Cabbage
Banned
- Joined
- Nov 24, 2002
- Messages
- 2,598
It seems to me that pretty much anything discovered by Mueller's team is leaked immediately.
I see no reason to believe that. Opinions are opinions, not evidence.
It seems to me that pretty much anything discovered by Mueller's team is leaked immediately.
Yes, absence of evidence constitutes evidence. If somebody claims that he left his keys in my house during a dinner party, and I search for them and don't find them, then that is strong evidence that he didn't leave his keys in my house.
Knowingly laundered money? I think that's a low probability. That doesn't strike me as Trump's gig, and he was under constant audit by the IRS. It would be a foolish thing for a billionaire to do.
Did he now? That should be simplistic for you to provide evidence for in full context with no spin. Go for it!
In my day it was The Man.Illuminati busy or something? How about the NWO?
In my day it was The Man.
I see no reason to believe that. Opinions are opinions, not evidence.
I find it absurd to compare a situation as simple as lost keys to the layers of complexity involved here, where, if there is guilt, it is natural to assume evidence for it is well hidden.
That seems quite naive. Is he actually a billionaire? And ask Al Capone why he didn't pay his taxes. Your position might be believable if there weren't many examples in the past of rich people engaging in precisely these foolish behaviors.
Opinions are informed by evidence. At least mine are.
There are news articles almost every week about how Mueller is putting pressure on this guy or that, or focusing on this area or that. Or working with the NY attorney general to pin a state crime on Manafort so that Trump can't pardon him. This information must be coming from somebody on Mueller's team, unless you think the reporters are making it up out of whole cloth.
While we're working through the details of the unimpressive scale, let me remind you that you still haven't supported your claim, nor have you explained the wild goose chase you initiated with the bogus evidence you foisted.Seems like "highly unimpressive" ought to be closer to the 100% end of the spectrum than the 0% end, wouldn't you say? I'd suggest somewhere around 75% unimpressive. At 20%, I'd probably want something more like "somewhat unimpressive" or "slightly unimpressive".
Indeed. And this helps explain why he publicly encouraged the Russians to meddle, right around the same time his senior staff, including Donny "I love it" Jr, met with the Russians to get dirt on Hillary.Actually, I think it's the opposite. A conspiracy involving so many people is almost impossible to keep well-hidden. The lost keys, however, have already been hidden well enough that their owner didn't realize he had dropped them, and nobody else at the dinner party noticed them.
An additional factor in my theory's favor is that Trump is an open book. The guy can't stop himself from revealing his innermost thoughts for longer than a few seconds, no matter how muddled they are.
Opinions are informed by evidence. At least mine are.
There are news articles almost every week about how Mueller is putting pressure on this guy or that, or focusing on this area or that. Or working with the NY attorney general to pin a state crime on Manafort so that Trump can't pardon him. This information must be coming from somebody on Mueller's team, unless you think the reporters are making it up out of whole cloth.
House Intelligence Chairman Devin Nunes lashed out at Attorney General Jeff Sessions last week in a letter where he threatened Sessions with a public grilling if he doesn't produce documents about the Russia dossier to the House intelligence committee.
Nunes, who despite stepping aside from directing the House Russia investigation has been leading his own separate investigation, accused Sessions and the FBI of stonewalling him repeatedly in a September 1 letter obtained by CNN. In the letter, he threatened to drag Sessions and FBI Director Christopher Wray before the committee for a public grilling and hold them in contempt of Congress -- a jailable offense -- if they don't hand over the documents.
The House intelligence committee issued a pair of subpoenas last month seeking documentation of whether the FBI or Justice Department used material from the dossier compiled by former British intelligence agent Christopher Steele as part of the federal investigation into possible collusion between the campaign of President Donald Trump and the Kremlin. Nunes also writes that he subpoenaed to discover whether information from the Russia dossier was used in the crafting of applications to conduct surveillance under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.
In the letter, which was signed only by Nunes and no other members of the House intelligence committee, Nunes explained that he was extending the deadline for responding to the subpoenas to September 14. But he capped it off with a sharp threat.
Yeah, no...
https://www.lawfareblog.com/how-read-news-story-about-investigation-eight-tips-who-saying-what
espeially:
Rule No. 3: It Is Ethical and Legal for Defense Lawyers to Dish on Matters About Which Prosecutors Cannot Appropriately Talk
Indeed. And this helps explain why he publicly encouraged the Russians to meddle, right around the same time his senior staff, including Donny "I love it" Jr, met with the Russians to get dirt on Hillary.
Why would defense lawyers be privy to various strategies of the Mueller team? Unless of course they read them in the New York Times I guess.
Both you and Noah keep repeating this claim as if it had any basis in reality. It doesn't, as both I and Emily have pointed out many times.
Both you and Noah keep repeating this claim as if it had any basis in reality. It doesn't, as both I and Emily have pointed out many times.
Highly unimpressive!Both you and Noah keep repeating this claim as if it had any basis in reality. It doesn't, as both I and Emily have pointed out many times.