What Happens When Top Rival American Politicians Compete to Jail Each Other?
Article written by Richard Fernandez in "PJMedia":
It's been more than two years since the Belmont Club article predicting a political showdown after
the election of Donald Trump was written. Since then, its scenario of
top rival American politicians trying to jail each other has become an
actual possibility. "Will impeaching Trump lead to indictments of Obama
and Biden over Ukraine?" says an article in the Spectator. Rudy Giuliani asks: 'Shouldn't Biden be investigated over Ukraine if Trump can be impeached over it?' Hillary's in the mix too:
As President Donald Trump's presidency is threatened by an impeachment inquiry, the Republican chairmen of two Senate committees, Ron Johnson and Chuck Grassley, are asking Attorney General William Barr to investigate any ties between Ukraine and Hillary Clinton's 2016 campaign.
To use a
World War II analogy there are torpedoes in the water going in opposite
directions at each fleet's battlewagons. If all strike home, a lot of
damage will ensue as the different parts of the bureaucracy act against
rival leaders. Not surprisingly, the term "civil war" actually began
trending on Twitter. CBS News reported: "'Civil War 2' trends on Twitter after Trump quotes speculation that impeachment would spark 'civil war.'"
The very mention of the term is itself an impeachable offense according to Harvard Law professor John Coates.
"This tweet is itself an independent basis for impeachment - a sitting
president threatening civil war if Congress exercises its
constitutionally authorized power." The fact that it was Pastor Robert Jeffress
who said the offending words on a TV program -- Trump was merely
quoting him -- is of no moment. The impeachment devil who no one
professed to believe in has appeared at Nancy Pelosi's prayers.
Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi said Saturday that she is heartbroken and prayerful as House Democrats move forward with their impeachment inquiry and that President Donald Trump's actions left her no other choice.
There is
frank hostility. "Joe Biden's campaign wrote to executives at ABC, CBS,
NBC, CNN and Fox News to 'demand' that Rudy Giuliani not be invited on
the air to discuss Ukraine and President Trump because of what they
called his misleading comments about the Biden family," according to the New York Times. Giuliani
responded indignantly: "Think of the Biden arrogance and entitlement to
protection. They believe they own the media and they are demanding that
they silence me. They know I have incriminating facts, not hearsay,
because they know what they did in selling Joe’s office to a Ukrainian
crook."
Politicians
could be psyching themselves into the very thing they purport to
abhor. If they sincerely want to step back from the brink now's the
time. Otherwise, their actions may at some point unleash a runaway
train. As a Harvard symposium noted, World War I started by miscalculation.
None of the leaders of Europe in 1914 would have chosen the war they caused—and in the end all lost. By 1918, the Kaiser had been dismissed, the AustroHungarian Empire dissolved, the czar overthrown by the Bolsheviks, France bled for a generation, and England shorn of the flower of its youth and treasure. Given a chance for a do-over, none of the leaders would have made the choices he did. Combinations of assertiveness and ignorance, risk-taking, overconfidence, and conceit produced an outcome so devastating that it required historians to create a new category: world war -- Graham Allison
A salient lesson of World War I for decision-makers should be humility about predicting consequences in a transitional epoch. The leaders of the era were wrong about almost everything – the effectiveness of ultimatums, the value of the alliance system, the duration of the conflict, the tactics and strategy required in a new industrialized war, the social and cultural impact of mass death and the stability of empire. -- Ben Heineman
Perhaps the
worst illusion of politicians is that they are in control; that we can
determine the climate or we can create an end to history. But often we
cannot. Human affairs will remain vulnerable to external events whether
it is from a disaster such as a meteor arriving undetected from outer space or unlooked-for salvation from people like Stanislav Petrov,
who saved the world during the Cold War by ignoring a faulty Soviet
missile alert. The future is an alien signal. It's bound to surprise us.
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