Michael Flynn
July 30, 2021 It’s an oft-quoted saying: “Everyone is entitled to their own opinion, but not their own facts.”
A fact is something done, an action performed or an event or
circumstance that actually occurred. Essentially, facts are indisputable
truths about people, places and events.
The one seminal event that continues to fester like a boil on the American psyche is this past Nov. 3, 2020, presidential election.
Why does it continue to fester? It festers because people of all
stripes and backgrounds believe there were elements of election fraud,
misrepresentations of the truth, dishonesty due to lawfare and, in
certain cases, severe obstruction by politicians at all levels of
government..........
My sense is that there are three outcomes, along with a set of wildcard
possibilities. Outcome one is that Biden and Harris resign — I see the
probability of this as zero, and readers can make their own judgments as
to why.
Outcome two is where states present recounted electoral votes to
SCOTUS (our illustrious U.S. Supreme Court justices). What happens then?
There are four scenarios. In scenario one, SCOTUS
declares the 2020 election invalid and suggests Congress reconvene and
recount electoral votes — Biden and Harris are then replaced. In
scenario two, SCOTUS declares the 2020 election invalid but says the
president and vice president remain in office with limited powers to be
specified (e.g., no executive orders, no veto power, only perfunctory
roles, past executive orders are declared invalid and all are rescinded,
and the vice president is not the presidential successor). In scenario
three, SCOTUS declares the 2020 election invalid but the Biden
administration remains in office (no loss of powers or authorities). In
scenario four, SCOTUS completely sidesteps the states’ request and does
nothing.
If scenario four plays out and SCOTUS sidesteps and avoids their
responsibilities to examine the constitutionality of our election
systems and processes, then enters outcome three. An outcome three
decision has responsibility landing square on “states rights” found in
the U.S. Constitution.
If this occurs, states have a set of options. They can reallocate
their electoral votes based on the new audit results and replace those
within their respective states who were illegitimately elected in 2020,
including governors, state legislators and other state officers, as well
as replace congressional members at the federal level (members of the
U.S. House of Representatives and U.S. Senate). And a states convention
may be immediately held to decide on the presidency and vice presidency.
If the decision is to replace these top two positions, that would be unprecedented in U.S. history.
Bottom line, we have not been here before and yes, there remain many
unclear constitutional issues in play. If new audits indicate fraudulent
election outcomes in other states, we the people, through our states’
legislators, have somber and serious obligations to consider, if not for
us then for future generations of American citizens..............To Read More.....