On June 09 2017 07:19 RealityIsKing wrote:
Looks like Trump is innocent, gg.
Looks like Trump is innocent, gg.
Of what? Because it looks like he's guilty as hell from where I'm sitting so we're probably not thinking of the same charge.
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KwarK
United States41470 Posts
June 09 2017 03:42 GMT
#156361
On June 09 2017 07:19 RealityIsKing wrote: Looks like Trump is innocent, gg. Of what? Because it looks like he's guilty as hell from where I'm sitting so we're probably not thinking of the same charge. | ||
Wulfey_LA
932 Posts
June 09 2017 03:45 GMT
#156362
Even more, now everyone in the media can straightly and bipartisanly call Trump a liar because Comey took the stand and said so. This isn't a Blue v. Red difference anymore. Every denial by Team Trump will only dig the truth in deeper, that Trump fired Comey to stop the FBI investigation. Also, so what if this isn't necessarily a good vote winner? Endless process can gum up the whitehouse and the congress, and stop terrible Republican legislation. AHCA threatens tens of millions and the new repeal Dodd-Frank bill is another Republican effort to get us back to the Enron days. If more Comey process slows that down, then go for it. | ||
DarkPlasmaBall
United States43400 Posts
June 09 2017 04:08 GMT
#156363
On June 09 2017 12:45 Wulfey_LA wrote: "Non-elected media Democrats oversold the Collusion angle" is some weak spin guys. Comey put the lie to Trump's denials. Now it is facts in record that Trump pressured Comey to drop at least the Flynn investigation. Further, everyone on this board gave up on finding out and out collusion at the Trump level a while ago (Flynn, Manafort, Page can still be utterly compromised without Trump). Even more, now everyone in the media can straightly and bipartisanly call Trump a liar because Comey took the stand and said so. This isn't a Blue v. Red difference anymore. Every denial by Team Trump will only dig the truth in deeper, that Trump fired Comey to stop the FBI investigation. Also, so what if this isn't necessarily a good vote winner? Endless process can gum up the whitehouse and the congress, and stop terrible Republican legislation. AHCA threatens tens of millions and the new repeal Dodd-Frank bill is another Republican effort to get us back to the Enron days. If more Comey process slows that down, then go for it. Agreed, and Trump himself explicitly announced that that's why he fired Comey, and Comey had repeatedly said during the hearing that he has no reason not to take the president at his word there. Comey didn't even need to speculate about why he was fired or logically put 2 and 2 together because Trump already told people it was because of that. | ||
Plansix
United States60190 Posts
June 09 2017 04:09 GMT
#156364
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{CC}StealthBlue
United States41117 Posts
June 09 2017 04:24 GMT
#156365
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biology]major
United States2253 Posts
June 09 2017 04:31 GMT
#156366
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Karis Vas Ryaar
United States4396 Posts
June 09 2017 04:37 GMT
#156367
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Danglars
United States12133 Posts
June 09 2017 04:50 GMT
#156368
On June 09 2017 07:57 On_Slaught wrote: Show nested quote + On June 09 2017 07:41 Danglars wrote: On June 09 2017 07:14 xDaunt wrote: Even Chris Matthews gets it: Liberal MSNBC host Chris Matthews said Thursday the accusation that President Trump directly colluded with Russia to interfere in the U.S. election "came apart" following former FBI Director James Comey's testimony in front of Congress. Source.In his written and spoken testimony on Thursday, Comey said that he never felt that Trump had tried to impede the FBI's investigation into Russia, even that the president had encouraged it and he suggested that former national security adviser Mike Flynn wasn't at the heart of the investigation. "The assumption of the critics of the president, of his pursuers, you might say, is that somewhere along the line in the last year is the president had something to do with colluding with the Russians … to affect the election in some way," Matthews said on MSNBC, following the testimony. "And yet what came apart this morning was that theory," Matthews said, listing two reasons why. First, he said Comey revealed that "Flynn wasn't central to the Russian investigation," and secondly, he said that kills the idea that Flynn might have been in a position to testify against Trump. "And if that's not the case, where's the there-there?" Matthews said. At most, Flynn might be in trouble for failing to properly disclose his ties and register as a foreign agent. But even if he does get in trouble for those things, it's becoming abundantly apparent that this Comey thing is an overblown sideshow where Trump terminated Comey merely to try to get this Russia bullshit out of the headlines, not because the investigation threatened Trump and Trump wanted to impede the investigation. Matthews leading