To the best of my knowledge there is, in fact, nothing extralegal about a general strike.Captain Seafort wrote: ↑2020-03-28 01:18pmYou're still talking in terms of overthrowing the lawful head of state by extralegal means.The Romulan Republic wrote: ↑2020-03-28 12:53pmFor the present, I am willing to grit my teeth and wait until the election, and see if Trump can be checked in that way. If he cannot, either because he has conned enough of the American people and suppressed the votes of enough of the rest to win "legitimately", or because he outright rigs the race or refuses to peacefully leave... then I will support a General Strike, as the most disruptive and powerful action that can be taken short of being the aggressors in an armed conflict.
If Trump fires on or mass arrests the strikers, well, then he fired the first shots.
You think there will be another election if we lose this November. Well, maybe the kind where Dear Leader is the only name on the ballot and he gets 95%.If your lot lose in November (assuming the election doesn't get Covided off) then grit your teeth and wait until the next election. The alternative is to declare that you - not Trump, you - are not prepared to abide by the rules, and the current US constitutional framework is therefore null and void. Once that toothpaste is out of the tube you'll have a devil of a job getting it back in, and it won't be Trump who gets the blame for pulling it out.
I am aware of the dangers you describe. Which is why I do not support starting an armed conflict. We would take the blame for that, and rightly so, and we'd likely lose very quickly and completely. But that does not mean that we must simply wait and meekly accept a worsening status quo, forever (or until it becomes too late to do anything about it).
And frankly? The current Constitutional framework is already being routinely disregarded by the sitting President who's legitimacy you feel we must respect. Our sitting meekly and doing nothing while the last few planks are pulled out will not preserve it. No less a venerated figure in American history than Abraham Lincoln made the argument, during the Civil War, that he had to disregard certain portions of the Constitution in order to prevent its complete overthrow, and the courts largely upheld him in that view.
Edit: To put it simply, why is the lawfulness of Trump's Presidency the only portion of the Constitution that you seem to feel must be respected at all costs?