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The Smoking Cannon

So much evidence, so little time.

 
It seems like every time the president speaks, he says something that could be construed as abuse of power or something that the founders clearly meant to protect us from. Trump calls these things, “perfect.”
 
Now comes the unraveling.
 
The president is obviously not going to get contrite. He’s getting angrier and angrier and his communications are getting more and more abusive, personal and vile. He’s clearly angry because Rudy and his other sycophants probably told him that what he was asking of foreign leaders was perfectly fine, and that in their opinion, the president cannot be the subject of a criminal complaint while in office. Of course, that’s just conjecture and will have to be tested before a judge, but I’m thinking that once somebody tells the president something he wants to hear, then the president takes this as an iron-clad guarantee of correctness.
 
Uh oh.
 
There’s that darned United States Constitution in the way again.
 
And the real issue is that most of the other people who work in government know what the rules are and that what the president has either asked them to do or what he’s done under the impression that everything a president does is legal, is actually not.
 
The next phase of this drama has already begun. It’s where the civil servants and the credentialed professionals, as opposed to the aforementioned sycophants, begin to talk, release documents, ask for whistle-blower status, hire attorneys, or seek bargains. They will not give up their humanity or morals for a president who seems to have left his in Queens at the spot where Trump and his father decided to build apartments, but not rent them to African-Americans.
 
We are almost at the “my kingdom for a horse” moment. But first, the president has to repeat conspiracy theories while accusing Joe Biden of something for which there is no evidence. He must curse and sputter and offer excuse after contradicting excuse to cover his behavior. Then he will ask the last of his sycophants to fall on their professional and person swords. And some will.
 
In the end, though, his behavior makes the country less secure, more divided, and sullied by the mud he’s slinging.
 
For more, go to www.facebook.com/WhereDemocracyLives or Twitter @rigrundfest
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By Robert I. Grundfest

I am a teacher, writer, voice-over artist and rationally opinionated observer of American and international society. While my job is to entertain and engage, my purpose is always to start a conversation.

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