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PostPosted: Wed May 10, 2017 6:57 pm 
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FarSky wrote:
Until the new, hand-picked Trump appointee directs resources away from it, or directly closes the investigation. Do you really believe each agent investigates without direction from their supervisor?


That's unlikely, seeing as the present investigation is a counterintelligence investigation, and not actually directed at Trump..

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Ah yes, the Attorney General who has been implicated in Russian involvement and who directly advised the firing of the man heading the investigation. Totally impartial and not at all sketchy.


Jeff Sessions hasn't been "implicated" in anything beyond making a mistake while answering a vaguely-worded question. So far, absolutely no one other than Russians has been "implicated" in anything, leftist propaganda notwithstanding. The only person that might eventually become an exception based on current information is Mike Flynn, and even that involves a "sketchy" use of the concept of an "emolument."
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Except McConnel today quashed the need for a special prosecutor post-firing, saying that the new FBI director will handle it.


Since there is no criminal investigation at this point, a special prosecutor is not warranted. The calls for one are based entirely on the idea that "there must be wrongdoing somewhere, and if there isn't we'll make sure we find it anyhow" and an attempt to create a perpetual distraction to neutralize the Republican's advantages.

There is absolutely no excuse for calling for one at this point - before Trump was even inaugurated the DNI unclassified report made it clear there was no evidence of collusion.

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I think it's quite a chilling effect that last week Comey asked for funding for the Russia investigation from the AG's office, the immediate response of which was a recommendation from the AG and deputy AG to have him fired. That's definitely a chilling effect.


What's needed is a chilling effect. At this point, the Democrats just need to be stomped on until they shut up about it. This is nothing more than refusal to accept that no, there is no leftist veto or "Resistance" of acting horrified that their ability to just scream the Republicans into caving has been taken away.

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PostPosted: Thu May 11, 2017 1:06 am 
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Diamondeye wrote:
Xequecal wrote:
Comey is the bad guy now? Does this Russia **** remind anyone else of Gamergate with how unfollowable it is?


It's easier to understand if you just get that the Russians didn't expect Trump to win either, and were really trying to undermine the expected Clinton presidency through propaganda efforts. They didn't actually hack any vote tallies or anything, and they didn't hack the Republicans because the Republicans didn't think "password" was a good password.

That's basically it. Russians gonna Russian. In all the discussion of it, the talking heads regularly fail to give the Russians credit for pursuing their own interests; they're always trying to fit Russia into whichever narrative they prefer, and about none of which does Russia give a ****.


Well, it's not difficult to follow the true motivation, which is simply Democrats trying to mine this for as much political capital as possible and the Republicans trying to defend themselves. But the narrative itself in regards to Comey and Russia is very similar to Gamergate in that something would happen and both sides would make statements, then the next day something else would happen to contradict those statements, forcing a retcon of the narrative. Repeat about 15 times and suddenly you need a huge flowchart and advanced calculus to even make sense of the official stances. It was like during the campaign when Comey shifted back and forth from, "giving special treatment to Hillary" to "unfairly targeting Hillary" on a near daily basis and every time the left/right had to somehow respond without appearing contradictory or hypocritical.


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PostPosted: Thu May 11, 2017 1:52 am 
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Xequecal wrote:
Well, it's not difficult to follow the true motivation, which is simply Democrats trying to mine this for as much political capital as possible and the Republicans trying to defend themselves. But the narrative itself in regards to Comey and Russia is very similar to Gamergate in that something would happen and both sides would make statements, then the next day something else would happen to contradict those statements, forcing a retcon of the narrative. Repeat about 15 times and suddenly you need a huge flowchart and advanced calculus to even make sense of the official stances. It was like during the campaign when Comey shifted back and forth from, "giving special treatment to Hillary" to "unfairly targeting Hillary" on a near daily basis and every time the left/right had to somehow respond without appearing contradictory or hypocritical.


You don't have to even bother trying to keep track of it all. There's 3 salient points:

1) Loretta Lynch created the entire shitshow when she met with Bill Clinton. From that point on, the die was cast - There was no way to both avoid the appearance of giving Clinton special treatment and also avoid appearing to throw the election to the Republicans, no matter who made what decision.

