• @spongebue
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    51 day ago

    It shouldn’t have taken 4 years, no, but there’s a lot of false equivalence in everything else you said. Different crimes, different things that have to be proven (including intent), different witnesses to be interviewed to build that case, etc.

    • @Blue_Morpho
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      1 day ago

      Yes, there are different things that need to be proven for different crimes- All of which are done after arrest for every other poor or middle class person arrested.

      I had an employee with an ex girlfriend who would call the police to report him for missed child support payments. He would be arrested, thrown in jail over the weekend until Monday morning when the county clerk would be back in office and tell the judge, “Mr. X has been paying his child support, you can release him.”

      That’s the legal system for the poor.

      • @spongebue
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        -11 day ago

        That’s a pretty shitty thing, but the solution is not to extend the shittiness elsewhere, especially since a miss here would vindicate Trump that much more in the eyes of his supporters

        • @Blue_Morpho
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          1 day ago

          So Trump and only Trump gets off because we wouldn’t want shitness extended? Wtf?

          And a miss would mean nothing just as the fraud and rape convictions meant nothing to them.

          In my opinion, Trump in prison without makeup and hair stylists would have had a huge affect on many of his followers who see him as an untouchable strong man. It would have destroyed the illusion he portrays.

          • @spongebue
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            21 day ago

            If there’s a problem being applied unequally, you don’t spread it. You fix the problem.

            He wasn’t convicted of rape. A jury found that, more likely than not, he sexually assaulted E Jean Carroll in her defamation lawsuit. The same jury found that, more likely than not, he did not rape her but the judge later clarified that those actions constituted rape. All of it was part of a civil lawsuit, where the standard is a preponderance of evidence (basically, that “more likely than not” phrase I used). Criminal trials are brought on differently and need to be proven beyond a reasonable doubt, which is a much more difficult burden.

            • @Blue_Morpho
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              21 day ago

              The standard has always been to arrest criminals. It’s never been a problem. Only Trump got a pass.

              The judge said rape. The issue wasn’t how hard it is to prosecute criminal vs civil. You started 2 separate arguments.

              One was he couldn’t be arrested because that’s not how it is done. That is false. Arresting first is the standard.

              The second was that how he was perceived would be a political problem. To which his rape and other fraud convictions are proof it didn’t matter to his followers. The standards to get a guilty verdict in civil cases aren’t relevant.

              https://www.npr.org/2022/12/06/1140756394/former-president-donald-trumps-company-found-guilty-criminal-tax-fraud

              • @spongebue
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                21 day ago

                You don’t get guilty verdicts in civil cases, as you said. You don’t get convictions. Those are very specific things with very specific meanings, and they do not happen in the civil system

                • @Blue_Morpho
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                  121 hours ago

                  Which is why I linked to his 2022 criminal conviction.

                  • @spongebue
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                    121 hours ago

                    You said

                    The standards to get a guilty verdict in civil cases aren’t relevant.

                    They’re not relevant because you don’t get “guilty” verdicts in civil cases. Nuances matter and you’ve been getting them all wrong