the charge to bring liberals away from this myopic campaign strategy? Collusion's dead except for bitter clingers, obstruction is just politicking for 2018, Trump getting pissed and sinking his own agenda through tweets/interviews is the big prize. I'm sorry. Did i miss the part where he said the Trump campaign was cleared of collusion? I for one never thought Trump himself did anything; he's far too stupid to be a good mark (plus he has a big mouth). It's all the greedy fucks around him. I love how you take pleasure in this whole thing as if what we heard about Trump today doesn't paint a picture of a shit person being in the White House. But I suppose you came to terms with that some time ago and merely get off on being adversarial. I said dead except for bitter clingers, which you may take to mean some can hold out hope that there's some huge disclosure aside from Trump making questionable personnel choices. Put it another way: you think a campaign manager or appointee being dirty will make a lick of difference considering the mistakes and bombast Trump puts out on a daily basis? Obstructing justice is already drowning it out and that's with Comey throwing a wet blanket on it. So wake up and smell the coffee. I do take pleasure in silly libs doing silly things. Try having to vote for the lesser of two evils for several straight elections, forced to send a liar without a clue about policy or political philosophy to the white house. It's sometimes fun to laugh at the clown show that is the Democratic party and the allied media. | ||
Danglars
United States12133 Posts
June 09 2017 04:53 GMT
#156369
On June 09 2017 10:00 Nevuk wrote: Who in their news office thinks this kind of approach does them any good? If loud mirth in the echo chamber really stuck it to the fall guy, we'd have a different occupant in the White House. | ||
Wulfey_LA
932 Posts
June 09 2017 05:12 GMT
#156370
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LegalLord
United Kingdom13775 Posts
June 09 2017 05:13 GMT
#156371
Sad thing is, either way this election went we probably would have had this situation in which the president was perpetually under investigation for not altogether unreasonable reasons. But at least Europe would have liked us more. | ||
ChristianS
United States3169 Posts
June 09 2017 05:20 GMT
#156372
If Trump's guilty, that's very good news for Trump. If he's not, that's bad news for Trump. Because if it was resolved, he could put this behind him, but with the water still murky, this promises to drag on a great deal longer. Liberals and some conservatives will say there's enough evidence of wrongdoing, conservatives will say there's not, and the stalemate will lead to more investigation, which will mean it will return to the foreground again and again and again. It's like the emails last year. It wasn't just about how bad the scandal was, it was the longevity of the story. That one scandal dominated coverage for basically the entire year, whereas a lot of other big scandals fell out of the news cycle and didn't have such a big impact on the election. The Khan thing, Judge Curiel, even the Access Hollywood tape had a big impact on the polls when they landed, and then faded away, whereas the emails kept coming up again and again (with one last hit in the form of the Comey letter). That's what this scandal is for Trump - and with Comey's testimony, he can't even deflect to criticizing the media at the moment. His accuser is James Comey, who's got about as good a reputation as anybody can have right now. Trump's advocates aren't even bothering to argue why what he did was good or just or proper. The best they can argue is that based solely on the actions described Trump can't quite be convicted of a felony. | ||
{CC}StealthBlue
United States41117 Posts
June 09 2017 05:21 GMT
#156373
Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ oversight of the federal investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election had become “problematic” before he voluntarily recused himself, fired FBI Director James Comey testified Thursday. The tantalizingly vague statement, based on facts Comey said he could not discuss in an open hearing of the Senate Intelligence Committee, suggested that FBI leadership knew weeks before Sessions’ recusal that he would have to step down. As Sen. Ron Wyden (D-OR) noted, Comey first made this assertion in his seven-page-long written testimony, which was released a day before his blockbuster in-person appearance. In that prepared statement, Comey said he immediately briefed his FBI leadership team after President Donald Trump requested he drop the investigation into Trump’s freshly ousted national security adviser, Michael Flynn, in a one-on-one White House meeting on Feb. 14. The officials agreed not to notify Sessions because they expected he “would likely recuse himself from involvement in Russia-related investigations,” per Comey’s prepared statement. “What was it about the attorney general’s own interactions with the Russians or his behavior with regard to the investigation that would