2) Comey tried to thread the needle by essentially saying "Yes she's guilty as **** but we aren't going to prosecute her because reasons, lol who would?" which of course totally backfired, and was compounded when the Weiner laptop appeared.

3) People sometimes talk to Russians. This does not make them Russian agents.

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PostPosted: Thu May 11, 2017 9:43 am 
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Diamondeye wrote:
Loretta Lynch created the entire shitshow when she met with Bill Clinton. From that point on, the die was cast - There was no way to both avoid the appearance of giving Clinton special treatment and also avoid appearing to throw the election to the Republicans, no matter who made what decision.

It's amazing how Trump supporters seem to grok why even the appearance of interfering with an investigation is a serious problem when it's the Clintons, but Trump can literally fire the guy in charge and it's totally fine.


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PostPosted: Thu May 11, 2017 11:52 am 
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Probably because it doesn't seem controversial to fire someone who for months has been overwhelmingly considered inept at his job.


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PostPosted: Thu May 11, 2017 11:59 am 
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I do have to say though, the funniest moment for me in this is Stephen Colbert's surprise when he announced that Trump fired Comey, and his audience cheered.


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PostPosted: Thu May 11, 2017 3:37 pm 
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Coren wrote:
Probably because it doesn't seem controversial to fire someone who for months has been overwhelmingly considered inept at his job.

And there's nothing controversial about two people who know each other having a brief chat while waiting at the same airport. Until you add the context. Then the Clinton conversation with Lynch becomes obviously problematic because it creates the appearance of influencing an ongoing investigation into Hillary's emails, and the firing of Comey creates the appearance of punishing someone for the ongoing investigation into Trump's campaign and some of his early appointments. And in the case of Trump, we have a tremendous amount of circumstantial evidence that it was in fact actual punishment rather than just the appearance of punishment.


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PostPosted: Thu May 11, 2017 3:54 pm 
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I agree that the timing of the firing of Comey is curious to say the least. He should have been fired on July 5, 2016 when he usurped the Office of the Attorney General by holding a press conference and announcing that an investigation should be closed without being brought before a prosecutor. Further, the later discovery of new information relating to said investigation was disclosed prior to proper investigation by the FBI. This should have been grounds for dismissal. The fact that his ineptness was passed from a democratic president who didn't want the democratic nominee for president to be charged makes any action taken by his republican replacement seem suspect. You're an attorney RD, you should be able to look at the facts without rose colored glasses.

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PostPosted: Thu May 11, 2017 4:02 pm 
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[quote="RangerDave"]And in the case of Trump, we have a tremendous amount of circumstantial evidence that it was in fact actual punishment rather than just the appearance of punishment.[/quote]

Circumstantial, but hardly a tremendous amount I think.

But really I was just answering the question as to why Trump supporters don't grok at the firing, and it's simple... It was all but a bipartisan​ agreement that Comey was inept enough to be fired, so of course his supporters wouldn't balk at the idea, and Democrats took a break from wanting Comey fired to complain about him being fired.


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PostPosted: Thu May 11, 2017 4:37 pm 
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For anyone inclined to think this is all no big deal and it's just the Dems playing politics, I highly recommend the following two articles:

Democrats are losing all sense of proportion over James Comey’s termination, but that doesn’t make Trump right.....Yes, it’s fun to create or retweet video montages showing all the times Democrats called for Comey’s firing and contrast them with their all-caps outrage when Trump actually fired Comey....But — and this is vitally important — the evidence is accumulating that Trump fired James Comey in the middle of an accelerating investigation of Russian interference in the 2016 election and then lied to the American people about the reason. No amount of Democratic hysteria can make that right. There is no amount of leftist hypocrisy that makes that acceptable.


