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Bias against Trump

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wordup Flag 04 Jan 18 3.18pm

Originally posted by jamiemartin721

Oddly I think they're kind of protecting him. All the talk about collusion and dumb things he says, and has pretty much protected him from what is likely to be a serious scandal involving money laundering for the Russians, that may have been going on for a decade.

The issue isn't really going to be what you like or don't like about the guy, but what the FBI can pin in terms of criminal charges - and thats looking very much like money laundering, tax and declaration offences relating to foriegn investments, and lying to the FBI / Under oath etc.

Its gone too far for the FBI not to press charges on something against very senior members of the administration - and I'd be astounded if there isn't anything to find in terms of financial misdeeds and illegal business practices.

My bet is that it'll be more about financial activity before even entering the primaries - and that the 'election stuff' turns out to be more something the Russians did in return for the laundering, rather than something more nefarious like 'treason'.

I suspect that he'll be hung out to dry, by others who had a more direct hand in the cookie jar. He's a 71 year old man, who even if the arrests were all done and dusted by tomorrow, could likely spend the next five years before a trial proper - with a number of options available to even avoid standing trial on grounds of ill health etc.

I'll be surprised, even if found guilty, that he'll spend any time in prison. He's the perfect 'fall guy', old, dumb and possibly 'mentally incompetent'.

Bannon basically hit the nail on the head with this. There may well be huge money laundering involving the Russians that Trump is involved in. If they have you locked in on that, it's enough to take you down if they spill the beans and so he marches to the beat of their drum - by desperately trying to lift sanctions and so on - which is a dangerous quality in a president. Similar to the manafort situation. He's always been much more scared of saying anything about Russia than he is his own country and probably for a reason.

On top of everything, he's most likely f***ed over the gop for the midterms with his crazy behaviour and if he's still president then, they won't be thanking him for it.

Edited by wordup (04 Jan 2018 3.20pm)

 

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View Ray in Houston's Profile Ray in Houston Flag Houston 04 Jan 18 3.19pm Send a Private Message to Ray in Houston Add Ray in Houston as a friend

Originally posted by Stirlingsays

Clinton was a president and hence it's an accurate comparison on the behaviour of activists against them.


Candidate Clinton's husband had been president. That is completely irrelevant to her maintaining a private server on which she sent emails in her role as Secretary of State of the United States.

Or, in your mind, are women forever to be defined by who they married?

 


We don't do possession; we do defense and attack. Everything else is just wa**ing with a football.

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wordup Flag 05 Jan 18 1.18am

Originally posted by wordup

Comey went the extra mile on the Clinton front and doing so arguably even tipped the election. Of course not a peep from people when Trump is even on video saying that he fired Comey because of the, apparently imaginary, 'Russia stuff'.


Edited by wordup (04 Jan 2018 10.41am)

Trump ordered WH lawyer to stop Sessions from recusing himself in Russia probe - [Link]

"President Trump gave firm instructions in March to the White House’s top lawyer: stop the attorney general, Jeff Sessions, from recusing himself in the Justice Department’s investigation into whether Mr. Trump’s associates had helped a Russian campaign to disrupt the 2016 election.

The lawyer, Uttam Dhillon, was convinced that if Mr. Comey was fired, the Trump presidency could be imperiled, because it would force the Justice Department to open an investigation into whether Mr. Trump was trying to derail the Russia investigation."

"Two days after Mr. Comey’s testimony, an aide to Mr. Sessions approached a Capitol Hill staff member asking whether the staffer had any derogatory information about the F.B.I. director. The attorney general wanted one negative article a day in the news media about Mr. Comey, according to a person with knowledge of the meeting."

"The lobbying of Mr. Sessions is one of several previously unreported episodes that the special counsel, Robert S. Mueller III, has learned about as he investigates whether Mr. Trump obstructed the F.B.I.’s Russia inquiry. "

add these to the obstruction of justice pile too.


Edited by wordup (05 Jan 2018 1.36am)

 

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View Stirlingsays's Profile Stirlingsays Online Flag 05 Jan 18 2.59am Send a Private Message to Stirlingsays Holmesdale Online Elite Member Add Stirlingsays as a friend

Originally posted by Ray in Houston


Candidate Clinton's husband had been president. That is completely irrelevant to her maintaining a private server on which she sent emails in her role as Secretary of State of the United States.

Or, in your mind, are women forever to be defined by who they married?

That point wasn't related to his wife. It was specific to how the republicans went after Clinton over sex in the white house......You know, the poe faced religious right....the mirror image to your politically correct progressives.

As for your feminist virtue signalling I do find it rather amusing. Your displays of mental emasculation are almost as blatant as your misandry.

