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@kimwulff but don't underestimate the value of old approaches that just worked.

Boring policies that work are much better than shiny new policies that don't.

@RealJournalism

@benroyce I really can't say it anymore plainly, so maybe if you think on it some more you'll figure it out.

Pointing out differences doesn't discount similarities.

I'm sure if you think more about it you can find other examples in daily life that will help you understand this concept.

@faraiwe @dansup

@europesays You're above the law! And you're above the law! Everyone's above the law!

@theguardian_us_opinion this article is stretching really hard.

It basically runs through the reasons that it's reasonable to call it a landslide before just saying, "Nope it's not!"

There's no technical definition of a landslide. But this article does a pretty good job of laying out just why people could reasonably say there was one.

@benroyce it seems like you're getting distracted by distinctions without differences, like you're so busy trying to categorize different forms of questionable behavior that you're not noticing the similarities.

Yes, the issues with moderation are related because they are similar. That makes them related. Because of the similarities.

@faraiwe @dansup

@manton The way I always put it is that Mastodon is centralized around instances.

@Brandon Well that sounds like pretty good reason to think it's actually not that great and not that interesting 🙂

Good content appeals to both.

@knittingknots2 keep in mind that many on the GOP side have seriously lost faith in the FBI in the last couple of years, so if you're coming from that perspective, why would you care what the FBI had to say?

Anybody stunned by this hasn't been paying attention to the political environment.

@Nerde there are serious legal questions about whether a president can pardon somebody for unspecified crimes.

It's not actually clear that's legal.

To give somebody such a blank check is pretty questionable, really putting them above the law.

@RIJim

The very important answer is no, because what the Supreme Court actually said was that presidents can't prosecute for things like that.

The Supreme Court did not say presidents had free reign to violate the law. What it said was that presidents were restricted from inappropriate prosecution.

A whole lot of people get that backwards.

The Supreme Court ruling does much more to protect Biden from Trump than it gives to Trump.

@NewsDesk @politico

@veedems

Except, no that's not quite right. These infractions were judged to be so substantial that they needed to be prosecuted at a very high level. The administration already determined that significant resources needed to be poured into prosecuting these infractions.

Biden's administration already concluded that these were not minor infractions.

AND MORE IMPORTANTLY (yeah, my voice goes up because, wow) Biden pardoned Hunter for anything else as well, not just these things that you call minor infractions, but also anything else at all that he did.

That's incredible!

@NewsDesk @AssociatedPress

@mike805

In my opinion, Biden's explanation made it exponentially worse, but alternatively, it would have made it slightly better if he had resigned in the process.

I could at least appreciate an official saying, I am doing this but I recognize that it is not really fitting for the office. I cannot act neutrally here. And so as I do this, I hereby resign.

@louis

's pardon of his son crosses the line when it gives a blanket get out of jail free card to any laws his son might have violated, not just the ones we know about.

He put his son above the law. That's striking.

It's only the icing on top that he attempts to justify it by claiming persecution... by the administration that he himself was leading.

We need to be clear that this is disgraceful, as really that's the only way to hold such a person of power accountable.

Biden should be forever remembered for crap like this.

@MusiqueNow the problem is, the accusations listed, even if true, don't rise to the level of high crimes or misdemeanor.

But really, the SCOTUS records are public, and we can read for ourselves that these justices haven't misbehaved in office.

This is just a witchhunt.

@brianvastag as Hunter was afforded the full range of due process it's pretty hard to say he was overcharged.

But more importantly, keep in mind that JB has been the head of the administration putting these people away.

Pardon them? He's the one who locked them up!

@fixatedpersonsunit The important thing to keep in mind is that Democrats and Republicans are both put in place by voters.

We keep voting for this.

So it's not so much a horrible system of government, it's a system of government reflecting a population that, well, might be horrible.

It's just where we are as a society, so why would we expect a representative government to be different?

@LovesTha administrations don't have that authority.

@DrALJONES that doesn't make any sense, though, neither in terms of the connection between the encampment and intellectual argument nor in terms of elite intellectual argument versus military deployment.

Anyway, trespassing is not peaceful, and minimally disruptive is still disruptive.

This sounds like a person trying really hard to jump through logical hoops to justify just doing what they want to do and getting mad when finding that they don't actually have the level of privilege they think they do.

@jfrench

Don't forget, it was his dad that was prosecuting him.

Viewed through that lens, it's really hard to stomach all talk about political persecution or political prison.

No, if anything Hunter was getting levels of privilege that would not have been afforded to most people in his position, from judicial discretion through those really great lawyers through prosecutorial cooperation.

So no, it is not probable that he was a political prisoner. His dad tried to tilt the scales in his favor, and even then his behavior could not overcome his privilege, and his dad had to recognize his guilt and hold him accountable for it.

Right up until he didn't.

@rhys

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