@Frank Apisa,
Truthfully, like you think happened, is not truthfully.
Impeachment is a two-step process.
1. They send a letter declaring impeachment and vote on that.
2. Then Senate does a sort of trial, and they also vote on that.
*3. If it's a real crime, they might wind up facing civil courts to rather than just being removed from office.
Acquitted is not impeached. Or rather you can call it impeachment all day long, but you're acting like he was found guilty of something... No, Congress doing a mob campaign against you is not the same as a trial.
This is why we have Senate, so if you become president, and I lead Congress to impeach you on a stupid charge like "I don't like Frank Apisa very much." And Congress decides by majority that you're Guilty of people not liking you very much, you can actually get a second opinion and a real damned vote, before getting found guilty and sent to a civil court. At which point, a real court would throw crimes like Abuse of Power out the window, because they are not high crimes. Treason, maybe? Obstruction of Congress? Most courts wouldn't care, you're president and most presidents obstruct Congress. Made up charge.
I am convinced that people who voted for and support Biden have psychological issue. One of the first is a pervasive lack of empathy. If I put you in Trump's position, you literally cannot imagine how it feels to be accused by the entirety of Congress, and think things are okay for you but not for him. You think that a few hundred people mobbing against you is okay, but the results of something more like a real trial don't matter. It doesn't matter to you that he was acquitted. Fine, I find you Guilty of I don't like Frank Apisa very much. You don't get a second trial, because you've decided Senate isn't important. You've been impeached. And now you get to be garassed for the rest of tour life, even though you're a a common citizen.
"bulma, you're crazy. Seek mental help."
I'm not the one missing empathy.