear election loss. A growing consensus has emerged among legal experts, scholars and those otherwise concerned with the health of our democracy, that Trumps actions to overturn the election warrant criminal accountability. That sentiment was significantly bolstered when federal district court judge David O. Carter, reviewing an effort by the House Select Committee investigating Jan. 6 to obtain documents from a key witness, found that Trump had more likely than not committed federal crimes in trying to interfere with the electoral count proceedings that day. Judge Carters pronouncement didnt break any news about the evidence or the potential crimes Trump committed, all of which have been welldocumented. But the impact of a matter-of-fact pronouncement on Trumps potential culpability from a federal judge was unmistakable. As one analyst wrote in the New York Times, the ruling intensified scrutiny on the question of whether the Justice Department can, should or will try to charge him with the same crimes.

Yet Judge Carters opinion also met with a wave of warnings from legal journalists and expert commentators that accountability advocates shouldnt get their hopes up for a Trump prosecution, largely because of the difficult challenge of proving his criminal intent beyond a reasonable doubt to a unanimous jury of twelve, and the too-high risk of an acquittal or hung jury. The chances that Trump will be convicted of any crime are slim to none, wrote one former prosecutor, and a failure to convict will only embolden him and his followers.

As a former federal civil rights prosecutor who investigated and tried police abuse cases under the onerous willfulness standard for many years, I have a more optimistic view of the Justice Departments (DOJs) prospects for successfully prosecuting Trump. The former presidents defense counsel would be wise to advise him accordingly.

When the evidence of Trumps intentions and actions is viewed through the lens of the cases the Department and the Select Committee are buildingincluding evidence of the ties between the foot soldiers who led the Jan. 6 riots and Trumps inner circleand in the context of the cases the Department has already prosecuted against other Jan. 6 defendants, it looks formidable, not weak. And when it is examined in light of the Departments Principles of Federal Prosecution, Attorney General Garland should have little choice but to conclude that the implications for democracy and the rule of law of not prosecuting Trump far outweigh the risks of a trial loss, which exist in every complex case.

In the discussion that follows, I explain the basis for this conclusion by focusing on a prosecution of Trump for obstructing an official proceeding in violation of 18 U.S.C. 1512(c)(2), the charge DOJ has brought against more than 280 Jan. 6 defendants. (Note: other charges may be available against Trump, and he could (and likely would) be charged with conspiracy, which requires an agreement to commit a crime, or aiding and abetting, in connection with a substantive obstruction offense. For the sake of simplicity, the following analysis focuses on evidence that proves the substantive offense.). After explaining the elements of the charge, I address skepticism that Trump will be charged or convicted, and then explain why a prosecution of Trump is both winnable and necessary despite the known risks. I also discuss the long-standing DOJ standards that point directly toward prosecution in cases such as this one.

18 U.S.C. 1512(c)(2) makes it a crime punishable by up to 20 years in prison for anyone who corruptly obstructs, influences, or impedes an official proceeding, or attempts to do so. This discussion will assume that the joint session of Congress to count the electoral votes presided over by Vice President Mike Pence on Jan. 6 was an official proceeding, and that section 1512(c)(2) applies broadly to efforts to obstruct such a proceeding. All but one of the judges for the District Court of the District of Columbia to consider the issues have so held. (A discussion of the outlier decision by Judge Carl Nichols and the criticisms of it can be found here.)

To prove that Trump criminally obstructed the electoral count proceeding, prosecutors would need to convince a 12-person jury that he acted corruptly. According to the D.C. courts, this means that the defendant must use unlawful means or act with an unlawful purpose, or both to obstruct the proceeding. In addition, the defendant must act with consciousness of wrongdoing, which is defined as acting with an understanding or awareness that what the person is doing is wrong (emphasis added). In other words, it is not enough to prove that Trump knowingly engaged in an act that was unlawful; he must have subjectively understood that the act was unlawful. It is this part of the intent element that makes section 1512(c)(2) a so-called specific intent crime and raises the degree of difficulty in proving it. It is also the primary focus of skepticism over whether Trump could be convicted (despite over 280 cases in which federal prosecutors believe they can convict the defendant).

Several commentators who have questioned the likelihood of a Trump prosecution have highlighted the challenge of proving that Trump doesnt sincerely believe his own prolific lies or those of his sycophants, and lamented the absence of smoking-gun evidence revealing Trumps inner thoughts when it comes to proving that he knew what he was doing was wrong as he attempted, in various ways, to stop the electoral count proceeding.

