
seriously, can ANYONE argue against an independent investigation and counsel?
Moderators: Jeff250, Tunnelcat
Can you cite this? I couldn't find anything trying to find it on Google.woodchip wrote:Funny how Hillary Clinton said she would fire Comey if she got elected.
that's because he's lying, again. At least you called him on that one, I get tired sometimes.Jeff250 wrote:Can you cite this? I couldn't find anything trying to find it on Google.woodchip wrote:Funny how Hillary Clinton said she would fire Comey if she got elected.
Isn't that how it has always been ? ...Spidey wrote:Lies seem to be ok, depending on who is telling them.
He can't; it's a lie.Jeff250 wrote:Can you cite this? I couldn't find anything trying to find it on Google.woodchip wrote:Funny how Hillary Clinton said she would fire Comey if she got elected.
Sorry about that bit of the obvious, but I just thought it was ironic considering some of the statements made in the last few threads.Grendel wrote:Isn't that how it has always been ? ...Spidey wrote:Lies seem to be ok, depending on who is telling them.
And maybe you are as big a liar asTunnelcat wrote:I'm guessing no love loss from Mr. Comey. Oh, and the day before Comey gets the axe, he had asked for more resources for the Russian investigation. Maybe the hot seat is getting a little too hot for President Trump?![]()
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/05/10/us/p ... comey.html
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Well, I'm not the one who reported this particular story. I just passed it along. I'm not so thin-skinned that I would resent being called a liar, unlike our current crazy ego-maniacal Commander in Chief who fires people who won't swear loyalty oaths to His Highness and who doesn't even have the balls to face the Director of the FBI and tell him personally he's been fired. Bwok, Bwok, Bah-Gok. I've also found a few links refuting the story as well, but there are way more sources that can be found actually supporting the story. I also take with a grain of salt anything that comes out of the Justice Department. Sessions has got to be so deep into Trump's hip pocket that he lives there like a load of old grungy pocket lint, you know, kind of like Ol' Russky Vlad, so I wouldn't trust anything that comes out of that man's mouth, or office. And here I thought you never believed anything that the DailyKos came up with anyway?woodchip wrote:And maybe you are as big a liar asTunnelcat wrote:I'm guessing no love loss from Mr. Comey. Oh, and the day before Comey gets the axe, he had asked for more resources for the Russian investigation. Maybe the hot seat is getting a little too hot for President Trump?![]()
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/05/10/us/p ... comey.html
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i am:
http://www.dailykos.com/story/2017/5/10 ... dy-s-lying
If you think Trumps firing of Comey was a bad thing:Top Gun wrote:And here's our Watergate. It makes no difference at this point if the entire Russia thing winds up being a big steaming pile of nothing. The President just fired the head of the FBI because he was under investigation. This is the literal textbook definition of obstruction of justice. Any representative who doesn't vote for articles of impeachment on this is taking a ★■◆● on the Constitution.
Let’s cut right to the chase: James Comey should have been fired immediately following his disastrous press briefing last July, in which he candidly laid out the case against Hillary Clinton over her mishandling of classified information and then refused to recommend charges. Overstepping his authority while radiating sanctimony, arrogating power while clumsily intervening in the election, Comey deserved to be sacked on the spot.
http://nypost.com/2017/05/13/comeys-fir ... o-the-fbi/On his watch, the FBI continued its politically correct, see-no-evil attitude toward radical Islam and thus failed to prevent the atrocity in San Bernardino; it also investigated the Orlando nightclub shooter for 10 months before closing its case, allowing him to kill or wound 102 people. Meanwhile, the federal office of personnel management was hacked by the Chinese, resulting in a serious data breach. That’s failure on an unacceptable level.
Now the bureau’s tied up and bogged down in the almost certainly chimerical “Russian hacking” fantasy, which bubbled up out of the leftist fever swamp in the wake of Clinton’s loss in November, and for which there is exactly zero evidence.
Oooooops. Looks like you're caught pushing bull★■◆● again.Just before Bill Clinton was inaugurated as the 42nd President of the United States on January 20, 1993, allegations of ethical improprieties were made against Sessions. A report by outgoing Attorney General William P. Barr presented to the Justice Department that month by the Office of Professional Responsibility included criticisms that he had used an FBI plane to travel to visit his daughter on several occasions, and had a security system installed in his home at government expense. Janet Reno, the 78th Attorney General of the United States, announced that Sessions had exhibited "serious deficiencies in judgment."
Although Sessions denied that he had acted improperly, he was pressured to resign in early July, with some suggesting that President Clinton was giving Sessions the chance to step down in a dignified manner. Sessions refused, saying that he had done nothing wrong, and insisted on staying in office until his successor was confirmed. As a result, President Clinton dismissed Sessions on July 19, 1993.
bull★■◆●? Did Clinton not fire Sessions? Only hatebone around here is the one you have for me. [Keep the personal shots out of the discussion]Ferno wrote:anything to fuel your hateboner for anything you deem on the left eh woodster?
But let's see what the facts say...
Oooooops. Looks like you're caught pushing bull★■◆● again.Just before Bill Clinton was inaugurated as the 42nd President of the United States on January 20, 1993, allegations of ethical improprieties were made against Sessions. A report by outgoing Attorney General William P. Barr presented to the Justice Department that month by the Office of Professional Responsibility included criticisms that he had used an FBI plane to travel to visit his daughter on several occasions, and had a security system installed in his home at government expense. Janet Reno, the 78th Attorney General of the United States, announced that Sessions had exhibited "serious deficiencies in judgment."
Although Sessions denied that he had acted improperly, he was pressured to resign in early July, with some suggesting that President Clinton was giving Sessions the chance to step down in a dignified manner. Sessions refused, saying that he had done nothing wrong, and insisted on staying in office until his successor was confirmed. As a result, President Clinton dismissed Sessions on July 19, 1993.
It amazes me that someone who claims to have taken an oath to protect and defend the Constitution is burying his head in the sand while the president actively shits all over it. [Deleted - Personal Shot]woodchip wrote:Anderson Cooper, the guy that brought the term "Tea bagger" to the national lexicon. Speak about someone having a slanted left protectionist presentation. I don't know how you figure, slick, that Trump is obstructing justice. After all Clinton fired Bill Sessions, his FBI chief. Both FBI heads were recommended for dismissal by the presidents AJ. If there is a legitimate Russian concern, the new FBI chief will continue to pursue.