> Truth trips
The chicom counterfeits aren't up to snuff.
Check'd
> It will be incomplete unless we are provided the things that we are withholding.
Some problems can only be solved with fire.
> can't figure it out
The ballots don't align correctly because they're counterfeit. And since the CCP's official online industrial outlet mall is Alibaba, there is a comical connection between the two.
The Chink fakes are no good.
Yet GEOTUS did not cross the Rubicon.
> Hacked narrative
When the security guard leaves the warehouse unlocked and open, it does not require a cat burglar to steal from the facility.
Inside job.
> Think I don't understand
Caesar was a deep state actor overthrowing the republic, and GEOTUS is the opposite. Hence, the parallels are not present.
> His part
He's in the perfect position right now. He is beyond criticism himself, yet has infinite opportunity to spout "told ya' so" from every rooftop.
Brilliant play.
> The Rubicon
Trump has never chosen to use his personal power to invade and overthrow the Republic. This is what Caesar accomplished when he crossed the river and entered the Pomerium of Rome.
So yes, GEOTUS has taken some irrevocable steps, and he cannot turn back; but he's not trying to usurp power for himself as Caesar did.
Never forget that Caesar was beholden to banking elites and special interest groups too.
> Dubs
> Makes to attempt to clarify what he is attempting to convey
Crossing the Rubicon can mean many things, depending on context. I have provided mine. Where is yours?
> Dems are Caesar
Yes, this. They're the ones trying to use political and economic pressure to install a new power dynamic.
Trump went home on NIGHT76. He didn't storm the capital, or any other dumb shit like that.
Never interrupt an enemy who is in the process of making a mistake.
> Canard of regulation
Dumbass. How do you think the media companies got their power in the first place?
The FCC gave it to them.
Dumbass.
Regulation cause this mess, and will exacerbate it. Just remove their Sec. 230 immunity, and the problem solves itself - they'll be sued into oblivion.
> Why not regulate them?
Because of regulatory capture. Every regulated industry eventually comes to control the regulatory bodies above them. The regulations on serve to bulwark the existing firms and protect them from liability and competition.
Treat them like you-and-I get treated. Hold them accountable. Allow them to be sued.
Maybe then the internet will become free again, and we can go back to shitposting cat pictures on anime boards.
> Thinks that the regulatory bodies can be labeled as public/private, and that will somehow make a difference.
Dumbass. It's a trick.
> Fascism
Yes. Enforcing socialism, while calling it freedom, is fascism. We live in a fascist world. And it was fascist before Mussolini was born.
He stole all his ideas from America.
> Let the military run it, and everything will be great.
Shithead. The military is filled with non-hacks. They'll fuck it up even worse than a "civilian" government.
Anybody with competence left government service long ago. Only the losers, criminals and idiots remain.
> Is trying to link the election to my statement about the inefficacy of regulatory bodies
> Is still a dumbass.
Also, it's the "united States", not the "United States". Capital letters matter.
> Making excuses for the military
At no point in American history as any member of the armed services ever protected or defended the ideals or values espoused in the Constitution. This isn't because of bad elected officials, but because of inherent issue with the system.
Militaries are non-productive organizations - they hurt people and break shit. To that end, they do not accumulate productive people, they are filled with destructive people. Always and forever.
But as for RICO, yeah. All of them get trials, most of them get sentences.
> Wrong OG
The Constitution was a trick, fren.
They got us to stop fighting against them, and to start fighting for them.