Cavemonster
Philosopher
- Joined
- Sep 28, 2008
- Messages
- 6,701
Special prosecutors were a mistake.
I'm very open to specific critique of the role of special prosecutors.
However, humor me.
Imagine things are at least somewhat as Trump's harsher critics say. Imagine that a President has committed a serious crime very much against the laws and interests of the country. Imagine that the President has surrounded himself with people who may have been involved with that crime and a substantial chunk of the executive branch is engaged in covering up that crime.
Imagine that a political party holding the majority in both houses of congress have decided that the uncovering of whether that crime occurred represented a threat to their party's goals and that they valued those goals more than the public having access to the truth or the rule of law.
While you may not agree that this is the case now, surely given a view of world history you don't think situations like this are impossible.
If not a special prosecutor, what institution do you imagine would investigate such a thing? How would they be markedly different from the role that Mueller is playing?