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The Quiet Lawlessness of Joe Biden

  

Category:  News & Politics

Via:  s  •  2 days ago  •  39 comments

The Quiet Lawlessness of Joe Biden
He was elected to restore norms but has done more damage to the rule of law than any other president.

S E E D E D   C O N T E N T



Four years ago today, Joe Biden took the oath of office and   made a series of promises : “I will defend the Constitution. I will defend our democracy. I will defend America.” Those words came just weeks after the January 6 riot at the Capitol, but the idea that Biden, the Washington mainstay, would restore the “norms” so often flouted by his predecessor was arguably the very reason American voters elected him in the first place.



As he’s scrambled to try and salvage his legacy in recent weeks, Biden has returned to those themes. “In the past four years, our democracy has held strong,” he   said   in his farewell address last week. “And every day, I’ve kept my commitment to be president for   all   Americans.”



No. His “aww shucks,” doddering nature is effective, but Joe Biden’s legacy is not the Restorer of Norms. He is leaving office quietly having caused more damage to the rule of law than arguably any single one of his predecessors.




But what about Andrew Jackson? 



Following the   Worcester v. Georgia   decision that acknowledged Native American tribes as distinct political entities, Jackson—responsible for the Trail of Tears—purportedly said, “John Marshall has made his decision; now let him enforce it.” Well, after the Supreme Court   struck down   Biden’s student loan “forgiveness” plan as unconstitutional in   Biden v. Nebraska , the president tried again. “Early in my term, I announced a major plan to provide millions of working families with debt relief for their college student debt,” he   bragged . “The Supreme Court blocked it. But that didn’t stop me.” 



But what about Abraham Lincoln?



Abraham Lincoln was one of the greatest presidents in American history—if not the greatest—but he did occasionally overreach as the Civil War raged, suspending the writ of habeas corpus multiple times,   ignoring a ruling   from Chief Justice Roger Taney about the decision, and ordering the arrest of opponents in Congress and in the media. But then again, President Biden encouraged his Department of Justice to prosecute his political opponents,   declaring from the steps of Marine One   that he hoped the January 6 committee “goes after [Trump administration officials defying subpoenas] and holds them accountable criminally” and that his own DOJ would bring charges against them. In April 2022, the   New York Times   reported   that Biden had grown “frustrated” with Attorney General Merrick Garland’s “deliberative approach” and that he had “confided to his inner circle that he believed former President Donald J. Trump was a threat to democracy and should be prosecuted.” Once Trump   was   eventually indicted, Biden   taunted his opponent   about his limited ability to campaign against him: “I hear you’re free on Wednesdays.”



But what about Woodrow Wilson? 



After all, President Wilson infamously resegregated the federal government and enforced the Sedition Act of 1918 to jail thousands of his critics. Hard to beat that one. But Biden did try his best to silence his critics—or at least erase their criticisms—by unleashing his staff to threaten and bully social media companies in an effort to prevent Americans from straying from his political orthodoxy. Meta CEO Mark Zuckerberg   told Joe Rogan last week   that “these people from the Biden administration would call up our team and, like, scream at them and curse” to take things down that were, in fact, true. As Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito   recounted in   Murthy v. Biden :




For months in 2021 and 2022, a coterie of officials at the highest levels of the Federal Government continuously harried and implicitly threatened Facebook with potentially crippling consequences if it did not … crack down on what the officials saw as unhelpful social media posts, including not only posts that they thought were false or misleading but also stories that they did not claim to be literally false but nevertheless wanted obscured.



But what about Franklin Roosevelt?



After the Supreme Court struck down several of his New Deal initiatives, a frustrated FDR threatened to add justices to the court with the Judicial Procedures Reform Bill of 1937. Feeling pressured by far-left critics of the court, Biden   created a   Presidential Commission on the Supreme Court of the United States after he   agreed   that the court was “getting out of whack.” The Commission’s report studied Democratic legislation to   pack the court   and strip it of jurisdiction to hear cases that could undermine his administration’s priorities. Threatening to destroy the political independence of the Supreme Court unless its justices rule the right way didn’t work for FDR, and it didn’t work for Biden either.



But what about Barack Obama?



Despite his constitutional duty to “take care that the laws be faithfully executed,” President Obama put out memos announcing his decisions not to enforce laws he disagreed with—like   marijuana   and   immigration   enforcement. So did Biden,   making clear last week   his administration would not enforce the TikTok ban   that he himself   signed into law just months earlier—not because he disagreed with it, but because he didn’t want to be on the hook politically for shutting down the app that is so popular with young people.