For example, in one New York Times piece weighing the prospects for a Trump prosecution, the authors noted that Trump would have a powerful argument about his mental state against a claim that he pressured former Vice President Pence to violate his legal duties under the Electoral Count Act i.e., that Trump sincerely thought he was asking Mr. Pence to do something lawful because of the advice he received from lawyer John Eastman, who concocted a baseless rationale for Pence to ignore the law. Likewise, in a second piece, the Times quoted a law professor for the proposition that [t]he problem with Trump is defining his state of mind when it is so changeable. He believes whatever he wants to think and it doesnt necessarily have to be grounded in reality. Thats a tough argument to a jury, to say he knew a particular thing. A Washington Post analysis similarly observed that while theres ample evidence that Trump was repeatedly warned his rhetoric [about election fraud] was untrue, it may be more difficult to prove that Trump believed those warnings. And another commentator in the Post noted that [o]ne of the fundamental questions of the Trump era in politics has been the extent to which he believes the false claims he makes . If he tried to steal power out of a sincere delusion that it was warranted, is that a sufficient condition for innocence?

Doubts about proving what Trump knew dovetail with doubts about the efficacy of using circumstantial evidence to try to convict him. Commentators have variously opined that inferences from circumstantial evidence tend to be weaker than direct proof, that prosecutors are likely to insist on written evidence that Trump knew his actions were illegal, and something akin to a confession is necessary to any hope of convicting Trump. All of this is underscored by the inevitably political nature of a case involving Trump, where the presence of one or more Trump supporters who also believe his lies in a jury pool could prevent a conviction.

At a high level of generality, these assessments of the risks of prosecuting Trump arent wrong; no one can guarantee a win at any jury trial, much less in a specific intent case. However, they are divorced from the context in which a case against Trump would likely unfold. Although many commentators have focused on the difficulties of proving Trumps subjective beliefs about the outcome of the election or the application of the Electoral Count Act, the case the DOJ is building seems unlikely to turn on those beliefs. Furthermore, the jury instructions and legal rulings in the Jan. 6 obstruction cases that have already concluded provide a roadmap for how prosecutors can make a winning argument for Trumps conviction even with, if necessary, only circumstantial evidence. Indeed, many of the Justice Departments most important and politically charged cases have been won with circumstantial evidence.

In order to analyze the elements and particularly the evidence of criminal intent of a potential obstruction charge against Trump, we must first zero-in on what the relevant investigations have uncovered so far, and where they appear to be headed as additional evidence continues to emerge. The publicly-available facts are succinctly summarized in Judge Carters opinion. In effect, there was a multi-pronged effort led by Trump and others to prevent the certification of President Bidens clear electoral victory that culminated in the events of Jan. 6.

One of those prongs was a campaign by Trump to persuade various federal and state officials to take actions aimed at undoing Bidens win and allowing Trump to remain in office. This included the former presidents efforts (beginning before votes were cast) to claim the election was fraudulent; to coerce Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger to find 11,780 votes, which is one more than we have in order to overturn the result in Georgia; to convince DOJ officials to just say the election was corrupt and leave the rest to me; and, of course, to harangue Vice President Pence into setting aside his legal duties as President of the Senate under the Electoral Count Act based on Eastmans scheme which Eastman himself admitted was so clearly unlawful that it would be rejected by all nine Supreme Court justices. An obstruction charge based on this prong would most likely focus on the pressuring of Pence in his role as a legislative officer, with the other actions serving as evidence of Trumps overall malign intent. We know that Trump was repeatedly told by the Attorney General and others that his election fraud claims were unfounded, and that he was surely aware of the more than 60 court decisions rejecting all such claims. Key evidence still to be uncovered (or publicly revealed) includes whether Trump was privy to Eastmans own views of the meritlessness of his claim that Pence could legally refuse to certify the election.

The second prong was the storming of the Capitol by a violent mob aimed at physically disrupting the constitutionally mandated proceeding to formalize the election results. Trumps relationship to that mob remains a subject of investigation by the Select Committee, litigants in several civil lawsuits (disclosure: I and my organization Protect Democracy are co-counsel in one of those cases), and likely the DOJ, but we already know that Trump weaponized the mob to pressure Pence. We know that members of the mob, including militia leaders who have been charged with coordinating efforts to storm the Capitol, were drawn to Washington, D.C., by Trumps lies about election fraud and his Dec. 19, 2020, tweet calling for his supporters to assemble for a rally on January 6 that will be wild. We know that many of the rioters breached the Capitol intending to stop Pence from counting the electoral votes. We know that militia leaders who planned the breach of the Capitol had close ties to Trump consigliere Roger Stone. We also know that Trump addressed a large crowd at the White House Ellipse that ended just after the electoral count proceeding began at 1 pm, and after Pence informed Trump that he would not go along with his unlawful scheme to reject certain states votes. Trump exhorted the crowd to go with him to the Capitol and fight like hell to get Pence to do the right thing.