If you're inclined to downplay the termination of FBI Director James Comey, reasoning that he was a flawed leader, or that President Trump was legally entitled to fire him, or that many of the Democrats objecting to his termination previously criticized him, or that liberals are so freaked out by the president that their latest freakout cannot be taken seriously, a civil libertarian like me is unlikely to change your mind....That’s why I want to introduce you to Benjamin Wittes, who almost always disagrees with me and other civil libertarians, downplaying the possibility of government abuses. Over all the years that I’ve been sounding alarms about drone strikes and NSA surveillance, Wittes has retorted that civil libertarians like me are being unduly alarmist.

...Let us now delve into his thinking on Comey. Last spring, when I urged Obama to tyrant-proof the White House, to the extent possible, before his successor was sworn in, Wittes didn’t abandon his bygone positions. He maintained that concerns about drone strikes or mass surveillance were silly. But he did add, “There are, to put it mildly, more proximate concerns.” ...So what finally worried one of Washington, D.C.’s most consistent critics of civil libertarians? Here's what:

Spoilered for length:
Spoiler:
Benjamin Wittes wrote:
...The soft spot, the least tyrant-proof part of the government, is the U.S. Department of Justice and the larger law enforcement and regulatory apparatus of the United States government....The Justice Department has some institutional defenses against this sort of thing, but they are far weaker than the intelligence community's institutional defenses against abuses. They mostly do not reside in statute or in the sort of complex oversight structures that Granick complains in the case of NSA are not restrictive enough. They reside in the Levi Guidelines, in certain normative rules about contacts between the Justice Department and the White House, in norms that have developed over the years in the FBI. And they reside in the hearts of a lot of replaceable people. Ultimately, they reside in an institutional culture at the Justice Department, and that is precisely the sort of thing a tyrant leader can change.

Wittes went on to sketch what a would-be tyrant would need to do to effect that sort of change. “He would need to appoint and get confirmed by the Senate the right attorney general,” he wrote. “That's very doable.” Indeed, we now know his name: Jeff Sessions. Wittes added, “Certainly, a bunch of pesky, scrupulous AUSAs might have to go.” And like past presidents, Trump got mass resignations of Assistant U.S. Attorneys. Finally, Wittes wrote, “Trump might develop a problem with our redoubtable FBI director, who doesn't leave with the outgoing administration and has stared down a president before. But so what? Bill Clinton didn't get along with his FBI director either. Comey will not be there forever anyway.” Here we are mere months into Trump’s term. And Comey is already gone.

Just after election day, Ben Wittes...made a case for retaining [Comey] in his post:

Benjamin Wittes wrote:
Trump has the authority to fire the FBI Director, even without cause, though it goes against custom. But if Trump is a serious leader, interested in maintaining the credibility of his presidency, he won’t. Since J. Edgar Hoover left office, only a single FBI Director has ever been fired. A few months after taking office, Bill Clinton fired Reagan-appointee William Sessions over alleged ethical violations. Those allegations were laid out in a report endorsed by the Republican Attorney General before Clinton took office, but Sessions refused to cede to pressures to resign. Notably, Clinton went on to appoint Louis Freeh as FBI Director, who had a notoriously oppositional relationship with the White House.

In short, while it is technically within the presidential power to fire an FBI Director, it is not something anyone should perceive as normal. Were Trump to fire Comey it would be a serious aberration; if he were to do so for mere political preference, in retaliation for Comey’s professional judgment that Clinton should not be prosecuted, or out of fear of Comey’s independence, it would strike a blow against an important check on the modern presidency. And nobody who believes in the rule of law, even those most angry at Comey, should be hoping for it right now. In fact, for those concerned that President Trump will trample the rule of law—liberals and conservatives alike—Comey’s fate is one potential canary in the coal mine.

That canary is now dead.

That brings us to one final Ben Wittes and Susan Hennessey article....Published this week, it states:

Benjamin Wittes wrote:
The situation has no parallel with the only previous FBI director to be removed by a president: President Clinton’s firing of William Sessions, whose ethical misconduct was so extensive that it resulted in a six-month Justice Department investigation and a blistering 161-page report detailing his illicit activities, including flagrant misuse of public funds. Trump’s firing Comey at a time when Comey is investigating Russian intervention in the election on Trump’s behalf and the specific conduct of a number of people close to Trump...deeply threatens the integrity of and public confidence in ongoing law enforcement and intelligence operations. Trump’s offered rationale does nothing to assuage the fears we expressed in November regarding the meaning of this event.

