Crossbow
Seeking Honesty and Sanity
Someone obviously has no idea what the words "non sequitur" mean.
Thanks much.
I was thinking about the same thing myself.
Someone obviously has no idea what the words "non sequitur" mean.
Someone obviously has no idea what the words "non sequitur" mean.
Ha!Russocurious?
Page 214*:
Which appears just above the portion where they say "If we couldn't find any evidence of the President committing a crime, we'd say so. ...we can't say so."
* That's in PDF pages, it's also Volume II, page 2
Trump Tweets
No Collusion, No Obstruction - there has NEVER been a President who has been more transparent.
Is anyone tempering their hatred for Donald Trump, now that he has been investigated, and not charged with anything?
I know people like my brother were telling me that once the Mueller Report came out, i'd start hating him too, and I agreed that when it did, and he was charged with a crime, i'd turn on Trump in a heartbeat.
Now that he has not been charged, has anyone gone the other way?
It seems for 2 years Fox, Trump, and his supporters have been correct, and now that the Mueller report is out, no one is realizing that they have been fooled for two years.
The media and DNC have been trying to correct their galactically bad 2016 campaign for almost 3 years, is the fog of cognitive dissonance starting to lift?
Honesty please.
Well, that's true.
His repeated attempts to lie are pretty damn transparent.
That says that they didn't try to show that crimes were committed, because they weren't going to bring charges. It doesn't say why they weren't going to bring charges.
The ordinary means for an individual to respond to an accusation is through a speedy and public trial [where] An individual who believes he was wrongly accused can use that process to [...] clear his name.
[A] prosecutor's judgment that crimes were committed, but that no charges will be brought, affords no such adversarial opportunity for public name-clearing before an impartial adjudicator.
The concerns about the fairness [...]would be heightened in the case of a sitting President, where a federal prosecutor's accusation of a crime [...] could carry consequences that extend beyond the realm of criminal justice.
9-27.220, nor any of what you posted mentions the OLC's policy that a sitting president cannot be indicted.Page 214*:
Which appears just above the portion where they say "If we couldn't find any evidence of the President committing a crime, we'd say so. ...we can't say so."* That's in PDF pages, it's also Volume II, page 2
Well, if Barr said it in his press conference, then it must be the truth.
It's in footnote 6, mentioned in the second paragraph, I believe.9-27.220, nor any of what you posted mentions the OLC's policy that a sitting president cannot be indicted.
He basically did. That's what most of Volume II is. What he can't do is officially call Trump out without providing him a mechanism to clear his name. That's what impeachment is for and Mueller can't start that.What you quoted also says, "this report does not conclude the president committed a crime." There is nothing preventing the Special Counsel from listing any crimes committed by the president in his report, only that he can't issue an indictment.
That is specifically what he did. I'm running to a meeting now, so I'll have to look up the exact citation later. (Maybe some nice sole can do it for me?)In other words, Mueller could have pointed out any crimes and let Congress deal with them because he is unable to under current DOJ policy, but he didn't.
None of what you have provided states that Mueller didn't indict Trump because he couldn't, which was Crossbow and Beelzebuddy's original claims.
(Maybe some nice sole can do it for me?)
I refuse to do it, I'm putting my foot down.
Oh, hey, looky there… we're back to "Bill Barr is a liar!!!111!1111!1!"
I agree. It’s not clear cut. Which is why I just said I’m leaning towards impeachment. I certainly appreciate the arguments against.
9-27.220, nor any of what you posted mentions the OLC's policy that a sitting president cannot be indicted.
What you quoted also says, "this report does not conclude the president committed a crime." There is nothing preventing the Special Counsel from listing any crimes committed by the president in his report, only that he can't issue an indictment. In other words, Mueller could have pointed out any crimes and let Congress deal with them because he is unable to under current DOJ policy, but he didn't.
None of what you have provided states that Mueller didn't indict Trump because he couldn't, which was Crossbow and Beelzebuddy's original claims.
In other words, Mueller could have pointed out any crimes and let Congress deal with them because he is unable to under current DOJ policy, but he didn't.
That is specifically what he did. I'm running to a meeting now, so I'll have to look up the exact citation later. (Maybe some nice sole can do it for me?)
tl;dr: Congress can investigate and prosecute obstruction charges against the President without the problems caused if the DOJ did it.In sum, contrary to the position taken by the President ' s counsel, we concluded that, in light of the Supreme Court precedent governing separation-of-powers issues , we had a valid basis for investigating the conduct at issue in this report. In our view, the application of the obstruction statutes would not impermissibly burden the President's performance of his Article II function to supervise prosecutorial conduct or to remove inferior law-enforcement officers. And the protection of the criminal justice system from corrupt acts by any person-including the President-accords with the fundamental principle of our government that "[n]o [person] in this country is so high that he is above the law."
When it comes to Trump, everything seems to be priced-in already: I don't think there is anything Trump can do to lose base support except endorse a "liberal" agenda.
Did you actually read the Mueller report. Mueller was very clear about a few things.
The first was he could not indict a sitting President because of longstanding DOJ policy.
The second was he could not exonerate the President although he would have like to have been able to.
And finally he would not incriminate the President as that was up to Congress.