Later, twenty minutes after he was told by his Chief of Staff that the mob was inside the Capitol, he poured gasoline on the fire by tweeting: Mike Pence didnt have the courage to do what should have been done to protect our Country and our Constitution, giving States a chance to certify a corrected set of facts, not the fraudulent or inaccurate ones which they were asked to previously certify. He then proceeded for a period of several hours to ignore multiple pleas to call off the mob from lawmakers inside the Capitol and his own aides, who evidently believed that the mob was taking instruction from him. At 3:13 p.m. Trump tweeted for the crowd to stay peaceful, but pointedly did not call on them to leave the Capitol so the proceedings could resume. Instead, Trump, Rudy Giuliani, and Eastman continued to attempt to persuade lawmakers to delay the counting of the votes. The mobs efforts succeeded in delaying certification of Bidens win until 3:42 am on January 7. The continuing investigations will likely focus on what Trump knew about the prospect of militias breaching the Capitol, pressuring Pence, and delaying the certification and what his intentions were when he addressed the crowd at the Ellipse and afterwards in failing to call them off. It is worth noting in this regard that Judge Amit Mehta, who is overseeing DOJs cases against Stewart Rhodes and other members of the Oath Keepers, has held that the well-pleaded facts set forth in complaints on behalf of several members of Congress and Capitol Police officers plausibly establish a conspiracy between Trump and those who stormed the Capitol. While the plausibility standard is obviously lower than reasonable doubt, that decision illustrates how a court has already assessed Trumps use of the mob to orchestrate interference with the electoral count proceeding.

It is possible that the DOJ could elect to charge Trump with obstruction based solely on his own (and Eastmans) efforts to pressure Pence to ignore his legal duties. A lead DOJ prosecutor verified the viability of that theory during a pretrial hearing for one of the Jan. 6 defendants. And DC courts have held that inducing another person to violate a legal duty in relation to an official proceeding meets the definition of acting with an unlawful purpose. Former United States Attorney Barbara McQuade has explained in detail how a prosecution that does not include Trumps connection to the mob could be carried out.

However, given what we know of the progression of the investigations, including the guilty pleas and cooperation agreements DOJ has recently obtained from key militia members with links to Trump associates, as well as reports that top leaders of the Oath Keepers are providing DOJ their communications with those in the former Presidents orbit, it seems far more likely that DOJ would, if it proceeded where the evidence leads, include Trumps use of the mob to pressure Pence and disrupt the electoral count proceeding as part of the mix. This is so not least because tying Trump to the violence presents a stronger case against him. While at least one of the judges overseeing the Jan. 6 cases has questioned where the outer limits of acting with an unlawful purpose lie, she and other judges have been definitive in holding that using independently unlawful means to obstruct an official proceeding violates the statute and have specifically held that violently storming the Capitol to disrupt the electoral count proceeding falls on the clearly unlawful side of the line. Whats more, tying Trump to the mob is the mechanism for holding him responsible for the deadly injuries that occurred as a result of the mobs actions.

A theory of the case that links Trump to mobilizing a violent mob is also an easier lift when it comes to proving Trumps consciousness of wrongdoing. If DOJ pursues a case based solely on Trumps efforts to persuade Pence to violate the law, it will likely need to prove that it was not reasonable for Trump to rely on Eastmans legal advice, either because Trump knew he had not won the election or because Trump knew that the Vice President lacked authority to reject the states electoral votes. Although there is ample evidence from which a jury could infer that Trump knew both, this is the place where, as the skeptics have warned, one or two jurors deciding that Trump sincerely believed his election lies and the outlandish advice he received from Eastman could derail a guilty verdict.

On the other hand, if DOJ has evidence to prove that Trump knew of the mobs plans to breach the Capitol or that he incited or aided and abetted them in doing so, Trumps beliefs about the election and his lawyers advice will be largely irrelevant. This is so because using actual or threatened violence to disrupt the proceedings is unlawful regardless of Trumps nonsensical views on election law, and it is difficult to imagine a reasonable juror concluding otherwise. Indeed, so much so that it would be wrong not to pursue the case on the speculative notion of such an outlier. Trump has denied that the Jan. 6 rally was truly violent or that or that he encouraged violence precisely because he knows that stopping a government proceeding with violence is against the law.

Assuming DOJs theory of prosecution is that Trump made use of a violent mob to disrupt the electoral count proceeding, the biggest purported weaknesses in the case are the following: (a) the evidence of Trumps knowledge of the plans to breach the Capitol and his intentions when addressing the mob on Jan. 6 remains, as far as the public knows, circumstantial, and (b) the concern that our polarized country cant produce a jury that would unanimously agree to convict him even in the face of evidence beyond a reasonable doubt. But there is nothing inherently weak about a circumstantial case, and the evidence against Trump is strong (and likely to get stronger) by comparison to other high-profile cases DOJ has prosecuted. Moreover, the Jan. 6 trials that DOJ has already completed give good reason to believe that a jury in the District of Columbia would make its decisions based on the law and the facts.

As set forth above and in Judge Carters opinion, the evidence that Trump waged a campaign (on his own and in agreement with others) to obstruct the Jan. 6 electoral count proceeding is on the cusp of being overwhelming. It would no doubt be useful if the ongoing investigations uncovered even more evidence that Trump helped plan or knew about the plan for the Capitol breach. And they very well might, especially considering the pace at which the ground-up DOJ investigation is producing pleas and cooperation agreements. However, even if they dont, as Judge Carter said, The illegality of the plan was obvious. The evidence proving Trumps intent is more than enough to sustain a guilty verdict on appeal. And it stands up well to the quantum of evidence in other high-profile cases DOJ has successfully prosecuted with circumstantial evidence.

