Veredict CNN (?)
Senate votes to acquit Donald Trump; 57 Guilty, 43 Not Guilty.
I want to know if an appeal for provisory inegilibility, maintaining him as a productive politician is an option, considering all he has done for the country and for the world, his political contacts, his positive reputation around the world. Overthrowing him for a definite period of time suppresses all possibilities for Trade he has amended.
An example was the Bill Clinton process, followed by Bush administration that was conducted by wars and conflicts around the world.
(Dilma Rousseff was impeached in Brazil/2016, and her inability to run for elections was set for a period of 8-years of punishment as ineligibility. Nowadays she is an important consultant for major matters discussed in the Government, she's recurred to as a resource for final positioning/opinions of the Congress. Her impeachment happened due to administrative improbity, a much more serious accusation than the one held by Mr Trump today.)
It is an ungrateful insanity to ignore the solutions approached by the former President of the USA:
- Denuclearization agreement with North Korea (first talks)
- Removal from U.S. troops in Syria
- Understandings with Iran
- Constant visits to Russia, negotiating the Middle East situation on demand of ammunition from the U.S.
- End of Trade War with positive asset to the U.S.
- Project Dragon by NASA, putting a definite end to the Cold War and setting a determination for the end of Trade War too
As a Donald Trump supporter, I will direct this opinion to the White House, expressing my feelings towards this outcome. I truly believe this doesn't make me an inconvenient citizen of the world, and I am not ashamed of supporting Donald Trump, and still, contribute with President Biden with my opinions in the blog, and at the open channel of the White House, during all times God provides me with intelligence and freedom, and as long as I am not reproved with an apparent excuse against this behavior for the sake of provision.
(11) an appeal to provisory ineligibility - YouTube
Regards,
Thaís Fernanda Ortiz de Moraes
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