But what about George W. Bush?



Bush famously signed the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act into law while   publicly stating   the legislation presented “serious constitutional concerns.” But Biden repeatedly told the American people that he did not have the power as president to issue an   eviction   moratorium, disburse   blanket   “forgiveness” of student loan debt, or tackle   climate change —only to forge ahead with all three and criticize the Supreme Court in the most strident and partisan terms when justices struck them all down.



And of course, but what about Donald Trump?



There is no minimizing how Trump handled his 2020 election loss—attempting to undermine and overturn the results to stay in power. Biden, to his credit, has done nothing of the sort this time around, inviting Trump to the White House and emphasizing the importance of a peaceful transfer of power. But that all played out against the backdrop of Biden trying to rig an election in his own way, hiding his deteriorating mental acuity from the American people—and even leaders of his own party—in an effort to secure reelection based on a facade. In a recent   interview with   USA Today , Biden conceded that he “[didn’t] know” if he had the “vigor” to serve another four years.



He did this by hiding his condition and blackballing anyone who questioned his competency. Trump infamously attacked special counsel Robert Mueller throughout the course of the Russia investigation. And after special counsel Robert Hur   released his report   declining to charge Biden for the mishandling of classified documents—in large part because Hur did not believe a jury would convict a “sympathetic, well-meaning, elderly man with a poor memory”—Biden accused Hur of callously asking him when his son died. “How in the hell dare he raise that?” the president   bellowed , allowing his staff and block Hur from various employment opportunities. But in actuality, it   was Biden who brought up   Beau—not Hur. More to the point, the transcript also showed Biden asking his attorney “in 2009, am I still vice president?” 



Trump has also been undermining the rule of law for years, repeatedly and emphatically deriding the justice system as “rigged.” And yet, how else can we describe Biden’s handling of his son’s criminal prosecution this past year? He pointed to Hunter’s indictment as proof that Americans should trust our legal system, even saying after his son’s conviction—related to a   firearm restriction Biden supports —that he would “abide by the jury decision” and “not pardon him.” Yet weeks after the election, the pardon   came nonetheless —not because he was a devoted father but because he’d “watched [his] son being selectively, and unfairly, prosecuted.” He claimed “no reasonable person” could conclude this wasn’t a politically motivated case—despite the fact that Hunter was prosecuted by Biden’s own Justice Department.



It was all a lie. As the judge overseeing the tax case pointed out, “The Constitution provides the President with broad authority to grant reprieves and pardons for offenses against the United States … but nowhere does the Constitution give the President the authority to rewrite history.” 



Biden’s   attempt to rewrite history   with respect to the Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) last week is a fitting capstone on his lawless presidency. Congress first sent the ERA to the states for ratification in 1972 with a seven-year deadline, but it didn’t receive the requisite support   until January 2020 —decades beyond the congressionally mandated deadline and after several original states had   voted to de-ratify   the amendment.



The archivist of the United States didn’t accept the belated ratification as a legitimate development, and neither has any federal court that has considered the question. The late Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsberg (one of the earliest and strongest proponents of the ERA) didn’t accept it, and neither did Joe Biden for the first 1,457 days of his presidency— until it became a question of his legacy. Then, he   decided he could   simply “affirm what [he] believe[s]” and announce that the Constitution had been amended, concerns about precedent be damned.





As we enter a second Trump administration, there is plenty of concern about the institutional havoc the president-elect could wreak. Might he try to   run for an unconstitutional third term ?   Ignore the Supreme Court   if it declares his immigration enforcement actions to be unlawful?   Threaten TV networks   with onerous regulations and investigations if they air or refuse to censor criticisms of his administration?   Refuse to enforce   a law passed by Congress that criminalizes fraudulent memecoins or appropriates money for military equipment to Ukraine?



But while these folks were worried about what violations Trump   might   commit, Biden was actually   committing   them. He may have been less upfront about his lawlessness than his predecessor, but he did significant damage to our constitutional order and the rule of law in the name of appeasing political supporters and attacking political opponents.



That’s Biden’s legacy—a quiet lawlessness that should live in infamy.


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Sean Treacy
Professor Principal
1  seeder  Sean Treacy    2 days ago

When even the anti-Trump Dispatch team publicly recognizes Biden did more damage to the rule of law than Trump....

