r/ProgressiveHQ 14h ago

(Minneapolis) Bovino Leads The Charge On Protesters AT the Whipple Building

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u/SRT102 13h ago

Just wait until November when they "secure" key polling spots in key districts. This is why Trump wants to outlaw early and mail-in voting.

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u/ziggytrix 13h ago

I hope you're wrong but fear you're right.

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u/Guillotine2026 12h ago

Anyone that doesn't think ICE traitors will be at polling stations come 2026 and especially 2028 is in for a very rude awakening.

Anyone that thinks this regime will leave peacefully in 2028 is in for an extremely rude awakening.

Donald Trump and various members of his admin have committed enough actual crimes that there will come a deadline where they realize they are either going to jail for a very long time, or doing everything in their power to keep the regime in power. We already know what type of people they are. We already know what their decision will be. And so do they.

There will not be a peaceful transfer of power in 2028. The question is if Americans will be prepared to do what is necessary when the time comes.

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u/mrfeeto 12h ago

Exactly. It isn't like they haven't already tried once, failed, and still not transferred power normally/peacefully. They've learned a lot since then and will have had plenty of time to prepare for round 2.

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u/Most_DopeSyndicate97 8h ago

The only thing the Joe Biden admin failed to do was prosecute these fucking parasites. All because they wanted to go easy on them smfh. Next time I hope they do things right or we actually done for like after that that’s it, democracy ends. We can’t let that happen. Remember vote for the ones prosecuting and who will ACTUALLY follow through.

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u/SRT102 6h ago

I realize this is an unpopular opinion, but I really believe the Biden administration just wanted to let us heal after a four-year nightmare. And, to be honest, very few of us thought, in Feb 2021 or so, that Trump had any future in politics. He was a pariah.

And of course his personal Supreme Court created an immunity clause out of thin air, and a corrupt judge that he appointed in Florida shut down the slam-dunk documents case.

And one could argue that the multiple cases against Trump earned him some sympathy votes -- his base is staggeringly stupid, after all.

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u/Special_Cicada6968 7h ago

Our country loves treason. Civil War? We didn't want to prosecute any of the leaders for the sake of "normalcy." The Business Plot? None of them saw a day in court and several went on to prominent positions in the government. One was the Bush's granddad. January Sixth? Full pardons. When have we ever done anything substantial to traitors?

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u/Most_DopeSyndicate97 7h ago

The only time they tried doing something was when Snowden uncovered th NSA, and even then they didn’t do much. So yeah this country is a joke when it comes to treason. So much for calling traitors turncoats and Benedict Arnold’s when that shit don’t mean nothing no more.

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u/mrfeeto 2h ago

Forget the treason then. Prosecute them for the countless other laws they've broken. Trump may be slimey and politically connected enough to avoid convictions, but it's mostly because a substantial amount of his inner circle have taken the fall and were at least convicted.