In the police abuse cases I prosecuted, for example, in order to prove that a defendant police officer knew that their actions were wrongful, my colleagues and I relied on evidence of the defendants training, or what other law enforcement witnesses perceived and did during the incident based on their training and asked the jury to infer from that evidence that the police officer defendant knew it was wrong to use the type of force at issue. This is the kind of evidence DOJ recently relied on to convict the four officers who stood by and failed to intervene as Derek Chauvin killed George Floyd, a case that was considered a landmark victory both because of the rarity of convicting police officers for failing to stop a superior from using excessive force and the politically charged context in which it was tried.

Likewise, in a case intimately familiar to Attorney General Garland, DOJ convicted Timothy McVeigh and Terry Nichols for orchestrating and carrying out the Oklahoma City bombing with evidence that was wholly circumstantial and in a political atmosphere in which there were many potential jurors who shared McVeighs animus toward the federal government. With the passage of time and McVeighs refusal to fight his death sentence, the public has largely forgotten the real-time concern over whether the jury would be hamstrung by one or more pieces of the evidentiary puzzle.

And there are plenty of other reasons to provide cause for optimism that DOJ can successfully prosecute Trump with a circumstantial case.

For starters, jurors who hear a Trump trial will be explicitly instructed that it is acceptable, and indeed customary, for the government to prove its case with circumstantial evidence and will have been vetted in jury selection for their ability to follow that instruction. As the instructions in the trials conducted thus far make plain, there is nothing nefarious or extraordinary about lacking smoking gun evidence of a persons state of mind: Someones intent or knowledge ordinarily cannot be proved directly, because there is no way of knowing what a person is actually thinking (emphasis added).

Furthermore, the jurors will be instructed that there is no difference between direct and circumstantial evidence in the eyes of the law: The law says that both direct and circumstantial evidence are acceptable means of proving a fact. The law does not favor one form of evidence over another. . . . Circumstantial evidence does not require a greater degree of certainty than direct evidence (emphasis added).

Of course, jury instructions are only as good as the jurors willingness and ability to follow them. Here its important to recognize the power of voir dire the questioning of potential jurors by the court and the lawyers for both sides and the accompanying jury selection process in rooting out jurors who harbor factually false beliefs that they cannot set aside, or who cannot accept and follow the courts instructions. Such jurors can be removed for cause. The law is clear that Trump is not entitled to a jury that will refuse to follow the law.

In addition, the court has tools that will allow it to prevent a Trump trial from becoming anything close to a fact-free zone. Judges are permitted to exercise control over the presentation of evidence for the purpose of preventing mini trials on issues that are not legitimately in dispute and that could confuse jurors. For example, the court can take judicial notice of facts not subject to reasonable dispute, such as the fact that Biden won the 2020 election and that there was no evidence of fraud that would undermine the states reported results. If Trump takes the stand in his own defense, he may be allowed to testify that he believed certain things that are objectively false. But his attorneys will not be given free rein to turn the election results into a trial issue.

Could this process nonetheless miss a juror who refuses to follow the law or who is highly sympathetic to Trump and thus inclined to believe him regardless of the evidence presented? No experienced prosecutor would ever say otherwise. But the Jan. 6 jury trials the government has already successfully completed should give Trump no comfort that this will happen.

While those trials involved everyday insurrectionists who stormed the Capitol (or attempted to do so) and not Trump himself, Trump was essentially an elephant in the room at each one. Yet not only were the judges able to seat jurors who followed their instructions, the prosecutors gave clear and compelling presentations that led to remarkably quick guilty verdicts. The Guy Refitt and Dustin Thompson obstruction trials are illustrative of where the momentum lies.

Refitts defense attorney asked the jurors in much the way Trumps attorneys likely would to ignore objective reality and find that he didnt mean the import of his own words and that the video evidence showing him at the Capitol was fake. The jury convicted him in less than three hours.

Trump featured more prominently in the Thompson trial, where Thompson claimed that he lacked the necessary criminal intent because he thought he was acting on Trumps orders when he stormed the Capitol and tried to stop the certification proceeding. As part of Thompsons defense, the jury viewed a video of Trumps speech at the Ellipse for the purpose of listening to what Trump said and evaluating the effect of his words on Thompson. Presumably, a juror who was sympathetic to Trump and his claims of innocence would also be reluctant to convict one of his followers who claimed to believe he was acting on Trumps orders. But the jury convicted Thompson also after deliberating for under three hours.

Theres no doubt that an actual Trump trial would be unprecedented and to some extent incomparable to anything we have seen in our justice system, and jury selection would be a painstaking process. That said, thus far, DC juries have had no difficulty separating Trump the politician and the web of his big lie from the obvious crimes committed by those who thought they were doing his bidding. And the judges presiding over the hundreds of Jan. 6 obstruction cases have given no hint that they will be unable to prevent a Trump circus from overtaking their courtrooms.

