Just kept this to represent the multiple times you've used a total absence of evidence to run wild. It's frankly hilarious.
But whatever, if you think a situation for which you have no evidence of pressure is a big deal, you should be freaking the **** out over the situation where there is evidence of pressure. And yet you aren't. Strange, isn't it?
The meeting itself is obviously improper. It isn't plausible that neither Clinton nor Lynch understood this. So why have it at all, if nothing substantive was going to be discussed?
I wouldn't say it was improper, I would say it was dumb. There were no rules that forbid it, but it was not wise.
Comey's firing is eminently justified. He's handled everything incompetently.
That isn't remotely the issue. Someone's firing can be justified in the abstract but still improper.
Ty Lue, for example, could be a bad basketball coach who deserves to be fired. Still wrong to fire him BECAUSE he's black.
Comey may be inept, but firing him to squelch an investigation should result in serious consequences.
You don't like it when I speculate, but you do it too. You're speculating that this is the reason for Comey's firing. But you have no actual evidence to that effect.
Haha. Come on, that's even more desperate then the multiple times you've used an absence of evidence to fuel your speculation about Clinton and Lynch.
Evidence:
1) Story staff told immediately contradicted by Trump.
2) Trump says he was thinking about Russia.
3) Trump tells the Russians the pressure is off.
That's plenty of evidence. Maybe not sufficient to convict, but most definitely enough to draw a reasonable conclusion.
No, I don't. And in fact, the most plausible scenario isn't Bill saying anything, it's Lynch. All she needed to do is tell bill that Hillary would get off the hook, provided she didn't lie during her upcoming FBI interview.
"Don't lie to Congress" may be the lamest conspiratorial message I've ever heard. Lynch followed up, "Make sure you don't say the N-Word, show up without pants, or kick the chairperson in the junk."
Deeply disturbing stuff.
To affect the election. Which is supposedly a very bad thing to do.
No, almost everything "affects" the election - it's the how and why that matters.
Lynch looking at the evidence, realizing it's a whole lot of nothing, and pointing out to Comey that treating the whole lot of nothing like a serious investigation will be bad PR. She was over-ruled (more evidence of her dark, manipulative powers) and the rest is history. 538 and others have directly tied Clinton's fall in the polls to Comey's statement, which was highly explosive in an investigation where Clinton was cleared.
Again, nothing remotely sinister.