1. If you support POTUS influencing DOJ in lesser sentencing recommendations for people who he likes, would you also support POTUS influencing DOJ in stiffer sentencing for people who he hates?
In the other thread "Do the ends Justify the Means" You said, and I quote:
"The ends could justify the means but only if the means are just. If the means are just so are the ends."
What if the means are unjust? How does that square with your support of the Dumpertrumper?
3. You said: "Even the appearance of bias can be ruinous to the entire justice system". Would the appearance of bias in an Impeachment trial be ruinous to the constitutional system?
4. You said: "It looks like the trial against Stone is rigged. The jury foreman is an anti-Trump democratic candidate and Russia truther". Question to you: "If they were Trump supporting Republican would it have been rigged in Stone’s favour?"
You believe that smokescreen by Barr? — Noah Te Stroete
Both prosecutors who left the case were Obama stooges. Sounds like justice to me.
Let's parse these questions very carefully one at a time. What did you mean from your quote above?
Then we will get to Dumpertrumper's tweets that influenced public policy (the second part of question #1). — NOS4A2
Cannot wait for the national debates between Bernie and Trump. — creativesoul
Both prosecutors who left the case were Obama stooges. Sounds like justice to me. — NOS4A2
have never supported POTUS influencing DOJ in lesser sentencing recommendations for people who he likes. The question is loaded because it assumes, without evidence, that POTUS was influencing DOJ. — NOS4A2
You are evading the question once again. We already know that their job as prosecutors is to recommend sentencing. Again, why was it justice they left the DOJ?
A conpiracy theory is:That's a valid complaint by Barr. The timing of Trump's tweet, though it agrees with Barr's assessment about the Stone case, has a tendency to fuel conspiracy theories among the Twitterati. — NOS4A2
He criticized inappropriate action by Trump. That was the correct thing to do. Contrast this with the typical things we hear: telling us how wonderful it is that he hear exactly what the President thinks.↪Relativist You believe that smokescreen by Barr? He’s working with Guiliani. — Noah Te Stroete
Trump's tweet doesn't suggest a conspiracy. Rather, it suggests he's interfering in the criminal justice process. And it IS an inappropriate interference- that's an unequivocal fact - and it's a clear counterexample to your claim that Trumps words don't matter.
Did the tweet have an effect? It's possible. Trump's behavior casts suspicion - that's the consequence of doing something inappropriate.
Ah, so you disagree with Barr.First, it is not inappropriate to call foul on injustice. In fact I think it is quite appropriate — NOS4A2
Did the tweet have an effect? — Relativist
He criticized inappropriate action by Trump. That was the correct thing to do. Contrast this with the typical things we hear: telling us how wonderful it is that he hear exactly what the President thinks. — Relativist
I'm not. But I think it appropriate to identify behavior that is at least superficially good. I think one's credibility is damaged when one finds fault with everything the "opposition" does, just as credibility is damaged when one refuses to see fault in anything your side does (like NOS4A2 does).Don't kid yourself in him suddenly growing a moral backbone. — Benkei
That's very possible, but that doesn't make it a bad thing.Barr has to keep the DOJ together after four prosecutors resigned from the Roger Stone case and one altogether quit. — Noah Te Stroete
I'm reminded of Michael Cohen's description of the way Trump let you know he'd like you to buy him some tie he'd seen. Trump would never directly ask for the tie, he'd just talk about how nice the ties is, and how good he thinks he'd look in it.Did the tweet have an effect? — Relativist
It's the power of the tweet. So much plausible deniability in obstruction-by-tweet. — ZzzoneiroCosm
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