All that said, the Justice Department has discretion not to charge a case even if the evidence is sufficient to prove the defendant guilty, and there are those who believe that the risks and consequences of an acquittal of Trump or even a hung jury would be so grave that DOJ will not indict a circumstantial case (or any case) against him. But declining a meritorious case based on the political implications of losing would be a hard-to-explain deviation from the Departments internal standards.

According to the DOJs Principles of Federal Prosecution, the attorney for the government should commence or recommend a federal prosecution if he/she believes that the persons conduct constitutes a federal offense, and that the admissible evidence will probably be sufficient to obtain and sustain a conviction, so long as the prosecution furthers a substantial federal interest and there are no other adequate alternatives to secure justice.

The likelihood of an acquittal for some non-legal reason is not generally a basis for declining a case, especially in the circumstances that apply here:

Where the law and the facts create a sound, prosecutable case, the likelihood of an acquittal due to unpopularity of some aspect of the prosecution or because of the overwhelming popularity of the defendant or his/her cause is not a factor prohibiting prosecution. For example, in a civil rights case or a case involving an extremely popular political figure, it might be clear that the evidence of guilt viewed objectively by an unbiased factfinder would be sufficient to sustain a conviction, yet the prosecutor might reasonably doubt, based on the circumstances, that the jury would convict. In such a case the prosecutor may properly conclude that it is necessary and appropriate to commence or recommend prosecution (emphasis added)

A declination based on Trumps political status or the popularity of his cause would also violate the admonition that a persons political associations, activities, or beliefs are not proper considerations for deciding whether to seek charges.

These standards are a recognition both of the difficulty of civil rights and other politically charged cases and of the importance of seeking accountability for actors who use the power of their government positions to subvert our most basic rights in a democratic system of government. Many historians and scholars who study how democracies decline have warned that societies that fail to seek accountability for corrupt political leaders endanger democracy by eroding faith in the rule of law on the part of the ordinary citizens whose belief that democracy is superior to autocracy is necessary to sustain it. And our own recent history has demonstrated that the failure to hold Trump accountable for his long history of potential crimes and abuses of power has cemented his belief that he is above the law. It is frankly difficult to imagine how a hung jury or acquittal of a man who has already fomented a violent insurrection could embolden him any further. Instead, as a group of more than a thousand DOJ alumni recently wrote, allowing him to walk away without facing even the possibility of a penalty when there is sufficient evidence to prosecute him would surely embolden his authoritarian-minded successors while decimating the idea that the president is not a king.

* * *

By every objective measure, and according to the judgment of numerous former federal prosecutors, and now a sitting federal judge, former President Donald Trump committed crimes when he unlike any U.S. president before him refused to accept the results of a free and fair election and attempted to overturn it. Many regular citizens who acted on Trumps false claims and exhortations have been convicted of the same charge that Trump would likely face if indicted. And far from being weak, the evidence that Trump knew he could not obstruct an official proceeding to maintain himself in office is, as a legal matter, overwhelming and of a kind used to convict ordinary and high-profile Americans every day. Attorney General Garland has repeatedly said that the DOJ will seek accountability for anyone, at any level, who is legally responsible for the insurrection that culminated on Jan. 6, and that the Departments charging decisions would be governed by the facts and the law, not politics. For all these reasons, we have cause to expect that the DOJs investigation will result in charges against Trump if the admissible evidence matches what we have seen in the public record. And when and if that happens, justice has far more than a fighting chance to prevail.

Continue reading here:
Prosecuting Trump for the Insurrection: The Well-Founded Case for Optimism - Just Security

Jordan Peterson net worth: The controversial figure has this much wealth – Marca English

Jordan Peterson is a Canadian clinical psychologist, social commentator, author and professor of psychology, who is known for his somewhat controversial comments on political, social and cultural issues, but who over the course of his career has generated an enviable net worth.

Peterson was born on June 12, 1962, in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, his mother was a librarian at Grande Prairie Regional College and his father was also a teacher, so from an early age he used to read authors such as George Orwell, Aldous Huxley and many others.

He attended Fairview High School and graduated in 1979. He then studied at Grande Prairie Regional College and majored in political science and English literature, later moving to the University of Alberta, where he would end up with a degree in political science.

In his need and quest to understand the underlying factors behind some of the thematic events that took place before his time, Peterson traveled to Europe to discover the psychological origins of 20th century European totalitarianism, as well as the Cold War.

Peterson later decided to study psychology and returned to the University of Alberta. In 1984 he earned a B.A. in the subject and then went on to McGill University in Montreal to earn his Ph.D.

In 1993, he began teaching at Harvard University, as an associate professor in the psychology department, where he also conducted much research while in the department, until 1998 when he returned to the University of Toronto to assume his duties as a full-time professor.

As a psychologist, Peterson focuses his interest on the psychology of religious and ideological beliefs. While teaching, he also practices; the professor conducts clinical sessions and offers psychological assistance to individuals as well.