What follows is a lengthy, devastating account of why the reasoning offered by the Trump administration is not credible. Since that is evident to anyone paying close attention––and raises the question, what is the real reason that is being kept from the public?––better to skip down a bit farther. As they point out, firing Comey removes the person running the Russia investigation, “the guy who, in February, reportedly refused the White House’s request to publicly knock down stories about Trump and Russia while congressmen in key positions of investigatory responsibility allegedly complied.” It removes “the essential person for a credible investigation". That is alarming whether or not Trump himself is guilty of any wrongdoing.


*Edited to clarify source of nested quotes.


Last edited by RangerDave on Fri May 12, 2017 9:13 am, edited 2 times in total.

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PostPosted: Thu May 11, 2017 4:40 pm 
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Coren wrote:
But really I was just answering the question as to why Trump supporters don't grok at the firing, and it's simple... It was all but a bipartisan​ agreement that Comey was inept enough to be fired, so of course his supporters wouldn't balk at the idea, and Democrats took a break from wanting Comey fired to complain about him being fired.

Fair enough, but circumstances change, and my impression is that Democratic calls for firing were tapering off as the Russia investigation ramped up - as they should, because of the greater importance of that and the core issue of investigatory independence. I mean, hell, can you imagine the Republican meltdown if Obama had fired Comey back in June or October? Or if Clinton had won the election and then fired Comey herself? It would make the current Dem reaction look tame by comparison, and frankly, they would be right, just as the Dems are right now.


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PostPosted: Thu May 11, 2017 5:01 pm 
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Sorry, if your position is "fire Comey", I don't see how interest in the Russia investigation suddenly rehabilitates him. This is a pretty abject confession of trying to have it both ways.

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PostPosted: Thu May 11, 2017 5:04 pm 
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RangerDave wrote:
Diamondeye wrote:
Loretta Lynch created the entire shitshow when she met with Bill Clinton. From that point on, the die was cast - There was no way to both avoid the appearance of giving Clinton special treatment and also avoid appearing to throw the election to the Republicans, no matter who made what decision.

It's amazing how Trump supporters seem to grok why even the appearance of interfering with an investigation is a serious problem when it's the Clintons, but Trump can literally fire the guy in charge and it's totally fine.


Because Trump is not actually being investigated. This isn't hard. The investigations are of what Russia was doing.

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PostPosted: Thu May 11, 2017 5:20 pm 
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Diamondeye wrote:
Because Trump is not actually being investigated. This isn't hard. The investigations are of what Russia was doing.

Please; you're smarter than that, DE. The investigations are of what Russia was doing and whether and to what degree it involved or compromised Trump-related people. And either way, it's embarrassing and politically damaging to Trump - not to mention a blow to his monstrous ego - and it strains credulity to argue that wasn't the motivation for this firing.


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PostPosted: Thu May 11, 2017 6:33 pm 
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RangerDave wrote:
For anyone inclined to think this is all no big deal and it's just the Dems playing politics, I highly recommend the following two articles:

Democrats are losing all sense of proportion over James Comey’s termination, but that doesn’t make Trump right.....Yes, it’s fun to create or retweet video montages showing all the times Democrats called for Comey’s firing and contrast them with their all-caps outrage when Trump actually fired Comey....But — and this is vitally important — the evidence is accumulating that Trump fired James Comey in the middle of an accelerating investigation of Russian interference in the 2016 election and then lied to the American people about the reason. No amount of Democratic hysteria can make that right. There is no amount of leftist hypocrisy that makes that acceptable.


If you're inclined to downplay the termination of FBI Director James Comey, reasoning that he was a flawed leader, or that President Trump was legally entitled to fire him, or that many of the Democrats objecting to his termination previously criticized him, or that liberals are so freaked out by the president that their latest freakout cannot be taken seriously, a civil libertarian like me is unlikely to change your mind....That’s why I want to introduce you to Benjamin Wittes, who almost always disagrees with me and other civil libertarians, downplaying the possibility of government abuses. Over all the years that I’ve been sounding alarms about drone strikes and NSA surveillance, Wittes has retorted that civil libertarians like me are being unduly alarmist.