have led the entire leadership of the FBI to make this decision?” Wyden asked. “Our judgment, as I recall, was that he was very close to and inevitably going to recuse himself for a variety of reasons,” Comey said. “We also were aware of facts that I can’t discuss in an open setting, that would make his continued engagement in a Russia-related investigation problematic and so we were—we were convinced and in fact, I think we had already heard that the career people [at the Justice Department] were recommending that he recuse himself, that he was not going to be in contact with Russia related matters much longer.” “That turned out to be the case,” he added. Sessions recused himself two weeks after that Feb. 14 conversation between Trump and Comey, after the Washington Post reported that he failed to disclose two conversations he had with Russia’s ambassador to the U.S. during the campaign. Sessions had voluntarily offered during his own confirmation hearings that he “did not have communications with the Russians.” After the Washington Post broke the news that Sessions twice met with Russian ambassador Sergey Kislyak, the attorney general’s spokesperson confirmed the encounters, saying they occurred in his capacity as a then-senator from Alabama rather than as a prominent Trump campaign surrogate. The attorney general announced his recusal from both the Russia probe and any “matters that deal with the Trump campaign” hours later. “My staff recommended recusal,” Sessions said in a March 2 news conference. “I believe those recommendations are right and just.” During that announcement, Sessions declined to confirm that there was an investigation into Trump’s associates and Russia. He also said he did not “believe” he had met with any Russian officials other than Kislyak. Trump is reportedly still seething at Sessions over that recusal, which he believes ultimately led to the appointment of a special counsel to oversee the sprawling Russia investigation. Source | ||
DarkPlasmaBall
United States43400 Posts
June 09 2017 05:24 GMT
#156374
On June 09 2017 13:53 Danglars wrote: Show nested quote + On June 09 2017 10:00 Nevuk wrote: https://twitter.com/NYDailyNews/status/872936143054045185 Who in their news office thinks this kind of approach does them any good? If loud mirth in the echo chamber really stuck it to the fall guy, we'd have a different occupant in the White House. Not to mention the fact that calling Trump a liar is like calling water wet. It's common knowledge and no one in their right mind would say that Trump isn't a liar. We have far too much video and Twitter evidence of him explicitly lying. | ||
Slaughter
United States20254 Posts
June 09 2017 05:29 GMT
#156375
On June 09 2017 14:13 LegalLord wrote: I remember back in 2012 when people were quite displeased with Obama and thought they just had to suck it up and vote for him again. I can't say I was quite that cynical back then, but by the end of his second term he certainly did wear out his welcome. It almost seems that the Dems decided that if Obama was a lesser evil, then perhaps they needed to squeeze a little more mileage out and put up an even worse candidate. Sad thing is, either way this election went we probably would have had this situation in which the president was perpetually under investigation for not altogether unreasonable reasons. But at least Europe would have liked us more. We must run in different circles. Everyone I knew from the center to the left were at worst just satisfied with his work. Conservatives I knew liked to nitpick and complain about Obamacare but nothing too bad, more just common stuff when you ideologically disagree. | ||
Danglars
United States12133 Posts
June 09 2017 05:36 GMT
#156376
On June 09 2017 14:24 DarkPlasmaBall wrote: Show nested quote + On June 09 2017 13:53 Danglars wrote: On June 09 2017 10:00 Nevuk wrote: https://twitter.com/NYDailyNews/status/872936143054045185 Who in their news office thinks this kind of approach does them any good? If loud mirth in the echo chamber really stuck it to the fall guy, we'd have a different occupant in the White House. Not to mention the fact that calling Trump a liar is like calling water wet. It's common knowledge and no one in their right mind would say that Trump isn't a liar. We have far too much video and Twitter evidence of him explicitly lying. Yes. He certainly didn't hide it. "But this time it's so much worse" in the campaign was usually followed by something worse. | ||
LegalLord
United Kingdom13775 Posts
June 09 2017 05:38 GMT
#156377