Peterson is the author of the two books, Maps of Meaning: The Architecture of Belief from 1999 and 12 Rules for Life: An Antidote to Chaos in 2018 from 2018. He has also hosted his own podcast called The Jordan B. Peterson Podcast. He created Self Authoring Suite, which is a writing therapy program.

In 2016 Peterson gained notoriety thanks to a series of YouTube videos in which he criticized political correctness, as well as the Canadian government's Bill C-16, which added gender identity as 'compelled speech', making it mandatory to refer to someone who uses specific language.

According to sites like Celebrity Net Worth, Jordan Peterson's net worth is $8 million. Jordan claimed in 2019 that he was earning $80,000 per month from his Patreon account, in addition to $35,000 per share and approximately $200,000 per month from his consulting/clinical practice.

In addition, he receives royalties from his books, which are estimated at five million books sold so far and add to that other earnings coming from his YouTube channel, which has millions of subscribers.

Link:
Jordan Peterson net worth: The controversial figure has this much wealth - Marca English

Hypatia’s Past and Jordan Peterson’s Future – The American Conservative

See, thats on the back of the American dollar billthats like the Eye of Horus from the Egyptians, and so the idea here is something like, at the top of the hierarchy is something that is no longer part of the hierarchy.

Jordan Peterson addresses a dark lecture hall, pointing to arcane symbols of divinity on a bright presentation screen. The forces these ancient symbols evoke, he explains, drive both political and personal change: The Egyptians saw that the attentive Eye is what revives a dead society, and so, if you want to find the best place to start untangling the paralyzing morass of your life, then bloody well pay attention!

Is there something specific about our strange era that makes Petersons approach to myth appealing? Consider a similar figure from a similar age, someone not usually associated with the right or traditionalists: Hypatia of Alexandria (ca. A.D. 370-415). Hypatia was a pagan philosopher, most famous today for being murdered in A.D. 415 by a mob of Christian thugs who seemed to have hoped the bishop, St. Cyril of Alexandria, would be happy about it. (Whether or not he was is still debated.)

But before the Enlightenment made her a martyr for Reason, and before a journal of feminist philosophy was named after her (which you may recall from when it published, then retracted, an article that compared transgenderism and transracialism), Hypatia taught philosophy to conservative Christians in the early 5th century.

For most Americans over the age of 30, it is likely confusing to come to the Early Christian era and realize the pagans, and their liberal minded Christian sympathizers, were in fact the cultural conservatives of their time, while monk-frequenting Christian fundamentalists were the utopian radicals spearheading a cultural revolution.

But once we establish that, there is a lot of similarity to contemplate. In Hypatias Egypt, notions of the sacred were being radically altered. Many temples, after millennia standing as reference points of cosmic order, were being desecrated and returned to the bland chaos of profane space. The non-sacred is a region without structure or consistency, amorphous, as Eliade relates in The Sacred and the Profane.

In our times, shared consensus about what is sacred has been blown into fragments. How many people share a religion with their grandparents now? Part of Jordan Petersons appeal lies in the fact that, in an age of uncertainty and spiritual decentralization, he has located an edifying message in traditional stories, stories whose antiquity or stature certifies the content to be timeless and universal.

Facing rising religious fundamentalism in her late Roman world, Hypatia also promoted and inspired literary works that dug deep into tradition. These included a number of philosophical allegories, not least of which was the Osiris-Horus myth cycle itself. Her life offers a lesson for contemporary traditionalists attempting to stare down cancel mobs.

Those who have been following Petersons work may have noticed his take on the Osiris story (and its characteristic symbol, the Eye of Horus) come up rather frequently. But for those who have not: in short, Osiris, the tragically benign divine king of Egypt, falls victim to the tricks of his evil brother Seth.

In Petersons telling, Seth symbolizes the opportunistic careerist. He murders King Osiris, which signifies the tendency of a (static) ruling idea, system of valuation, or particular storyto become increasingly irrelevant with time, hence the kings vulnerability such rent-seeking bureaucrat types. Osiris stands for Order, but he is foolish, an indication of the danger when one forgets or refuses to admit to the existence of the immortal deity of evil. (See Petersons Maps of Meaning.)

There is redemption though. Horus is the son of Osiris and Isis (Isis is Chaos). With his mothers help, and his dead fathers supernatural counsel, Horus defeats Seth, loses his Eye in the process, but then gets it back later. Horus emerges as the ultimate paradigm for the ruler, and for the fully actualized individual, synthesizing the Order and Chaos antithesis, made wiser because of his suffering.

Ancient Greeks, both pagan and Christian, would call what Peterson is doing with this myth allegoria, the practice of pointing out that a story says something else besides its meaning on the surface. As ancient philosophers and writers knew, allegory works best when performed on a story thats really, really old.

Hypatias take on Osiris comes to us from her student, a Libyan named Synesius. She sent him to Constantinople around A.D. 400 to try to meet the Emperor Arcadius, and to make influential friends there who could help out their cause in Alexandria. Synesius turned to the myths and allegories he learned at Hypatias school. He wrote an essay inspired by the story in Plutarchs Isis and Osiris, and presented it to some new learned friends at court.

