If he had, he might have come across the story of king Charles I, who was a big fan of the doctrine known as the divine right of kings.
He ended up fighting the armies of both the English and Scottish parliaments in the First English Civil War. He was taken prisoner and handed over to the English parliament, where he spurned demands to embrace a constitutional monarchy.He refused to plead, declaring the trial was illegal because “no learned lawyer will affirm that an impeachment can lie against the king”.
Still, Charles I and the divine right of kings came to mind when the six Conservative judges of the US Supreme Court used their superior numbers to declare a former president cannot be prosecuted for official acts taken during his term in office. It seemed a distance from the opening words of the second paragraph of the US Declaration of Independence of July 4, 1776: “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal…”At least one of them, Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, made it clear she had done her reading on the divine right of kings and the Declaration of Independence.Bloomberg
“To say that someone is immune from criminal prosecution is to say that, like a king, he ‘is not under the coercive power of the law,’ which ‘will not suppose him capable of committing a folly, much less a crime’.” Perhaps some of the Democrats who have stood by, effectively complicit by having done nothing of consequence to prevent the Trump revival, had done their reading, learning how merciless history can be upon those who act against a king deemed to be incapable of doing wrong.
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