Wednesday, December 9, 2020

The Big One



One of the things I've learned following Thomas Wictor over the last four years is that one should scoff at his ideas at one's own peril. Somehow he has a way of being proven right, especially on things having to do with Trump, who he sees as a strategic genius beyond anything we have seen in our lifetimes.

With the sudden dramatic unveiling of the filing of Texas v. Pennsylvania, yesterday was one of Wictor's finest triumphs. Ron Coleman, the former Team Trump lawyer whom Wictor identified shortly after election as one of the few people who knows what's going on, and who has correspondingly become a fan of Wictor in return, issued a long thread on Twitter asserting how Wictor had been proven right in an unexpected way.

Coleman said that although he found Wictor engaging and intriguing, during the last few weeks he cringed whenever Wictor mentioned how "the Supreme Court would hear the evidence of fraud." As a lawyer who is experienced with the highest court, Coleman knew that it doesn't work this way. The Supreme Court doesn't hear evidence unless it has been introduced in the lower courts first. So far no one has been able to introduce any evidence regarding the fraud, that could make it to the Supreme Court,

Coleman mentioned that there is only one type of case where the Supreme Court would hear new evidence, and that is when it is the originating court. But this happens only if one of the States is a party to the lawsuit. In that case, the Supreme Court is the first court to hear everything in the lawsuit.

And that's exactly what happened yesterday, with the lawsuit that Texas filed against Pennsylvania, Georgia, Wisconsin, and Michigan. Since the filing Texas has been joined by at least seven other states. It is not happening in a small way but in the biggest possible Constitutional way according to the law. This is the Big One. This suit alone could destroy Biden.

"How did Wictor know?" Coleman mused. Somehow he did.

Wictor might say he just thinks like Trump. He does what seems impossible.

Another feature of the Texas lawsuit that proves Wictor right is the fact that it "came from nowhere." No one in the media or on Twitter had any inclination this lawsuit was going to be filed, just before midnight on December 7, the day before the "safe harbor" deadline for the States to certify electoral votes. It is a massive lawsuit that boggles the mind. Obviously it was in preparation for weeks. Yet there were. no leaks to the media. This is how Trump works. He doesn't tell his opponents and enemies what he is going to do, unless it is to his advantage to tell them.

Our side is feeling way more secure in the outcome after yesterday. One does not know what the Supreme Court will do. If they fail us at this point, no doubt Trump has other options that will win this for him. It would be nice to see the Court step up at this moment, and have a strong voice in the re-establishment of the Republic. We will win anyway. 

What would Trump do if this doesn't work? Ha ha. You think any of us really have any idea?

Pity the poor Liberals at least. The media is utterly ignoring what could probably be the biggest Supreme Court case of this century. The idea is that will simply go away. Most of them probably have no idea about it. Yeah, good luck with that.






 "As I've learned from watching Trump all these years, he is always saying things that look ridiculous at first, but are very much grounded in reality" -- Ron Coleman.

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