On June 09 2017 14:29 Slaughter wrote: Show nested quote + On June 09 2017 14:13 LegalLord wrote: I remember back in 2012 when people were quite displeased with Obama and thought they just had to suck it up and vote for him again. I can't say I was quite that cynical back then, but by the end of his second term he certainly did wear out his welcome. It almost seems that the Dems decided that if Obama was a lesser evil, then perhaps they needed to squeeze a little more mileage out and put up an even worse candidate. Sad thing is, either way this election went we probably would have had this situation in which the president was perpetually under investigation for not altogether unreasonable reasons. But at least Europe would have liked us more. We must run in different circles. Everyone I knew from the center to the left were at worst just satisfied with his work. Conservatives I knew liked to nitpick and complain about Obamacare but nothing too bad, more just common stuff when you ideologically disagree. I think, on the scale of overall perception, Obama was clearly in a precarious situation in 2012. Against McCain it was pretty much the easiest victory one could dream up; McCain just wasn't going to win after being Bush III. But against Romney he was clearly vulnerable. Sure, Obama won handily at the end, but that is in no small part attributed to Romney's 47 percent fuckup. So there were clearly troubled signs there. By the end of the second term though, definitely a fair bit of resentment, and very thin coattails to ride out of office. | ||
LegalLord
United Kingdom13775 Posts
June 09 2017 05:42 GMT
#156378
On June 09 2017 14:20 ChristianS wrote: If Trump's guilty, that's very good news for Trump. If he's not, that's bad news for Trump. Because if it was resolved, he could put this behind him, but with the water still murky, this promises to drag on a great deal longer. Liberals and some conservatives will say there's enough evidence of wrongdoing, conservatives will say there's not, and the stalemate will lead to more investigation, which will mean it will return to the foreground again and again and again. I don't think so. Once they pin one thing on Trump, they will rightly assume that there is probably more. Instead of settling it and having him receive some demerit points and be off, that would break the matter right open into a much larger pursuit of justice (or something approximating justice). | ||
Danglars
United States12133 Posts
June 09 2017 05:42 GMT
#156379
On June 09 2017 14:20 ChristianS wrote: Here's where I think conservatives are crazy to be celebrating about the hearings: their cause for celebration is that we didn't see smoking gun evidence of collusion or obstruction of justice. That's an insanely low bar. It wasn't even that the accusations were dropped or disproven. We know pretty much the same stuff we knew before, but some stuff we know more certainly (i.e. confirmed directly from Comey rather than anonymous sources), some stuff we know in more detail (e.g. "honest loyalty"), and some more explosive allegations didn't happen (e.g. "Comey sez Trump threatened his wife if he didn't burn the evidence"). If anyone thought this would be resolved after today, they were wrong. If Trump's guilty, that's very good news for Trump. If he's not, that's bad news for Trump. Because if it was resolved, he could put this behind him, but with the water still murky, this promises to drag on a great deal longer. Liberals and some conservatives will say there's enough evidence of wrongdoing, conservatives will say there's not, and the stalemate will lead to more investigation, which will mean it will return to the foreground again and again and again. It's like the emails last year. It wasn't just about how bad the scandal was, it was the longevity of the story. That one scandal dominated coverage for basically the entire year, whereas a lot of other big scandals fell out of the news cycle and didn't have such a big impact on the election. The Khan thing, Judge Curiel, even the Access Hollywood tape had a big impact on the polls when they landed, and then faded away, whereas the emails kept coming up again and again (with one last hit in the form of the Comey letter). That's what this scandal is for Trump - and with Comey's testimony, he can't even deflect to criticizing the media at the moment. His accuser is James Comey, who's got about as good a reputation as anybody can have right now. Trump's advocates aren't even bothering to argue why what he did was good or just or proper. The best they can argue is that based solely on the actions described Trump can't quite be convicted of a felony. Yes this is celebrating with a very low bar. Quick reminder that even his supporters in this thread have very little good to hope for from the man (on the whole), so I'll take the good I can get. A lot of that is at the margins ... I'll break out the good stuff if he doesn't squander this in tweeting by the end of the week. | ||
IgnE
United States7681 Posts
June 09 2017 05:47 GMT
#156380
On June 09 2017 13:53 Danglars wrote: Show nested quote + On June 09 2017 10:00 Nevuk wrote: https://twitter.com/NYDailyNews/status/872936143054045185 Who in their news office thinks this kind of approach does them any good? If loud mirth in the echo chamber really stuck it to the fall guy, we'd have a different occupant in the White House. loud mirth in the echo chamber really stuck it to the fall guy? is trump a fall guy? that sentence is like peanut butter on the roof of my brain. | ||
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