I am obviously thrilled by today's events. My neighborhood was a non-stop celebration - cheering, horn-honking, etc. If not for COVID, there would have been a lot of hugs and high fives. So many people letting out sighs of relief. Strangers stopping strangers just to shake their hands...CameronBornAndBred wrote: ↑November 7th, 2020, 9:36 pmThe victory event tonight had the feeling of true finality tonight. Trump can whine all he wants, but the Biden administration is moving forward, and moving in to the White House. JB's got lots on his plate to work on healing this country, but he seems truly driven to do it.
Also, GA is nearing 10K votes in Biden's favor. AZ is looking iffy. I'd love for it to hold just to keep that projected "306" number.
I loved the speeches tonight. No more us vs. them rhetoric. No more loyalty tests. The president's job is to make choices, and the nature of the some of those choices is that they might help some more than others, but I think that Biden truly wants to do what is best for America. He has a huge job ahead of him and I'm sure he will stumble along the way. But we will have a government that is not run in a chaotic way based on the President's gut instincts, but rather a collaboration of knowledge and expertise to make deliberate decisions. These are all things we took for granted five years ago.
I am hoping that Trump's legal challenges prove futile and we can move on quickly. I saw that at least one of his sons tweeted a loyalty test to his supporters and several stepped up.
Though I am focusing on the positive, I am wondering how much he will try to do and be able to get away with over the next two months. Will it be a two month government funded golf trip to Mar-a-lago? I think he owns a few courses in Dubai so maybe we will pay for him to go there. I am concerned he will do nothing to deal with COVID, jobs, or any other major problems currently facing our country. What kind of executive orders will he try to push through? I wonder if he will truly test the limits, particularly since I think that Barr will still be unlikely to try to stop him.
Along those lines, I have read that in addition to the usual pardons (which both parties are admittedly guilty of, though I'm sure Trump will take it to a new level), Trump might pardon himself. I am trying to determine what he would be pardoning himself of? I feel like I am missing something obvious, but I thought that most of his federal charges are in process and/or on hold, so he can't really pardon himself of something he hasn't been convicted of. I'm not a lawyer - looking for some guidance here. Thanks.