Monday, December 2, 2024

What We Do For Love

Let me preface this brief but necessary episode by stating my kids have been known to call and without going past Hi, Mom, ask me to insert my empathy chip before we continue any conversation. They're not kidding. I am a bootstrapper pragmatist who is not good at "there, there" kinda support. Nope, my mantra is a cross between get over yourself and get on with it. Thankfully, my kids are used to this. I always keep my empathy chip in the top dresser drawer, right next to the drawstring bag with my pearls. That said, I love them to bits and will never stop trying to reach the stars with them.

I also believe in kids taking responsibility for their actions. 

The last couple of days have been spent reading up on Hunter Biden, his crimes and admissions of guilt, and the pardon issued by his father. 

President Biden had repeatedly said he would not pardon his son. I absolutely supported that position...until very recently. And then I didn't.

Yes, Hunter admitted his guilt. He was prepared for the sentencing. I would imagine he was prepared to go to prison to serve at least part of the sentence.  So I asked the question: 
Are people who didn't pay their taxes or lied on a gun form sent to prison?
Truth be told, these are not violent crimes, crimes that inflict harm on another person, place, or thing. That doesn't excuse them, nor does it truly negate the need for some kind of punishment, but there are other factors involved whether we want to believe they exist or not. In his Washington Post column today, Eugene Robinson wrote:

Hunter did commit crimes, though, to which he has pleaded guilty in federal court. But his were not the kinds of crimes that usually get prosecuted. He is hardly the first drug addict to deny being a drug addict on a gun permit form; and he has paid his delinquent taxes, including penalties and interest. He was given this harsh treatment because he is Joe Biden’s son.

He might not have been sentenced to prison time. But with Trump returning to the White House and pledging to punish his political enemies, he faced new peril. It was not inconceivable that Trump would find an attorney general willing to conjure the smoke surrounding Hunter’s dealings with the Ukrainian firm Burisma — already dispelled by years of fruitless investigation — into some kind of new criminal indictment.

When Joe Biden promised not to pardon Hunter, he thought he’d never have to. Things have changed.

I can’t argue that pardoning Hunter was politically the right thing for the president to do. I’m not even sure it was morally the right thing for a president to do. But if my son were in Hunter’s position and I had the power, with the stroke of a pen, to save him and give him a fresh start, I’d do it. I believe many fathers would agree.

Many things have changed.  That's the phrase that pays. 

On the MSNBC website, Steve Benen suggested the incoming president just might want to sit the pardon debate out. 

Indeed, by any fair measure, Trump’s record on pardons is arguably the worst in American history. During his first term, he effectively wielded his pardon power as a corrupt weapon, rewarding loyalists, completing cover-ups, undermining federal law enforcement, and doling out perverse favors to the politically connected.

Trump’s list of scandalous pardon abuses is so long, it could be a lengthy book. The names should be familiar: Paul Manafort. Michael Flynn. Steve Bannon. Roger Stone. Seven different Republican members of Congress who were locked up for corruption crimes.

Trump saw presidential pardons as get-out-of-jail-free cards for his friends and associates, engaging in the kind of brazen corruption that would’ve defined his term were it not eclipsed by other breathtaking scandals
Considering the history of the previous administration's pardons, there is a lot to consider in why this father pardoned this son. In a society free of political retribution, Hunter Biden woulda just gone to jail and that would be the end of it. But the reality is that the younger Biden is in physical jeopardy. Even with the pardon, we all know this administration is going to up its efforts to destroy the Biden family in every possible way. He has repeatedly threatened to prosecute anyone he perceives as a political rival. This includes the sitting President, Vice President, Nancy Pelosi, former President Obama, Liz Cheney, John Brennan, and James Clapper. The incoming president has stated repeatedly that former Joint Chiefs Chairman Mark Milley should be tried and executed for treason after calling China's top brass to assure them the outgoing president was not planning to attack them during the last days of his administration.  Based on those statements made by the incoming president, one must also understand Hunter Biden is on that list. Would he be safe walking free in this country?
My guess would be a solid no. 
I also think if the Bidens have any sense at all, they will find safe haven for him away from the United States. Trumped up charges are easy enough to do, and any crazy with a gun can go after him. Secret Service protection after his father leaves office is highly doubtful. 
There comes a time when thinking outside the box for safety is a must. I believe that the families of political enemies are in danger. The constant threat of retribution, never mind prosecution, is real. 
In this world, ousted political figures often seek refuge in other countries. The decision both Biden and Harris have to make is whether being the sacrificial lamb on the altar of political dogma is worth it. I'm not sure it is. 
But back to Hunter and the pardon. Should President Biden have pardon this man in this way? Probably not. But should Joe Biden, father of Hunter Biden, do whatever is necessary to physically protect his son and attempt to keep him out of unreasonable harm's way? Yes.
The Wifely Person's Tip o'the Week