 
 
 
JohnRussell
Professor Principal
2  JohnRussell    2 days ago

The Dispatch is a conservative web site. 

 
 
 
Sean Treacy
Professor Principal
2.1  seeder  Sean Treacy  replied to  JohnRussell @2    2 days ago
The Dispatch is a conservative web site.

The Dispatch was founded to oppose Trump. 

 
 
 
Sean Treacy
Professor Principal
3  seeder  Sean Treacy    2 days ago

Mark Penn, longtime Clintonista, admits the obvious:

The last straw

Last minute pardons for Biden’s political accomplices were the plan all along. The pardons for drug dealers and commutations for murderers were just cover for the main act of these pardons and his son — all done after elections have passed.

The only administration to try to jail political opponents was not Trump’s but Biden’s, and it was the voters who rejected it with their votes.

There were legitimate questions on whether Fauci lied about his funding of gain of function research, whether Miley broke the chain of command and had unauthorized communications with the Chinese and whether the Jan 6th committee coached witnesses. They may have all been right and truthful but there were questions, and they will all go unresolved now. But Biden was elected lying to the public about his son’s business (which was eventually uncovered), sought to win reelection hiding his infirmities, (which was also eventually uncovered), and genuinely abused his office in the closing days of his presidency as his low ratings sink even lower.

 
 
 
Ozzwald
Professor Quiet
3.1  Ozzwald  replied to  Sean Treacy @3    2 days ago
The only administration to try to jail political opponents was not Trump’s but Biden’s

Jail him for crimes which he committed.  Treating him like any other American suspected of committing a crime. 

Can you point out in the process anything that was done which was caused through Biden's request, or is it just that they would dare charge MAGA's cult leader with anything?

So begins the apologetic replies with no attempt to answer the question......

 
 
 
Sean Treacy
Professor Principal
3.1.1  seeder  Sean Treacy  replied to  Ozzwald @3.1    2 days ago
So begins the apologetic replies with no attempt to answer the question......

The irony. Try reading the post you were responding to again....

he only administration to try to jail political opponents was not Trump’s but Biden’

 
 
 
Ozzwald
Professor Quiet
3.1.2  Ozzwald  replied to  Sean Treacy @3.1.1    2 days ago
The irony.

Yup.  1st reply, no attempt at answering the question...

 
 
 
bugsy
Professor Participates
3.1.3  bugsy  replied to  Ozzwald @3.1    2 days ago

Biden is well known to have been upset at Garland for not filing charges earlier.

There is no way he didn't give the order. 

 
 
 
Sean Treacy
Professor Principal
3.1.4  seeder  Sean Treacy  replied to  bugsy @3.1.3    2 days ago

There is no way he didn't give the order. 

I don't think alot of Democrats understand how the executive branch works. They don't seem to grasp the Attorney General works for the President. 
 
 
 
MrFrost
Professor Guide
3.1.5  MrFrost  replied to  Sean Treacy @3.1.4    2 days ago
I don't think alot of Democrats understand how the executive branch works. They don't seem to grasp the Attorney General works for the President. 

No, they don't LOL 

 
 
 
Igknorantzruls
Sophomore Quiet
3.1.6  Igknorantzruls  replied to  MrFrost @3.1.5    2 days ago

This is exactly Y Trump is so damn dangerous

 
 
 
Ozzwald
Professor Quiet
3.1.7  Ozzwald  replied to  bugsy @3.1.3    yesterday
There is no way he didn't give the order. 

Citation needed.  Where in the process did Garland have a say when it was through a Grand Jury?

2nd response, still no attempt to actually answer the question.

 
 
 
bugsy
Professor Participates
3.2  bugsy  replied to  Sean Treacy @3    2 days ago

I think all those that got pardons are still investigated for their crimes, then ensure the world knows the cover up the Biden admin did to try and destroy this country.

They can't be charged, but they sure as hell can be degraded to the criminals that they probably are. 

 
 
 
Snuffy
Professor Participates
3.2.1  Snuffy  replied to  bugsy @3.2    2 days ago

Which brings up a question I asked in another seed on this same topic. How does the pardons impact the ability for a witness under oath to not answer questions? The 5th Amendment doesn't really apply anymore as the witness cannot be charged with the crime, so how do they refuse to answer? There was a case that went to SCOTUS where a prisoner was offered a pardon and he refused it so that he could continue to fight against the conviction and invoke his 5th Amendment rights.  If they just refuse a judge can hold them in contempt. If they lie under oath, they can be brought up on charges for that.