In his allegory, Synesius portrayed contemporary court intrigues as though they were happening in the days of the ancient pharaohs. Standing in for real Roman Christians on the Bosporus are mythical Egyptian pagans (and lesser gods) on the Nile. In the work, titled On Providence, Synesius uses the story of Osiris and Seth to politely warn his patron at court, an imperial bureaucrat: Osiris was like you, a good leader, a nice guy; but he refused to confront evil, and so Seth destroyed him. So, beware of intrigues!

Unfortunately, Synesiuss patron, a man named Aurelian, was toppled in a coup orchestrated by a Romano-Gothic generalissimo named Ganas. But Synesius still succeeded in using his wit, and Hypatias reputation, to win friends for philosophy.

When it came to philosophy, Hypatia had a great deal of skin in the game. Daughter of one of the last attested members of the Museum, a learned society connected to the famous Library of Alexandria, Hypatia got her start teaching mathematics. But over the years, by leveraging her fathers modest intellectual brand, she built up a renowned philosophical school that became a finishing academy for ambitious young Greek speakers in the eastern Roman Empire. Her students were a cross section of the citys elite at that time: a nice blend of Christians, Pagans, and maybe a few Jews as well.

Hypatia watched as the intricate sacred landscape of Greco-Egyptian cult and mystery, described by Herodotus in his Histories (book two) and Plutarch in his own Isis and Osiris, was gradually profaned and desacralized. The Christian emperors, starting with Constantine (r. 306-337) cut funding for pagan temples and redirected it to Christian churches. Pagan sacrifices were eventually forbidden in the 390s, around the time Hypatia was making her start as an educator.

Like many philosophers of her era, Hypatia stayed loyal to the old gods. But a large portion of her students were Christians. They nonetheless shared with her an interest in plumbing the ancient polytheist lore for deeper meanings and universal values. This was unpopular among more fundamentalist Christians. Like Tertullian a few centuries earlier, Christians were still asking, What hath Athens to do with Jerusalem?

Synesius, despite the polytheistic stories he dealt in, was a Christian. Other of his writings, such as On Dreams, are filled with philosophical allegories. Sometimes he even made fun of overwrought allegories, as in his satirical Praise of Baldness, which only indicates the popularity of the practice in his day. Nevertheless, Synesius and Hypatia seem to have shared a cultural mission. They aimed to produce and sponsor edifying literary works that could be enjoyed by pagans and Christians alike. In Synesiuss works, allusions to Homer, Plato, and classical culture abound, not as antiquarian relics or intellectual fetishes, but as part of an ambitious, living, creative project addressed to the present.

Any moral and theological claims he made could generally sit well with Christian and Pagan alike; God was usually spoken of in the singular. But to some Alexandrian Christians, radical, progressive types who thought Christians should tear down temples and do away with both literary and physical monuments of the past, this was threatening. Other more traditional Christians saw no harm in keeping old statues around, and wanted to keep reading the classics such as Homer and Aristophanes. To them, the Synesius-Hypatia agenda seemed harmless, perhaps even a healthy exercise in consensus-building. If the old religion was dying, its dwelling places filled with goats and haberdashers, at least some of the old stories could be made to seem lively, even sacred in the sense that they were still set apart and endowed with deeper meaning.

Judging by the huge number of medieval Byzantine manuscripts that preserve the pagan classics, forces sympathetic to Hypatia and Synesius ended up carving out a healthy future for an expansive traditionalism in the Eastern Roman Empire. In Byzantium, this traditionalism, or Christian classicism, existed more or less happily alongside the occasional fundamentalist tendency in society. The woke fundamentalists of our day, unfortunately, seem less likely to compromise.

Fundamentalism is a pattern in which human beings cling for salvation to a confined set of simple precepts or documents, ruling out all others as distraction, delusion, and vanity. It is one kind of response to chaos and confusion, an attempt to discern the signal amidst the noise. This is the religious fervor fueling both ancient and modern cancel mobs. It is the opposite of a generous traditionalism, the alternative championed by Hypatia and, many would say today, Jordan Peterson.

Hypatias political influence, and probably also her Christian-supported opposition to fundamentalism, eventually led to her lynching in the streets of Alexandria in 415 by an angry mob. Lets hope there are better fates in store for the controversial traditionalists of our day.

Alex Petkas (@costofglory) is a former tenure track academic. He produces The Cost of Glory podcast, which features dramatic retellings of Plutarchs Lives for general modern listeners. He holds a Ph.D. in Classics from Princeton University.

Read the original here:
Hypatia's Past and Jordan Peterson's Future - The American Conservative

Poilievre says vaccine mandates are based on ‘political science’ not medical science in conversation with Jordan Peterson – The Hub

Conservative Party of Canada leadership frontrunner Pierre Poilievre joined Dr. Jordan Peterson on the Jordan B. Peterson Podcast, released Monday, to discuss his candidacy and a number of issues animating the campaign, including housing and inflation, defunding the CBC, and the Freedom Convoy protests that paralyzed Ottawa for several weeks this past winter.