Edited by Stirlingsays (05 Jan 2018 3.00am)

 


'Who are you and how did you get in here? I'm a locksmith. And, I'm a locksmith.' (Leslie Nielsen)

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jamiemartin721 Flag Reading 05 Jan 18 11.08am

Originally posted by Ray in Houston


Candidate Clinton's husband had been president. That is completely irrelevant to her maintaining a private server on which she sent emails in her role as Secretary of State of the United States.

Or, in your mind, are women forever to be defined by who they married?

Also following investigation by the FBI this was deemed not to be a threat to security, nor was it deemed to be unusual but common place among representatives, include White House representatives in the Trump administration.

Also the scale of the issue is such that as an offence it wouldn't result in criminal charges, only a required change to Electronic Security measures to be implimented.

Which is a very long way from being a 'lock her up' offence. Essentially most of these offences are people forwarding emails to a 'online account' such as Google mail, because its easier to print them. Bad practice, but probably so common place you'd probably have to arrest and imprison half the security cleared white house staff.

 


"One Nation Under God, has turned into One Nation Under the Influence of One Drug"
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jamiemartin721 Flag Reading 05 Jan 18 11.12am

Originally posted by Ray in Houston


To add to the debunking of the "witch hunt" nonsense, it's very import to understand that the Comey-lead FBI was investigating possible collusion with Russia by the Trump campaign from back in mid-2016. So, they were looking at Trump/Russia and Clinton's emails at the same time, yet only announced in public the Clinton investigation.

If there's any foul to be cried here, it's by Clinton for the material fact there was an FBI investigation into Trump while Trump was screaming into any and every microphone about an FBI investigation into Clinton. Yet Comey chose to disclose one and not the other.

Ironically, its not a Witch Hunt, if you find actual witches at the end of the hunt. Witch hunts put innocent people to death based on the fear, hysteria and paranoia.

They already have charged 'Witches', and have a number of 'witches' who are co-operating with the 'witch hunters'.

 


"One Nation Under God, has turned into One Nation Under the Influence of One Drug"
[Link]

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View Stirlingsays's Profile Stirlingsays Online Flag 05 Jan 18 11.49am Send a Private Message to Stirlingsays Holmesdale Online Elite Member Add Stirlingsays as a friend

Originally posted by jamiemartin721

Also following investigation by the FBI this was deemed not to be a threat to security, nor was it deemed to be unusual but common place among representatives, include White House representatives in the Trump administration.

Also the scale of the issue is such that as an offence it wouldn't result in criminal charges, only a required change to Electronic Security measures to be implimented.

Which is a very long way from being a 'lock her up' offence. Essentially most of these offences are people forwarding emails to a 'online account' such as Google mail, because its easier to print them. Bad practice, but probably so common place you'd probably have to arrest and imprison half the security cleared white house staff.

Well, people have actually been found guilty and sentenced for less than what Clinton did, though I was not one of those who deemed that appropriate......Trump was clearly 'over egging the pudding' for effect.

[Link]

I cannot help but have the conclusion that Clinton escaped less harshly than others because of her position as an elite.....At a certain level I recognise that this is necessary....but the fact that elites can operate in different rules is worthy of criticism in a meritocracy. It's a failure of that system...whilst I recognise that the responsibilities and demands upon elites are far higher..but then again, so are the rewards and power.....but perhaps a little more leniency is understandable.....up to a point.

What Clinton did was stupid and careless, but a certain level of incompetence in governance...and indeed most structures, is more the norm than the exception. The investigation, criticism and embarrassment and reputational damage was sufficient feedback.

No, I raise the point only that if Trump had done this democrats and their supporters would have been all over it like a rash.

Which is to say that the republicans and democrats are ethically in the same gutter....but I reserve more irritation for democrats...with exceptions...because it's it's that side who you get the 'we aim high, while they aim low' crap from.....they like to present themselves as more ethical, when in reality they comprise just as many awful people themselves.


Edited by Stirlingsays (05 Jan 2018 12.01pm)

 


'Who are you and how did you get in here? I'm a locksmith. And, I'm a locksmith.' (Leslie Nielsen)

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View Kermit8's Profile Kermit8 Flag Hevon 05 Jan 18 12.10pm Send a Private Message to Kermit8 Add Kermit8 as a friend

Originally posted by Stirlingsays

Well, people have actually been found guilty and sentenced for less than what Clinton did, though I was not one of those who deemed that appropriate......Trump was clearly 'over egging the pudding' for effect.

[Link]

I cannot help but have the conclusion that Clinton escaped less harshly than others because of her position as an elite.....At a certain level I recognise that this is necessary....but the fact that elites can operate in different rules is worthy of criticism in a meritocracy. It's a failure of that system...whilst I recognise that the responsibilities and demands upon elites are far higher..but then again, so are the rewards and power.....but perhaps a little more leniency is understandable.....up to a point.

What Clinton did was stupid and careless, but a certain level of incompetence in governance...and indeed most structures, is more the norm than the exception. The investigation, criticism and embarrassment and reputational damage was sufficient feedback.

