Friday, July 22, 2022

Trump's Guilt: the Inescapable Conclusion From the January 6 Hearings

History is full of evil leaders who have harmed their countries and put their own desires, obsessions and goals ahead of the welfare of the nation they lead and the lives and security of the everyday citizen.  As the House Select Committee hearings on January 6th have laid out, Donald Trump is such a leader who in his quest to cling to power was willing to destroy America's democracy and jeoprodize the lives of members of Congress and the capitol police sworn to defend the Capitol and members of the House of Representatives and the Senate.  Because of Trump's actions and inaction, people died and others remain scarred from the coup attempt.  Last night's hearing continued to rely largely on Trump regime personnel to paint a disturbing picture of what transpired after Trump's speech that instigated the attack on the Capitol and Trump's near glee in watching the violence his followers wrought in an effort to prevent the certification of the election Trump lost and had been told he had lost by a panoply of members of his regime and senior White House officials. Clinging to power by any means to further his malignant narcissism was all that mattered to Trump and lives lost and/or ruined did not even show on Trump's radar.  The man is guilty of sedition and needs to be prosecuted, convicted and give the most severe penalty possible so that no one ever attempts such a coup agin.  A piece in The Atlantic looks at the damning conclusion from the hearings (another good piece is here in the Washington Post).  Here are excerpts:

Americans aren’t the most attentive political observers. But thanks in part to Hollywood, they have a pretty clear vision of what they expect their president to do in an unfolding crisis, especially an attack on U.S. citizens at home or abroad. He (or she, in the movies at least) will march down to the Situation Room, confer with advisers, and at some point address the nation in a sober televised speech.

During the crucial afternoon hours of January 6, 2021, as a mob of protesters stormed and briefly occupied the Capitol, then-President Donald Trump did none of those things.

Trump spent the afternoon sitting in his private White House dining room, staring for hours at a television tuned to Fox News. He made no effort to quell the violence or protect congressional leaders under threat, and when he was told the rioters were chanting that they wanted to “hang” Trump’s vice president, Mike Pence, Trump said that Pence deserved it. The mob came so close to Pence that, the committee revealed tonight, the Secret Service agents protecting him [Pence] feared for their lives and wanted “to say goodbye” to their families.

Trump ignored pleas from his staff, his allies in Congress, and even his own daughter Ivanka. Many of those around the president wanted him to forcefully call off the mob and deliver a national address to denounce the violence. All he would do was film and tweet out a short video in which he gently asked his supporters to “go home in peace.” “He refused to defend our nation and our Constitution,” Representative Liz Cheney, the Republican of Wyoming, said. “He refused to do what every American president must.”

Trump’s leadership—or lack thereof—during the Capitol riot was the focus of tonight’s prime-time hearing, the ninth hearing that the committee has held and, for now, the final one scheduled. There will be more, however, committee leaders announced tonight.

The presentation filled in an aspect of the day about which relatively little had been known, because the Trump White House kept incomplete logs of the president’s activities and phone calls. The Secret Service deleted the majority of texts that its agents sent on January 6, a potential violation of federal law that the National Archives is now investigating.

The committee established that Trump was told within 15 minutes of ending his rally speech that the Capitol was under attack. After the Secret Service rebuffed his demands to join the crowd himself, the president settled into his seat at the head of the dining-room table. . . . Trump interrupted his Fox viewing to make phone calls—not to help stop the riot but to urge Republican senators to hold strong in their planned objections to the certification of the election.

[S]enior administration officials testifying that they were aware of no Trump calls to the secretary of defense, the attorney general, or the secretary of homeland security. Sarah Matthews, a former deputy press secretary who testified at the hearing, told the panel that Trump could have delivered live remarks to the nation “within a matter of minutes” simply by walking down a hallway to the White House press-briefing room. He did not.

The committee juxtaposed descriptions of the president’s quiet afternoon in the White House with the growing terror at the Capitol. A White House national-security employee, whose identity was obscured by the committee, testified about how scared Pence’s security detail became as they tried to rush him past rioters to safety. Viewers saw footage of Senator Josh Hawley of Missouri scurrying out of danger just hours after he’d raised his fist to encourage the throng that would ultimately force him to flee.

This was Trump’s 3 a.m. moment, except it occurred during the middle of the president’s notoriously short workday. It would be easy to say Trump was a mere spectator, choosing to sit out an attempted coup and arguably derelict in his sworn duty to “preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution.” But the January 6 committee has accused the former president of being far more than a passive observer who fiddled while the Capitol nearly fell.

Again and again, the panel has asserted that Trump was an instigator and a would-be participant in the charge, an unhinged leader who literally lunged for the wheel of the car that would take him to the Capitol. “The mob was accomplishing President Trump’s purpose,” Representative Adam Kinzinger said tonight. “So of course he didn’t intervene.” In the committee’s telling, [Trump] the president watched his legion of supporters attack the seat of American government not only with glee but also with envy, and it is sheer folly to have expected him to try and stop the riot he had fomented.

At best, Trump belongs in prison although I would prefer a far harsher penalty. 

1 comment:

Sixpence Notthewiser said...

Oh, we all knew he was guilty.
His minions knew he was guilty.
The MAGAts knew he was guilty.
Being guilty is his brand. Now, he needs to go to jail.

XOXO