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#DershowitzLogic


Added by Matt • Updated about a year ago by Matt
Added by Matt • Updated about a year ago by Matt

alan dershowitz defending president donald trump at the senate impeachment trial. Added to the image is a tweet by @jrehling that reads "It's not a crime if you feel like breaking the law is to your advantage.
#DershowitzLogic
Category: Meme Status: Submission Year: 2018 Origin: Twitter Region:
Type: Hashtag,
Tags: alan dershowitz, president donald trump, trial, law, impeachment inquiry,
alan dershowitz defending president donald trump at the senate impeachment trial. Added to the image is a tweet by @jrehling that reads "It's not a crime if you feel like breaking the law is to your advantage.
#DershowitzLogic

Category: Meme Status: Submission Year: 2018 Origin: Twitter Region:
Type: Hashtag,
Tags: alan dershowitz, president donald trump, trial, law, impeachment inquiry,

About

#DershowitzLogic is a hashtag used to mock an argument by President Donald Trump's lawyer Alan Dershowitz during the Senate impeachment trial in January 2020.

Origin

The earliest known usage of the hashtag was published nearly two years before the impeachment of President Trump. On May 2nd, 2018, Twitter user @ASnarkRangOut who tweeted about a defense of President Trump "Alan also said bloodstains on a sock found in O.J. Simpson's bedroom could not have been produced by splattering at the crime scene" (shown below).

On January 29th, Dershowitz argued at the Senate impeachment, "If a president does something which he believes will help him get elected in the public interest, that cannot be the kind of quid pro quo that results in impeachment" (shown below).



The first known tweet in reference to this statement was published that day by Twitter[1] user @DeborahMagone, who wrote, "So if I sincerely and truly believe robbing the bank is in the National interest , it's ok? #dershowitzlogic" (shown below).


Deborah Magone @DeborahMagone StandwihPP So if I sincerely and truly believe robbing the bank is in the National interest , it's ok? #dershowitzlogic 11:17 AM · Jan 29, 2020 · Twitter Web App

Spread

Over the next few hours, people continued to mock Dershowitz's line of defense. Twitter[2] user @t_a_pierce compared the argument to President Nixon, receiving more than 3,600 likes an 1,600 retweets in less than 24 hours (shown below, left). Twitter[3] user @maydaymindy9 tweeted, "Seriously can’t see how Harvard can keep Alan Dershowitz as a law professor he teaches corruption." The tweet received more than 3,300 likes and 960 retweets in less than 24 hours (shown below, center).

That day, U.S. Senator Brian Schatz tweeted,[4] "Their arguments are getting more and more dangerous to the rule of the law and the constitutional order. It is enjoyable to make fun of #dershowitzlogic but it is essential that this crazy autocratic nonsense get swept out of the Senate chamber with pace and enthusiasm." the tweet received more than 3,100 likes and 795 retweets in less than 24 hours (shown below, right).


T.A. Pierce @t_a_pierce Nixon: I'd like someone to break in to Democratic headquarters for me to find some dirt to help my reelection campaign but it's illegal. Advisors: No, no worries Mr. President. Since it's for your reelection it's in the public interest! Nixon: Cool cool #Dershowitzlogic 2:58 AM · Jan 30, 2020 · Twitter Web App Mayday Mindy C @maydaymindy9 Seriously can't see how Harvard can keep Alan Dershowitz as a law professor he teaches corruption #dershowitzlogic 3:25 AM · Jan 30, 2020 · Twitter for iPhone Brian Schatz @brianschatz Their arguments are getting more and more dangerous to the rule of the law and the constitutional order. It is enjoyable to make fun of #dershowitzlogic but it is essential that this crazy autocratic nonsense get swept out of the Senate chamber with pace and enthusiasm. 8:47 AM · Jan 30, 2020 · Twitter for iPhone

Dershowitz responded to the criticisms on Twitter.[5][6] In a series of tweets, he wrote, "They characterized my argument as if I had said that if a president believes that his re-election was in the national interest, he can do anything. I said nothing like that, as anyone who actually heard what I said can attest […] I did not say or imply that a candidate could do anything to reassure his reelection, only that seeking help in an election is not necessarily corrupt, citing the Lincoln and Obama examples. Critics have an obligation to respond to what I said, not to create straw men to attack."

Several media outlets covered the argument and response and reaction, including Politico,[7] USA Today,[8] NBC,[9] The Daily Dot [10] and more.



Various Examples


Ms. Krassenstein @HKrassenstein If a future President hires a hitman to murder his political opponents, it's perfectly fine as long as that president believes that the murder is in the best interest of the country -- #dershowitzlogic 5:46 AM · Jan 30, 2020 · Twitter Web App
Donald J. Drumpf @RealDonalDrumpf Many people are saying that using #dershowitzlogic I could have had Jeffrey Epstein arrested and murdered in prison to make sure I won re-election and it wouldn't be impeachable because i just thought it would be in the national interest if certain things never came to light. ] 1992 CNIC NBC GIF 3:45 AM · Jan 30, 2020 · Twitter for iPhone The Daily Edge @TheDailyEdge Using #dershowitzlogic it would he perfectly acceptable for a President to order the arrest of a p-------- sex trafficker, seize all his files, have him murdered, and then use the #kompromat obtained to blackmail the p--------'s Harvard lawyer friend to argue that it was all OK. Scott Giles @ScottGilesMusic · 15h Jeffrey Epstein, Alan Dershowitz, and Pals Accused of Sex-Trafficking Ring #dershowitzlogic thedailybeast.com/jeffrey-epstei.. 3:59 AM · Jan 30, 2020 · Twitter for iPhone JRehling @JRehling It's not a crime if you feel like breaking the law is to your advantage. #DershowitzLogic 5:21 AM · Jan 30, 2020 · Twitter Web App

Search Interest

External References


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