Raising a child is a lifelong experiment in unconditional love.
From the moment you hold them in your arms 
until one of you leaves this plane,
that child owns a piece of your heart. 

7 comments:

  1. Thanks. From that vantage point, I totally agree with the pardon.That's why I e mail my son in Israel more than I need to but just to say.."Stay safe."

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  2. Thank you for taking a bold but logical position on this matter, which is something the pearl-clutching inside-the-Beltway pundits on the left seem incapable of.

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  3. Your blatant partisanship is showing. Joe could have pardoned Hunter for just the gun possession and the tax evasion but it also applies to Hunter’s most egregious offense: his well-documented efforts to peddling access to his dad, when Biden was VP, to foreign interests ranging from a Chinese state-run bank to a well-heeled Kazakhstan oligarch.

    If your readers want to know how a real impartial journalist analyzes the Hunter affair, read:
    https://www.thefp.com/p/hunter-biden-scandal-pardon-trump-doj

    TL;DR outgoing MN congressman Dean Phillips spoke for many Americans when he posted on X: “Let’s just say the quiet part out loud, certain Americans are indeed above the law and influence is always for sale.”

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  4. It's not the pardon that troubles me, it's the untruths that he told again and again. He could have done this by speaking to the American people and saying that his son would not be safe and that Hunter is clean and deserves our understanding. Lies are for Republicans - this was not handled well.

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  5. An addendum to clarify my position:

    I would've preferred Hunter Biden served time. But as I said in the blog, I think his physical safety is at risk. He has a target on his back, as does his father, the VP, Nancy Pelosi, a bunch of generals and anyone else the incoming president has promised "retribution" complete with "military tribunals." He will be in a position to carry out his threats, and I'm not all that positive anyone will stop him.

    Therefore, as a parent, I would choose to keep my child safe, especially if that child has already played by the rules, admitted his guilt, and was prepared to go to prison. President Biden didn't pardon him to exonerate him; he pardoned him to keep him out of harm's way. There is a difference. As a parent, I totally understand why he did what he did. I probably, under the circumstances would've done the same thing...with or without my empathy chip.

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    Replies
    1. Two big lies in two short paragraphs:
      1) Joe pardoned him for 11 years instead of just the current two offenses for which he pled guilty to avoid investigations into the FARA laws and Joe's own complicity.
      2) Hunter was never prepared to go to prison. His father expected to pardon him all along and he knew it. First Joe thought he could do it after he was re-elected. Then he waited until after the election. For a guy with dminished faculties, Joe played it like a fiddle. Too bad he trashed his already poor legacy.

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  6. Eli Lake a former senior national security correspondent for The Daily Beast and Newsweek, two very progressive publications, said it best:
    "The New York Times reported earlier this year, Hunter himself was an unregistered foreign agent back in 2016—when his father was vice president—when he sought help from the State Department to secure an energy deal for Burisma, a Ukrainian company on whose board he sat. Unlike the Trump associates who were threatened with crushing FARA trials, Hunter’s activities drew little interest.

    Does Hunter Biden’s influence peddling add up to a scandal? Sure it does—a far bigger scandal than the gun and tax crimes that he was charged with. But the larger scandal is how the resistance to Trump—not just by Democrats but by supposedly nonpartisan agencies like the FBI—created a two-tiered legal system in Washington. The justice system was weaponized against Trump and his allies. For Biden’s son, the justice system was his protection."

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