It wouldn’t be fair to have your felony conviction negatively impact your opportunities. This is how justice works right?

265 points

Justice DENIED. AGAIN.

There’s no impropriety about sending a convicted felon to prison just before an election. He has already been convicted. The fact that he is the nominee is irrelevant. RNC should have thought about that before they picked a guy they knew would likely end up behind bars for all the criminal acts he committed.

Now Trump will say he “won” the case, just like he did with the classified documents case. Corrupt judges all the way down.

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-44 points

To be fair, would you want to be the judge that threw him in jail when the military comes to break him out following an election victory? Looking into America from the outside, people are hedging their bets with possible dictatorship.

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51 points

If he gets elected into the White House, that’s going to happen anyway. His entire thing is revenge, and these fuckers are submitting prematurely.

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25 points

YES

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12 points
3 points

I sure hope his record holds.

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3 points
*

Don’t be in a position of power of you’re a fucking coward then.

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-4 points

There are far more positions with power over people than there are good people mentaly equiped to fill them. Your comment is incredibly naive.

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200 points

This is an astounding level of bullshit even from a country that gives its full throated support to anyone with a net worth in the 7 figures or greater.

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15 points

A million bucks isn’t worth a million bucks anymore. $1,000,000 might net you $75,000 in yearly interest, before taxes. What kind of purchasing power is that going to be at retirement?

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40 points
*

A worker earning $36 an hour wouldn’t make $75,000 a year.

The millionaires are fine.

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0 points

You know how much insurance costs on a Ferrari?

…/s. Any Replacements fans out there?

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-6 points
*

$33/hr. was an unimaginable amount of money to me in 1998. What’s that look like when I can’t work anymore, say in 2040? How about when a loaf of bread goes from $.50 to $5.50? That’s how I know you’re a child.

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15 points

Please direct me to these ez pz 7.5% returns.

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3 points

FWIW, retirement studies would suggest a 4% withdrawal rate the first year, and increasing for inflation each year after. There are some other ways to go with this, but it’s a good starting place.

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1 point
Deleted by creator
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3 points

It’s ok. I’ll take that pesky $1,000,000 and earn that paltry $75,000 in annual interest for doing nothing. It’s ok. I’ll allieviate you from the stress of thinking how worthless it is to you. Yes, I’ll allow that.

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-5 points

People with your financial sophistication will be eating cat food out a can at 75. Good luck with those pesky numbers.

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198 points

what the fuck, he was convicted, who gives a flying shit about his fucking candidacy.

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62 points

Louder, so those in the south back can hear it

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5 points

Do you think only southerners are trumpers for some reason?

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13 points

I agree. The Bible belt still contributes to our problems, of course. But the rust belt really fucked us in 2016.

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176 points

This isn’t a verdict, it is sentencing. He has already been found guilty. If the sentence matches what others have gotten for the same crimes, there is no bias.

By failing to do so, he has at best delayed justice, and if Trump should win, has essentially nullified the jury’s verdict.

This feels reminiscent of Camu’s “The Guest.” The judge was given a job to do, and by waiting until the hard decision solves itself without his involvement, now all sides will feel this judge is a traitor.

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79 points

This judge is a traitor

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7 points

I think the idea is that on sentencing they’re just going to take him into custody so they don’t want to give him the “election interference!” out.

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10 points

I thought general consensus is he isn’t realistically looking at jail time for this?

I don’t ever expect him to actually be held accountable, sadly. I just want to see the justice system actually functioning in a way that protects this country as a whole. Trump did a ton of damage personally to this country, but to see the entire court system, the only thing we have to stave off change through less civil means, is a pure joke is the greater tragedy for me.

We could always theorize the laws and voting and our representatives would prevent something like this former presidency from ruining our country, but what have we seen but paper tigers?

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11 points

I think his crimes hold a maximum of 4 years in prison. But not a single person charged for them the first time has gotten prison time and usually get probabtion and a fine.

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-29 points

While I am not a defender of Trump, I think this decision is largely reasonable. It’s essentially punting sentencing to the court of public opinion. That’s the ultimate “justice”.