Poilievre reiterated his support for the peaceful protesters among those that gathered at the nations capital, saying that the vaccine mandates targeting the truckers were unscientific and malicious and that this was never about medical science, it was about political science. It was about demonizing a small minority for political gain, and Im proud of the fact that people stood up and fought for their freedoms in that case.

To prevent future impositions on civil liberties, Poilievre pledged to reexamine the Emergencies Act:

Im consulting with legal scholars on how we can curtail the power and limit the use of the Emergencies Act in the future. I want to be very careful though in how I do it because this is an incredibly blunt instrumentin times of war or foreign attack or something like that you can understand why there might be an occasion where these powers might be neededbut I do think we need to craft changes to the Act that will prevent it from being abused for political purposes like this again.

In contrast to the first official CPC leadership debate where candidates were forbidden from speaking Prime Minister Justin Trudeaus name, Poilievre here took the opportunity to forcefully denounce Trudeau, calling him an egomaniac and objectively unpopular.

Trudeau was not the only political figure to draw criticism, as Poilievre also took aim at Steven Guilbeault, the minister of environment and climate change, labelling him bonkers and a total nut. Peterson in turn characterized New Democratic Party leader Jagmeet Singh as stunningly and singularly devoid of ideas, and I havent seen anything come out of the NDP federally that isnt woke nonsense.

Poilievre also expounded on many of the messages that have served to draw substantial crowds to his rallies, including the importance of removing gatekeepers and increasing freedoms, commenting that there is a growing gap between the the have nots and the have yachts.

Summarizing his own motivations for leadership, he contrasted his message as one of hope for Canadians of all classes, especially the workers who are being left behind:

What bothers me most about politics in Canada is that there is a comfortable establishment that sits on top and governs for itself at everyone elses expense, and the people who do the nations workthe plumber, the electrician, the truck driver, the police officerhave almost no share of voice. I want to empower those people and disempower the political establishment. Thats my mission, thats my purpose, and I believe in it. I actually do believe in what I say. I truly believe that the ideas and the political approach that I advance are right. So having that purpose allows me to persevere through all of the nastiness and the exhaustion of political life.

Also in the line of fire was the CBC, which Poilievre again committed to defunding if he were ever to become prime minister. He says he is unworried about the backlash from Canadas mainstream media, who he claims were just as unfair to his Conservative predecessors even though they did not challenge the CBC directly.

Yeah, theyre going to come after me guns blazing, I know that, he said, But they would do that even if I werent taking the principled stand on defunding them.

Appearing on Petersons podcast might be a sign that Poilievre is doing an end-run around traditional media outlets, preferring to bypass the left-wing media, as he described them in the first leadership debate. To date, his media strategy has prioritized non-traditional, direct conversations to reach voters, such as this March 29 video from Tahini Mediterranean Cuisines YouTube channel that featured Poilievre smoking shisha and discussing Bitcoin.

Petersons podcast is a platform with a substantial reach that even outstrips traditional news channels. Petersons YouTube page has nearly five million subscribers and his videos average over half a million views. The Poilievre interview had more than 200,000 views by mid-day on Tuesday.

Peterson, who Tyler Cowen has called one of the worlds leading public intellectuals and who David Brooks described as the most influential public intellectual in the Western world, rose to prominence due to his opposition to the federal Bill C-16, which he resisted on the grounds that it legislated compelled speech.

While Peterson has generally stayed uninvolved in Canadian politics outside of his youthful dalliance with Albertas New Democratic Party, Peterson did interview the Peoples Party of Canada leader Maxime Bernier during the last federal campaign.

Speaking with Poilievre, Peterson commended his courage for agreeing to be interviewed:

Ive asked other politicians, including some on the conservative side, and Ive had some agree to speak with me, but generally they seem intimidated by the span of time that stretches out in front of them. Or perhaps, [theyre] not cognizant fully of the power of YouTube dialogue.

Peterson has grown increasingly critical of Trudeaus vaccine mandates and his recent handling of the Freedom Convoy protests, calling him a liar and a narcissist in an interview at the Hoover Institution on May 9. On February 19, Peterson released an original song, Wake Up, that was Dedicated, under the current unfortunate conditions, to the Prime Minister of Canada, the Right Honorable Justin Trudeau.

At the height of the protests on January 31, Peterson took to Instagram to directly appeal to several conservative politicians, naming Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe, Alberta Premier Jason Kenney, Ontario Premier Ontario Doug Ford, and then-opposition leader Erin OToole, and urging them to support the movement and remove the vaccine mandates.

What in the world are you waiting for? Its your moment. Youve got a huge number of Canadians occupying Ottawa, expressing their dismay with the suspension of our charter rights in the face of this so-called emergency, Peterson said. Our prime minister has literally abandoned the city, run away, as far as I can tell.

He continued, Youre not going to get a better opportunity. This is your moment, conservatives in Canada.

See the article here:
Poilievre says vaccine mandates are based on 'political science' not medical science in conversation with Jordan Peterson - The Hub