I've been asking myself that question, and I'm back to square one.
How do the Court conservatives think we, the nation, recover from election fraud on this scale? When they debated Texas's standing, they seemed to be upholding constitutional minutiae while allowing the constitutional core to be gutted.
For the liberal side it's a goal achieved. A victory for the progressive globalists.
Where do we go from here? How do we get an honest election after this? Maybe secession is the answer, but I'm pretty sure my state won't be among those that choose that path.
Posted by: Tom Bowler | December 14, 2020 at 06:31 AM
Angelo Codevilla seems to have arrived at a similar conclusion, as he describes in an essay entitled American Exodus. Not secession, but exodus.
Our American exodus won’t be led by a Moses. The Republican Party, with the exception of a few national-level personages, may be as useless as ever. But politics is a collective activity, and the lack of top-down leadership notwithstanding, our exodus is already in progress, thanks to Americans’ legal structures and traditions of state and local autonomy, as well as our Tocquevillian taste for organizing ourselves into ad hoc groups for the common benefit.
Already in the winter of 2021, 33 states, pressed by their voters, are introducing bills to prevent the kind of executive and judicial manipulation of election procedures that occurred in 2020. Ordinary citizens who are oppressed by COVID-inspired overregulation have also organized themselves to take advantage of the fact that safety in numbers is the first rule of civil disobedience. Thus, hundreds of California restauranteurs jointly defied the governor’s order to keep them closed, and sued him. Joint action is also the key to transforming what the authorities want to treat as disciplinary or criminal matters into political ones.
Professor Codevilla's full article is here.
Angelo Codevilla seems to have arrived at a similar conclusion, as he describes in an essay entitled American Exodus. Not secession, but exodus.