You keep making the same ridiculous argument. Trump wasn't sued because he claimed he was innocent.
He was sued because he was Trump and millions of people have Trump Derangement Syndrome allowing a person to sue him for anything without a shred of evidence because the TDS mob will still side against him.
That was not the claim of the suit though. The claim of the suit was that he defamed her by calling her a liar. First that is an opinion, second that was a possible defense against an accusation. For both reasons the suit was fundamentally flawed. Any action besides immediate dismissal including appeals courts and jury actions constitute sedition against the united states constitution.
He was sued because he made false accusations about her character that resulted in her being fired from her job.
It doesn't matter if it resulted in her being hanged by a lynch mob. Her right to not be called a liar (if there ever was such a right) ended the instant she accused someone of a heinous crime.
Defamation requires two things - a provably false statement the person making the statement knew to be false about another person that causes financially harm because of the false statements.
They would make something up.
The murdered babies might have donated to Alabaman charities. There ya go.
Oh, there are defamation laws are there? Guess what the 1st amendment says. "no law"
which require that a PERSON be defamed and the PERSON defamed has suffered financial damage. Your example doesn't meet either requirement.
Fine, Alabaman jury finds that when Kamala said that Trump was a predator who abused women:
"I was a courtroom prosecutor. In those roles I took on perpetrators of all kinds," she said in a speech in Delaware.
www.newsweek.com
She defamed Trump and award him $100,000,000,000,000.
The defamation laws protect individuals from using civil suits as weapons.
Only if people follow the law, which these false judges and juries did not.
Try filing a defamation suit when there has been no defamation
Already have an example of it working, the topic of this thread.
and you will not only lose in court but you will also probably have to pay all the lawyers fees of the person you sued.
Whether I 'lose' or not would depend on the balance of prejudice vs integrity of the judge and jury. In this case the judge and jury crossed the line between "abominable miscarriage of justice" to "active insurrection against the rule of law", which is enough to absolve anyone from respecting or enforcing their decision since it dissolves any previous consent to the social contract that may have existed.
It is no different from a judge which decided (while the 14th amendment was still present law) that black people were subhuman and not eligible to be citizens.
I say in both cases: Rejected, arrest the judge if possible; civil war if necessary. It must not stand.
Defamation laws are state laws. Congress can only write federal laws.
So states can violate the 1st amendment?
Your keep falling into a chasm that you can't seem to climb out of.
Projection.
A jury can't decide that since it is not a valid legal question.
Is that so?
They can decide any question put to them by a judge, and a judge can write anything on a piece of paper he wants. An appeals court can ignore any appeal they want.
The only thing that
can't happen is for the objective meaning of the law to change. That's why laws are written instead of simply picking judges. So the people know when it is being violated regardless of what judges say.
Let me repeat, no court would allow that question to be asked
You can repeat it 10,000 times but that does not change the fact that the thought experiment destroys your assertion. Indeed every repetition of "it wouldn't happen" is another confession of fear of the answer we both know you would have to give were you honest.
Juries can't decide that something in the Constitution isn't in the Constitution.
So if a jury decided black people aren't citizens due to their race, is that a legal fact?