While there are more important issues for Washington to be working on, I do not see how these pre-emptive pardons are good for the country. 

 
 
 
MrFrost
Professor Guide
3.2.2  MrFrost  replied to  Snuffy @3.2.1    2 days ago
so how do they refuse to answer?

Easy, they just don't answer. 

 
 
 
Igknorantzruls
Sophomore Quiet
3.2.3  Igknorantzruls  replied to  MrFrost @3.2.2    2 days ago

Believe they must

 
 
 
Snuffy
Professor Participates
3.2.4  Snuffy  replied to  MrFrost @3.2.2    2 days ago

And if they refuse to testify in front of Congress after being subpoenaed can then be cited for contempt of Congress and potentially receive prison sentences similar to Steve Bannon or Peter Navaro. The pardon doesn't prevent that.

 
 
 
MrFrost
Professor Guide
3.2.5  MrFrost  replied to  Snuffy @3.2.4    yesterday

And if they refuse to testify in front of Congress after being subpoenaed can then be cited for contempt of Congress and potentially receive prison sentences similar to Steve Bannon or Peter Navaro. The pardon doesn't prevent that.

I will give you this, you make a good point, but they are not required to answer any questions. That's a universal right, be they pardoned or not. 

 
 
 
Snuffy
Professor Participates
3.2.6  Snuffy  replied to  MrFrost @3.2.5    19 hours ago

Correct, they are not required to answer questions. But they would then have to deal with the consequences of not answering questions. It would be up to them to determine if they wanted to or not, with the understanding that if they answer they cannot be prosecuted for any past crime of which they had received the pardon.

 
 
 
Right Down the Center
Masters Guide
4  Right Down the Center    2 days ago

Thank God Joe is gone. Now it is time for trump to use his executive orders to erase as much of Joe's destructive and dividing policies as possible.  Funny how Joe was elected to bring back some normalcy and Trump was elected for the same reason. Joe was leading us off a cliff

 
 
 
Jack_TX
Professor Quiet
4.1  Jack_TX  replied to  Right Down the Center @4    2 days ago
and Trump was elected for the same reason.

I think this is true to a certain extent, and that idea is absolutely staggering to me.

Of all the people in America that could be elected to "return normalcy".... what the actual fuck is happening?

 
 
 
Right Down the Center
Masters Guide
4.1.1  Right Down the Center  replied to  Jack_TX @4.1    2 days ago

Generally speaking it is up to the incumbent to be the nominee. It seems to work the same way with ex president in this case. He would not have been my choice but here we are.

 
 
 
Jack_TX
Professor Quiet
5  Jack_TX    2 days ago

I think the larger issue is who was actually responsible for most of this.  Biden wasn't capable of doing many of the things of which he's accused.  

I think by now most of us have heard Mike Johnson confirm what we all strongly suspected... that Joe was unaware of many of the policy decisions that were made around him.  The real question for me is who was actually in charge.

 
 
 
Sean Treacy
Professor Principal
5.1  seeder  Sean Treacy  replied to  Jack_TX @5    2 days ago

It's amazing to see what's coming out.  Larry Sabato, the "non-partisan" pundit, told how he was informed by Democratic Senators who attended a meeting with Biden in early 2024 that that there was "nothing there" and Biden couldn't really participate.  Sabato, being a good establishment boy, continued to publish tweets mocking any age related concerns about Biden until the disastrous debate. 

 
 
 
Right Down the Center
Masters Guide
5.1.1  Right Down the Center  replied to  Sean Treacy @5.1    2 days ago

Of course the party of everyone should be held accountable will ignore these actions of trying to have a puppet regime.  They are all traitors, in the colloquial sense of course.

 
 
 
Jeremy Retired in NC
Professor Expert
5.2  Jeremy Retired in NC  replied to  Jack_TX @5    15 hours ago
Biden wasn't capable of doing many of the things of which he's accused. 

The idea Biden was capable was the biggest lie run on the American people.  And pathetically those that supported that lie actually expect to be taken seriously and at their word.

 
 
 
Sean Treacy
Professor Principal
6  seeder  Sean Treacy    2 days ago

The pardon of Fauci dates to 2014, so the criminal exposure obviously goes much deeper than perjury. 