...Let us now delve into his thinking on Comey. Last spring, when I urged Obama to tyrant-proof the White House, to the extent possible, before his successor was sworn in, Wittes didn’t abandon his bygone positions. He maintained that concerns about drone strikes or mass surveillance were silly. But he did add, “There are, to put it mildly, more proximate concerns.” ...So what finally worried one of Washington, D.C.’s most consistent critics of civil libertarians? Here's what:

Spoilered for length:
Spoiler:
Quote:
...The soft spot, the least tyrant-proof part of the government, is the U.S. Department of Justice and the larger law enforcement and regulatory apparatus of the United States government....The Justice Department has some institutional defenses against this sort of thing, but they are far weaker than the intelligence community's institutional defenses against abuses. They mostly do not reside in statute or in the sort of complex oversight structures that Granick complains in the case of NSA are not restrictive enough. They reside in the Levi Guidelines, in certain normative rules about contacts between the Justice Department and the White House, in norms that have developed over the years in the FBI. And they reside in the hearts of a lot of replaceable people. Ultimately, they reside in an institutional culture at the Justice Department, and that is precisely the sort of thing a tyrant leader can change.

Wittes went on to sketch what a would-be tyrant would need to do to effect that sort of change. “He would need to appoint and get confirmed by the Senate the right attorney general,” he wrote. “That's very doable.” Indeed, we now know his name: Jeff Sessions. Wittes added, “Certainly, a bunch of pesky, scrupulous AUSAs might have to go.” And like past presidents, Trump got mass resignations of Assistant U.S. Attorneys. Finally, Wittes wrote, “Trump might develop a problem with our redoubtable FBI director, who doesn't leave with the outgoing administration and has stared down a president before. But so what? Bill Clinton didn't get along with his FBI director either. Comey will not be there forever anyway.” Here we are mere months into Trump’s term. And Comey is already gone.

Just after election day, Ben Wittes...made a case for retaining [Comey] in his post:

Quote:
Trump has the authority to fire the FBI Director, even without cause, though it goes against custom. But if Trump is a serious leader, interested in maintaining the credibility of his presidency, he won’t. Since J. Edgar Hoover left office, only a single FBI Director has ever been fired. A few months after taking office, Bill Clinton fired Reagan-appointee William Sessions over alleged ethical violations. Those allegations were laid out in a report endorsed by the Republican Attorney General before Clinton took office, but Sessions refused to cede to pressures to resign. Notably, Clinton went on to appoint Louis Freeh as FBI Director, who had a notoriously oppositional relationship with the White House.

In short, while it is technically within the presidential power to fire an FBI Director, it is not something anyone should perceive as normal. Were Trump to fire Comey it would be a serious aberration; if he were to do so for mere political preference, in retaliation for Comey’s professional judgment that Clinton should not be prosecuted, or out of fear of Comey’s independence, it would strike a blow against an important check on the modern presidency. And nobody who believes in the rule of law, even those most angry at Comey, should be hoping for it right now. In fact, for those concerned that President Trump will trample the rule of law—liberals and conservatives alike—Comey’s fate is one potential canary in the coal mine.

That canary is now dead.

That brings us to one final Ben Wittes and Susan Hennessey article....Published this week, it states:

Quote:
The situation has no parallel with the only previous FBI director to be removed by a president: President Clinton’s firing of William Sessions, whose ethical misconduct was so extensive that it resulted in a six-month Justice Department investigation and a blistering 161-page report detailing his illicit activities, including flagrant misuse of public funds. Trump’s firing Comey at a time when Comey is investigating Russian intervention in the election on Trump’s behalf and the specific conduct of a number of people close to Trump...deeply threatens the integrity of and public confidence in ongoing law enforcement and intelligence operations. Trump’s offered rationale does nothing to assuage the fears we expressed in November regarding the meaning of this event.