No, I raise the point only that if Trump had done this democrats and their supporters would have been all over it like a rash.

Which is to say that the republicans and democrats are ethically in the same gutter....but I reserve more irritation for democrats...with exceptions...because it's it's that side who you get the 'we aim high, while they aim low' crap from.....they like to present themselves as more ethical, when in reality they comprise just as many awful people themselves.

Edited by Stirlingsays (05 Jan 2018 12.01pm)

Here's some actual reality and thinking about the more pro-gun lobby after Sandy Hook and the same attitude with other heinous gun mass murders over there...Roughly three-quarters (77%) of gun owners who say they belong to the NRA are Republicans or lean Republican, while only 20% are Democrats or lean Democratic. PewResearch


Not quite the 50/50 split ethically you would like.

Edited by Kermit8 (05 Jan 2018 12.13pm)

 


Big chest and massive boobs

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jamiemartin721 Flag Reading 05 Jan 18 12.12pm

Originally posted by Stirlingsays

Well, people have actually been imprisoned for less than what Clinton did, though I was not one of those who deemed that appropriate......Trump was clearly 'over egging the pudding' for effect.

[Link]

I cannot help but have the conclusion that Clinton escaped less harshly than others because of her position as an elite.....At a certain level I recognise that this is necessary....but it isn't fair and that should always be noted.

What Clinton did was stupid and careless, but a certain level of incompetence in governance...and indeed most structures, is more the norm than the exception. The investigation, criticism and embarrassment and reputational damage was sufficient feedback.

No, I raise the point only that if Trump had done this democrats and their supporters would have been all over it like a rash.

Which is to say that the republicans and democrats are ethically in the same gutter....but I reserve more irritation for democrats...with exceptions...because it's it's that side who you get the 'we aim high, while they aim low' crap from.....they like to present themselves as more ethical, when in reality they comprise just as many awful people themselves.

Only two of those where arguably less than Clinton.

The first, he stole physical classified documents which he was not authorised to have, took them home and destroyed some of them.

The second one, I agree with you on.

Third, he's director of the CIA.

Fourth, documents which he was not authorised to have - during an ongoing conflict.

fifth, intentionally stole classified documents and sold them to a man he believed was a Chinesse Agent.

Sixth, he took photographs on board a nuclear submarine and destroyed evidence once he realised he was under investigation. 101 of security clearance briefings, is that even in IT sites supplying to MOD, you cannot take photographs above basic security areas - You're not even allowed to take cameras or phones, among numerous otherthings, into a room where there might be secure data, let alone a nuclear submarine.

Sevneth - Yeah he got a harsh penalty.

Eigth - Classified documents from a Nuclear research facility - thats the holy grail of secret documentation protection. Thats nuclear research and data.

nineth - He's a NSA manager leaking classified documents.

Tenth - Kind of harsh as well on reflection.

However in most of these instances you have people who also are not 'civilians', but people within the military and secret services where the rules aren't just told to you, they're drummed in on a regular basis - and have access to highly classified secrets.

Clinton, yeah, she got hacked and she shouldn't have had this material on a private server - but it lacked willful intent and the information even as secretary of state would likely have been reasonably redacted for distribution - and she's a civilian obstentially, operating in an area where information may be classified - where as others are operating in an area where everything is at its lowest level at least classified.

Intent is an important aspect. Did she get away lighter than the three, because she was secretary of state, probably.

 


"One Nation Under God, has turned into One Nation Under the Influence of One Drug"
[Link]

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View Stirlingsays's Profile Stirlingsays Online Flag 05 Jan 18 12.30pm Send a Private Message to Stirlingsays Holmesdale Online Elite Member Add Stirlingsays as a friend

Originally posted by jamiemartin721

Intent is an important aspect. Did she get away lighter than the three, because she was secretary of state, probably.

Yep, I agree.

'Lock her up' was enjoyable knockabout but equally stupid in serious terms.

The lower levels often get treated more harshly for the obvious reason that they are less important.

I'm still not over that drunk posh tart who knifed a some bloke but....because she had 'wonderful prospects' and is 'bright' gets a different form of justice.

Edited by Stirlingsays (05 Jan 2018 12.33pm)

 


'Who are you and how did you get in here? I'm a locksmith. And, I'm a locksmith.' (Leslie Nielsen)

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nickgusset Flag Shizzlehurst 05 Jan 18 12.31pm

Incredible.

 

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View Stirlingsays's Profile Stirlingsays Online Flag 05 Jan 18 12.32pm Send a Private Message to Stirlingsays Holmesdale Online Elite Member Add Stirlingsays as a friend

Originally posted by nickgusset

Incredible.

Perhaps your gullibility is more incredible.

 


'Who are you and how did you get in here? I'm a locksmith. And, I'm a locksmith.' (Leslie Nielsen)

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