B-Man Posted December 13, 2024 Posted December 13, 2024 NOTHING TO SEE HERE: Little Joe is still busy . . . . . . . or at least his 'handlers' are. Biden commutes roughly 1,500 sentences and pardons 39 people in biggest single-day act of clemency. You see, if you can’t prove violence, then people are put away on something else. And there’s plea bargaining and… I’d look very carefully at everyone Biden is letting out and their connection to Biden. The Biden Junta is dirty, dirty, dirty. https://apnews.com/article/biden-pardons-clemency-4432002d67334e6716c2776fd73f3cc8 .
B-Man Posted December 16, 2024 Posted December 16, 2024 Presidents, and the number of individuals that they have of pardoned, commuted, or rescinded: - John F Kennedy: 575 - Lyndon B Johnson: 1,187 - Richard Nixon: 926 - Gerald Ford: 409 - Jimmy Carter: 566 people + 200K Vietnam War draft evaders - Ronald Reagan: 406 - George H. W. Bush: 77 - Bill Clinton: 459 - George W Bush: 200 - Barack Obama: 1,927 - Donald Trump: 237 - Joe Biden: 8,062 ……and he still has 36 days left! https://x.com/leslibless/status/1867941005594411259? 1
All_Pro_Bills Posted January 9 Posted January 9 (edited) 14 hours ago, BillsFanNC said: I suspect these so-called "preemptive" pardons will be nullified through any legitimate hearing in front of a Federal Court, most likely SCOTUS. If for nothing else then violations of a procedural nature. Like pardoning a person not charged or convicted of any crime. That's just not how the legal system is intended to function. I'd love to see one of these preemptive pardoned people get charged with a crime and then see the legal actions and arguments presented to the court, for and against. Edited January 9 by All_Pro_Bills 1
BillsFanNC Posted Wednesday at 12:45 PM Author Posted Wednesday at 12:45 PM Bennie Thompson. Why do you suppose that he'd be seeking a pardon? 1
B-Man Posted Sunday at 05:04 PM Posted Sunday at 05:04 PM Joe Biden can’t pardon Fauci , Liz Cheney nor Adam Schiff - A president cannot issue a pardon for someone who has not been charged with a crime. The power to pardon under the U.S. Constitution is generally understood to apply to offenses after they have been committed and typically after legal proceedings have begun or concluded. Preemptive pardons, where someone is pardoned for a crime they might commit in the future, are not recognized under current legal interpretations. https://x.com/EladioSantiag14/status/1880650992141664412 1
leh-nerd skin-erd Posted 14 hours ago Posted 14 hours ago 11 minutes ago, BillsFanNC said: Glad to see it—the likelihood of any of these (potential) wrongdoers seeing any meaningful punishment (if appropriate) is next to zero. It is a continuation of the bastardization of the rule of law and an acknowledgement of how the right people are above the law pretty consistently (see Joe B, classified document retention over a decade plus and the kindly elderly gentlemen exclusion among others). At the same time, perhaps it makes sense to explore constitutionality of preemptive pardons and the continued deep dive into wrongdoing. We’re only 2 years out from a potential change in political cycle and 4 years from a potential change in those in charge of executive branch. Trump will surely want to issue preemptive pardons to those in his circle should that come to pass. 1
BillsFanNC Posted 14 hours ago Author Posted 14 hours ago Pardoned J6 committee member Adam Kinzinger:
IrishLass Posted 13 hours ago Posted 13 hours ago Trump is going to knock the Deep State down like bowling pins. None of Joey's "pre-emptive pardons" will stand because he wasn't legitimately president.
4th&long Posted 13 hours ago Posted 13 hours ago Politics are corrupt but you guys are crying this morning and I love it. You don't get your pound of flesh. ***** you! Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha. The clown show gets started today and I will be here to laugh in your face.
Recommended Posts