 
 
 
George
Senior Expert
6.1  George  replied to  Sean Treacy @6    2 days ago

Plus Biden just pardoned his entire family, this man is a lawless piece of shit who has no honor.

 
 
 
Sean Treacy
Professor Principal
6.1.1  seeder  Sean Treacy  replied to  George @6.1    2 days ago
den just pardoned his entire family, this man is a lawless piece of shit who has no honor.

Incredible.  There really was a lot of grifting to cover up.  

The amount of damage he's done to our republic is inestimable.   

 
 
 
Sean Treacy
Professor Principal
6.1.2  seeder  Sean Treacy  replied to  George @6.1    2 days ago

He's in the running with Buchanan for worst President of all time.  

 
 
 
George
Senior Expert
6.1.3  George  replied to  Sean Treacy @6.1.2    2 days ago

It’s good that you give Biden that much credit. He is about to be first at something.

 
 
 
George
Senior Expert
6.1.4  George  replied to  Sean Treacy @6.1.2    2 days ago

You want a laugh, and proof that the experts are partisan propagandists.

 
 
 
Sean Treacy
Professor Principal
6.1.5  seeder  Sean Treacy  replied to  George @6.1.4    2 days ago

I got a COC violation for making fun of those who voted Biden so high so be careful. Partisan historians are a protected class.

 
 
 
bugsy
Professor Participates
6.1.6  bugsy  replied to  George @6.1    2 days ago

It will certainly come out eventually that these people were in fact criminals and Biden knew and approved of them using his name for influence.

Secrets in Washington can't be held forever. 

 
 
 
Sean Treacy
Professor Principal
6.1.7  seeder  Sean Treacy  replied to  bugsy @6.1.6    2 days ago
y that these people were in fact criminals and Biden knew and approved of them using his name for influence.

So  normal "middle class"  families don't set up 20 offshore corporations to secretly move money around? 

 
 
 
Dismayed Patriot
Professor Quiet
6.1.8  Dismayed Patriot  replied to  George @6.1    15 hours ago
Biden just pardoned his entire family, this man is a lawless piece of shit who has no honor.

And you'll be cheering Trump when he gives his family blanket pardons four years from now and claiming its all politics and they never did anything wrong yada yada yada. One side of America just elected a convicted criminal who just pardoned a bunch of other violent criminals who attacked our nation on his behalf. Trying to claim Biden's the real criminal is frankly beyond stupid, but then again that could and should be the MAGA motto, "Proudly Beyond Stupid!".

It's going to be a wild ride, that's for certain, but I've no doubt that Trump will be given plenty petard to hoist himself on over the next four years and this will turn out to be one of the WORST fucking decisions voters have ever made for America and we will be regretting it for generations. And while that will be on those who voted for the fascist felon, they will just shrug their shoulders and refuse to take responsibility because let's face it, they don't give a fuck about America, they only care about themselves just like their selfish piece of shit fascist fuck for a leader. MAGA voters claimed their hillbilly lives have been hell for them up till now, well it's just about to get turned up to 11 as Trump and his billionaire buddies turn their back on the 77 million moron march they inspired all while laughing at how gullible and easily manipulated those halfwit rubes were to elect him.

There really was a lot of grifting to cover up.

Perhaps the rightwing fascists could prove that before just making that statement based on blanket pardons. I mean it's not like you'll be saying the same when Trump gives blanket pardons to his family in a couple years, right? You'll remember this and think "Nope, I need to be fair and judge Trump just like I did Biden!", right? /s

The amount of damage he's done to our republic is inestimable.   

It's inestimable because there is none. What a laughable claim. You can't even prove any crime was committed let alone that any of these pardons will "damage our republic". Electing a convicted felon damaged our republic, this pardon is nothing but piss in a pot.

 
 
 
Jack_TX
Professor Quiet
6.1.9  Jack_TX  replied to  Dismayed Patriot @6.1.8    14 hours ago
given plenty petard to hoist himself on

Generally speaking, I support the use of Shakespearean phrases.

 
 
 
charger 383
Professor Silent
7  charger 383    2 days ago

Disappointed Biden did not pardon Pete Rose and put him in Baseball Hall of Fame  

 
 
 
George
Senior Expert
7.1  George  replied to  charger 383 @7    2 days ago

Maybe the check from the Rose family didn’t clear?

 
 

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