What follows is a lengthy, devastating account of why the reasoning offered by the Trump administration is not credible. Since that is evident to anyone paying close attention––and raises the question, what is the real reason that is being kept from the public?––better to skip down a bit farther. As they point out, firing Comey removes the person running the Russia investigation, “the guy who, in February, reportedly refused the White House’s request to publicly knock down stories about Trump and Russia while congressmen in key positions of investigatory responsibility allegedly complied.” It removes “the essential person for a credible investigation". That is alarming whether or not Trump himself is guilty of any wrongdoing.


You know you just cited the two biggest Never-Trumpers in the GOP right?

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PostPosted: Thu May 11, 2017 6:34 pm 
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Diamondeye wrote:
Sorry, if your position is "fire Comey", I don't see how interest in the Russia investigation suddenly rehabilitates him. This is a pretty abject confession of trying to have it both ways.

It doesn't rehabilitate him, but it does add a new complication to firing him. If you're weighing the pros and cons of firing him, it's a huge addition to the con column, which can quite reasonably tip the decision that way.


Last edited by RangerDave on Thu May 11, 2017 6:41 pm, edited 2 times in total.

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PostPosted: Thu May 11, 2017 6:37 pm 
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Hopwin wrote:
You know you just cited the two biggest Never-Trumpers in the GOP right?

Well, Friedersdorf is more of a libertarian independent, but yes, they're both strong Never-Trumpers. Regardless, the point is that they're not partisan Dems or squishy liberals. French in particular is a solid conservative Republican.


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PostPosted: Thu May 11, 2017 9:57 pm 
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I think the firing was much more about Trump sending the message of, "This Russia **** is bullshit and I'm not going to tolerate having my administration's time wasted by it anymore." Trump wants a director that will do "real" investigations and not "waste time" on Russia. If it were just about Comey not being so good at his job, I can't see how the benefit of having a somewhat better DoJ head outweighs the political costs of the firing. Like it or not the partisanship in the country has reached the point where Trump has the political capital to get away with this. Sure firing the guy investigating you appears corrupt but who is going to take him to task for it? Trumpers outright assume the media is lying with any negative Trump story and their opinion of the GOP establishment isn't much higher.


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PostPosted: Fri May 12, 2017 7:48 am 
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Xequecal wrote:
I think the firing was much more about Trump sending the message of, "This Russia **** is bullshit and I'm not going to tolerate having my administration's time wasted by it anymore." Trump wants a director that will do "real" investigations and not "waste time" on Russia.

Which is obstruction of justice and thus an impeachable offense. The President can't fire the FBI Director to punish him for investigating the President's campaign/administration. Once again, it ain't about the crime, it's about the cover up.


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PostPosted: Fri May 12, 2017 9:17 am 
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RangerDave wrote:
Xequecal wrote:
I think the firing was much more about Trump sending the message of, "This Russia **** is bullshit and I'm not going to tolerate having my administration's time wasted by it anymore." Trump wants a director that will do "real" investigations and not "waste time" on Russia.

Which is obstruction of justice and thus an impeachable offense. The President can't fire the FBI Director to punish him for investigating the President's campaign/administration. Once again, it ain't about the crime, it's about the cover up.


Impeachment is a political exercise. There's no such thing as an "impeachable offense," Congress can impeach or not impeach for any or no reason. They're not going to do it without the will of R voters behind it, and right now the majority of R voters hate the establishment almost as much as they hate the media. Trump literally just threatened Comey on Twitter and they're cheering him on. Trump is pretty much totally immune to corruption allegations at this point, he gains support when the media shits on him. Like it or not the baseline assumption at this point amongst Trump supporters is that any negative report that comes out of the mainstream media or the R establishment is a fake news lie.


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PostPosted: Fri May 12, 2017 9:24 am 
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Xequecal wrote:
Impeachment is a political exercise. There's no such thing as an "impeachable offense," Congress can impeach or not impeach for any or no reason.

