plague311
Great minds think...
As a fan of football, I'd love to know what that is in reference to, or what it means beyond a literal interpretation.
Grandpa Simpson, but it was mostly because it was the style at the time.
As a fan of football, I'd love to know what that is in reference to, or what it means beyond a literal interpretation.
Probably The Simpsons.As a fan of football, I'd love to know what that is in reference to, or what it means beyond a literal interpretation.The coaches both have onions tied to their belts.
To continue the analogy further...To continue your football analogy, Mueller only failed to score the touchdown because Barr executed an illegal "horse collar "tackle on the 1 yard line.If a football player makes a spectacular 99 yard run from one end of the field to the other, and drops the ball before he crosses the goal line, you will be frustrated (despite how impressive the run was). So Mueller's failure to finish things is going to be frustrating because in the end, he dropped the ball.
To continue the analogy further...
Mueller knew Barr was coming. He knew he was a dirty player. He knew it would be a dirty hit. He could have avoided the hit and still scored. But he decided "Nah, its more honorable if I take the hit and fumble the ball on the first yard line."
Let's take a look at another angle.
Mueller claimed he didn't want to present all the evidence against because without charging Trump, Trump would have no avenue to defend himself against the charges.
Sounds honorable enough if one didn't consider the fact there's a crook in the WH and Mueller knew it.
What law prevented Mueller from passing more information on to the House who Mueller also designated as the proper authority to prosecute Trump?
Adding to what PW just said. Meuller didn't say he suppressed any evidence. He said he couldn't indict a sitting president.Let's take a look at another angle.
Mueller claimed he didn't want to present all the evidence against because without charging Trump, Trump would have no avenue to defend himself against the charges.
Sounds honorable enough if one didn't consider the fact there's a crook in the WH and Mueller knew it.
What law prevented Mueller from passing more information on to the House who Mueller also designated as the proper authority to prosecute Trump?
Wow, certain posters here need to stfu and go and learn who Mueller is before continuing to demand what he should have done by projecting what they think they would have done.
Adding to what PW just said. Meuller didn't say he suppressed any evidence. He said he couldn't indict a sitting president.
We've been hearing the kind of guy he is for a long time.
I don't think having a certain kind of personality or set of preferences changes one's obligations
or the judgement of one's actions.
Trump's personality and preferences seem to be all about lying and cheating, but that doesn't mean we can't judge any particular time he acts wrongly.
Mueller had a unique platform and access to unique information. His choice to present everything buried dryly in legallese
empowered some really awful people to get away with spinning and continuing to get away with crimes.
I don't think that's adherence to law and order and the rules not in any sense that sees the forest for the trees. And I don't think that's in service of the best interests of the people, regardless of whether it's in line with his personal preferences or temperment.
And you keep on ignoring it
He met the obligations that he was required to.
Judgement by people that have an agenda and little clue what they're talking about.
Lying and cheating tend to be considered wrong by most people
He is a Lawyer. Who wrote a legal document. For another lawyer. Why would you expect it to be anything else?
No, those that are empowering those criminals are the ones that are refusing to take action on the facts that have been presented to them.
No, it was not his job to make allegations and partisan sound bytes for TV. It was his job to collect the facts, make determinations of whether to prosecute or not, the create a report for the AG explaining the legal decisions that were made. With the sole exception of prosecution of the President where he explained their reasoning for not making a decision, that is exactly what he did.
You are complaining that he didn't go beyond his mandate and act in a Partisan manner, something he was never going to do.
Not ignoring his temperment. It just doesn't change a judgement of his actions.
He met his legally outlined obligations.
Humans can still fail or be ****** while adhering to the legal letter of their obligations.
This just seems to be an insult with no substance.
Yes. Even if it's someone's temperment, their actions will still be judged.
You've never seen a lawyer make a case to the public? Ken Starr was a lawyer too. Granted, his mandate was different, but there's absolutely nothing in being a lawyer that precludes understanding who the audience really is and acting on it.
More than one person or group can share responsibility for something.
Just following orders is not much of a moral ideal. We established that at Nuremberg. I'm not comparing Mueller to a Nazi soldier, I just think we as a society have made it pretty clear that's a poor baseline for acceptable action.
If the idea was that he had to get Trump because he's a dirty Republican, THAT would be partisan. Caring about justice being done over looking impartial would not be partisan. It would open him up to accusations of partisanship, but so will anything that makes Trump look bad. It is not worth caring about.
You are still demanding things of him that were never in his job description. It was never his mandate to go after Trump at all. His mandate was to investigate the extent of the of the Russian interference and any criminal actions arising from that investigation and then to report to the AG on it. That's it, that was his job.
Let's take a look at another angle.
Mueller claimed he didn't want to present all the evidence against because without charging Trump, Trump would have no avenue to defend himself against the charges.
Sounds honorable enough if one didn't consider the fact there's a crook in the WH and Mueller knew it.
What law prevented Mueller from passing more information on to the House who Mueller also designated as the proper authority to prosecute Trump?
You are still demanding things of him that were never in his job description.
Speaking for myself, I have about zero patience for attacking someone because of what another person did based on captain hindsight logic.Do you believe that a person can be criticized for the choices they make even if they fullfill their job description and stay within the law?
Can an action possibly be wrong if it is within the confines of the law and the expectations of a job?
Do you believe that a person can be criticized for the choices they make even if they fullfill their job description and stay within the law?
Can an action possibly be wrong if it is within the confines of the law and the expectations of a job?