Well, Thomas in his dissent states that there is no real evidence of fraud, but that his opinion is that lack of evidence of fraud is not enough to make people feel good about the election process. I don't believe that is the correct standard, but I am not going to accuse him of being traitorous, or even wrong. So I think you are assuming something that isn't in evidence. But yes, I think that the constitution certainly does not provide for removing one President for another post inauguration. I do think it provides for looking at election fraud, but the cases were brought were not good ones. That isn't a universal rejection of the concept.Than maybe you should explain the law to Alito, Thomas and Gorsuch........
My statement was that I thought all of them likely decided in good faith, but that it is the correct decision. So I don't need to explain to Thomas, with whom I agree more than any other on the SC, where he went wrong, there are six others up there who disagreed with him. There are also countless articles, many from conservatives, arguing the same. You seem to see law as "does it agree with me" which is silly.
I was using his example, not my own, so calm down. My addition to it was simply that we don't try dead suspects.