I don't disagree with your political analysis, but there is in fact a Constitutional standard for impeachment - "treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors". Obstruction of justice, historically, falls into that latter category. It's literally one of the "high crimes and misdemeanors" that Clinton was impeached for.


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PostPosted: Fri May 12, 2017 10:35 am 
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RangerDave wrote:
Diamondeye wrote:
Sorry, if your position is "fire Comey", I don't see how interest in the Russia investigation suddenly rehabilitates him. This is a pretty abject confession of trying to have it both ways.

It doesn't rehabilitate him, but it does add a new complication to firing him. If you're weighing the pros and cons of firing him, it's a huge addition to the con column, which can quite reasonably tip the decision that way.


That's a political question though, and Trump decided otherwise. Are you complaining that Trump decided to make a decision you think is politically to his disadvantage?

Quote:
I don't disagree with your political analysis, but there is in fact a Constitutional standard for impeachment - "treason, bribery, or other high crimes and misdemeanors". Obstruction of justice, historically, falls into that latter category. It's literally one of the "high crimes and misdemeanors" that Clinton was impeached for.


Except that this action was taken openly, on the recommendation of the DOJ, and falls within the President's powers. Furthermore, the fact an investigation into Russia is going on does not make firing the FBI director obstruction of justice, especially when the idea that this investigation is A) criminal and B) aimed at the President, is itself, entirely a matter of misrepresenting what's going on in the first place.

The entire Trump-Russia connection is entirely because of Trump not being critical of Putin in the manner approved by Democrats during the campaign, Flynn's failure to be fully up front about his personal situation, and one poor answer to a poor question by Sessions. Once again the unclassified report on Russian interference found no evidence of collusion. The desire for this to be an investigation of Trump is purely "let's investigate until we find enough minor circumstantial details to create the impression of a real problem to the public." It is exactly the kind of misuse of prosecutorial power that people regularly complain about.

As for Clinton, Clinton illustrates perfectly why special prosecutors are a bad idea and never should be used. The special prosecutor was originally supposed to be investigating the real estate dealings of the Clintons. However, this (like most other special prosecutors) turned into an unlimited plenary authority to investigate anything and everything perpetually which turned into the **** show of the impeachment. While Clinton getting a teenage intern to suck his dick represents an abuse of power (lets not pretend that there's not a power dynamic involved between a teenager and the President, even if it was consensual) the fact is, it had nothing to do with what the prosecutor was supposed to investigate. Unfortunately, when you get one, they just run amok loohking for a conviction and cannot be gotten rid of by anyone without the appearance of partisanship.

This investigation into Russia's involvement is going the same way. So far, the evidence is that Russia was mostly engaging in propaganda, which should surprise no one. The problem is that the left simply will not accept any investigation that doesn't end how they want it to end - Trump neutralized or impeached - and being very obvious about it.

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PostPosted: Fri May 12, 2017 10:38 am 
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Xequecal wrote:
Impeachment is a political exercise. There's no such thing as an "impeachable offense," Congress can impeach or not impeach for any or no reason. They're not going to do it without the will of R voters behind it, and right now the majority of R voters hate the establishment almost as much as they hate the media. Trump literally just threatened Comey on Twitter and they're cheering him on. Trump is pretty much totally immune to corruption allegations at this point, he gains support when the media shits on him. Like it or not the baseline assumption at this point amongst Trump supporters is that any negative report that comes out of the mainstream media or the R establishment is a fake news lie.


This should be to no one's surprise. The media publicly stated it was refusing to cover Trump objectively during the campaign, and much of the Democrats have made it clear they will take any excuse, no matter how flimsy, to get an impeachment, and they're outraged that the usual methods of ginning up public support aren't working except among their own base.

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PostPosted: Mon May 15, 2017 9:38 am 
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Diamondeye wrote:
The problem is that the left simply will not accept any investigation that doesn't end how they want it to end - Trump neutralized or impeached - and being very obvious about it.


*coughs* Benghazi.

It's not a left v. right problem - it's a politics problem.

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PostPosted: Tue May 16, 2017 9:26 am 
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This is relevant, and pretty accurately sums up the problems with the Trump Presidency.


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