Here’s the thing, he’s already convicted of the crimes. The voting public knows this. If the voting public still votes him in , they’re essentially saying they’re okay with the crimes he’s committed. You really can’t get a better court of public opinion than a national election like this.

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16 points

Is that not mob justice?

Have we not seen the Russian funding of right wing networks and the seizing of disinformation websites this week?

Not everyone votes or can really give an informed vote.

If Trump wins, do we accept he’s now unpunishable for his crimes? If the voting majority supported him, do the rest of us suffer his promised revenge on his critics?

This is why we have a legal system supposedly. We have people who are supposed to enforce laws impartially and in a timely manner. The right to a speedy and fair trial, for both the plaintiffs and defendants. Justice delayed is justice denied.

I don’t want a bunch of biased legal know nothings determining justice. That’s some warlord stuff.

Laws are also supposed to protect from the tyranny of the majority as well. It’s also supposed to protect the powerless from overstepping authority, like a rogue president.

I’m no fan of lawyers, cops, or legislators, but I certainly don’t want to live in a place with no law.

Unless you forget an /s, I feel this is a bad take.

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-2 points

No, it’s not mob justice.

Generally, “unfair justice”, like mob justice is assessed by undue, unjust, or extreme punishment. Lack of punishment is not “unfair justice”. The US goes as fair to explicitly ban “double jeopardy” as it does not want “innocent “ people to face undue hardship.

In this case, the possible punishment is 100% within the legal system. At worst, trump receives the same punishment as any other criminal convicted of the same crimes. At best, Trump receives a lighter punishment as the result of the election. There is nothing undue or just about a lighter punishment.

Mob justice is a problem as it doesn’t allow for due process and proper representation. The “convicted” often ends up with non-reversible punishment (like mutilation or death) based on arbitrary “mobs”. Since the only outcome here is a reduced sentence, there isn’t an argument for mob justice.

TLDR: mob justice and similar “undue trials” really only care about wrongful convictions. Wrongful “not guilty” decision are not a “problem”

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14 points

What does public opinion have to do with law? That’s not how the justice system works. Convictions mean nothing without sentencing. This only further erodes people’s faith in the system. This decision is nothing but cowardice.

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7 points

This only further erodes people’s faith in the system.

It’s sure as fuck eroding mine!

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0 points

The court system is loosely based on public opinion. Since it’s unreasonable to gather the public’s opinion, a jury is selected to represent “the public”.

In this case, the election essentially allows you to get the actually public’s opinion. You literally cant get closer to true “court of public opinion” that having a nationwide vote on a recently convicted individual candidacy.

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170 points
*

Pathetic.

I’m stating it right now. I am officially running for President in the 2024, 2028, 2032, and 2036 elections. Therefore, to avoid the appearance of impropriety and not show political bias, the criminal court system cannot send me to jail until after the 2036 election, regardless of what crimes I commit or am convicted of in the mean time. The crimes I commit between now and then are irrelevant. I mean, you can convict me of those crimes if you’d like. You just can’t punish me for it because I’m a Presidential Candidate under the Trump standard set forth by this judge.

This act of “not showing bias” goes to show the exact bias that the entire court system continues to give to Trump: giving him special privileges that exactly zero other people in this country would have extended to them in the same situation. And in one fell swoop, Merchan shows that he’s absolutely no better than the rest of them; when push comes to shove, every single one of them will go out of their way to avoid holding Trump accountable for anything, all the while wondering why he keeps doing it.

He’s doing it because it works. He’s doing it because you let him. He’s doing it because you are unwilling to do anything to stop him.

And he’s going to keep doing it because you continue to let him win. Fuck this judge and fuck every other judge who continues to rule that Trump gets special treatment as if it’s some kind of fucking birthright.

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36 points

Showing plenty of bias by showering the felon with gratuitous delay and deference benefits.

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7 points

Why are you only running through the 2036 election? Are you already 90? Why stop when you’re 102?

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7 points

I just haven’t filled out the paperwork yet. I’ve got 12 years. I’ve got time.

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