[–] 26790055? 0 points 14 points 14 points (+14|-0) ago
I'm a lawfag. Sadly, I don't think it would happen that way. I do think there would be moral high ground to challenge everything he did, but from a purely legal standpoint, the time to invalidate Obama's actions would've been before he was sworn in, not after he leaves office. The swearing in, regardless of how fraudulent it was, has the effect of "perfecting" his ascension to that office and bestowed upon him all the powers of the presidency.
But spin this a different way. If Biden takes the presidency, through this obvious fraud on the American voters, would it invalidate what he does as president? I say no, from a legal standpoint. So the time to act is now before he is sworn in.
[–] 26790841? 0 points 13 points 13 points (+13|-0) ago
Kind of. Like you can't unwind a murder, a rape or a war. But you can punish for it. And you can make the punishment so severe that others will be deterred from doing it again.
These people need to be punished in the most severe fashion. I mean public convictions, public executions and using RICO to seize every last nickel they have as the presumed fruits of their criminal enterprise. The Soros family, and the Clintons and the Obamas and the Bidens and the Kerrys, etc, etc, etc, need to go down in the worst humiliation, and their children and grandchildren need to grow up penniless and in shame.
And all the illicit moves they made need to be rooted out challenged as morally indefensible until those moves are effectively offset or reversed on those grounds.
[–] 26790520? ago
I think it would give the country the political will to undo everything that he enacted, so in that sense, we might be able to make it as if he was never there anyway.