In a sit-down conversation with ProPublica, Biden discusses Kevin McCarthy’s “terrible bargain,” the fear of change that drives threats to democracy and the Supreme Court’s need for an ethics policy.
In a sit-down conversation with ProPublica, Biden discusses Kevin McCarthy’s “terrible bargain,” the fear of change that drives threats to democracy and the Supreme Court’s need for an ethics policy.
After the Trump and Biden administrations, it should be clear that the President is not who should decide what prosecutions the Dept. of Justice will pursue. That lies on the Attorney General. Also as another poster suggested in the other thread on the Biden interview, international war crimes should be pushed and protected by the ICC.
Edit: You may also be pleased to learn that Trump is, in fact, facing both state and federal criminal indictments of more than 90 felonies from financial fraud to election interference.
Of which the US is not a signatory.
And they wrote a law basically admitting they would invade The Hague to prevent any US politicians or soldiers being prosecuted.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Service-Members'_Protection_Act
The US sure sounds like a place full of lawless motherfuckers that only serve to protect themselves.
Laws like this, where they basically refuse any sort of accountability to the international community, are literally why the International Criminal Court exists. Because it’s way too easy for governments to just write laws that say “What we did wasn’t illegal, because we wrote this law that made it legal.”
What a lawless hellhole.
Precisely why it should be the ICC prosecuting. If a US official or dignitary was apprehended abroad and taken to the ICC to face charges the US would be forced to show it’s hand on the matter, then progress can happen in whatever manner is necessary from there.
Agreed, my point was simply that the US isn’t party to the ICC, and has no intent to be, precisely because they don’t want it validly turned against them.