Nancy has been waiting because she wants more than just impeachment-JAIL!!

Pelosi's living in Trump's head rent free

"I actually don't think she's a talented person," the President said. "I've tried to be nice to her because I would've liked to have gotten some deals done. She's incapable of doing deals."

"She's a nasty, vindictive, horrible person," Trump added.
 
Why was Manafort sharing GOP polling data with Russian spies throughout the campaign?

Why did the White House Counsel call Michael Flynn's attorney and leave that long, rambling message about cooperating with the Special Counsel?

Why did Trump tell Lester Holt he fired Comey "because of the Russia stuff"?

Why did Trump order McGahn to deny that Trump ordered to have him fired?

These are the questions y'all are going to have to answer for.

Better get your lifeboat prepped now, and start thinking of new ID's.

Those are some of the questions Mueller has to clarify before congress(good job).

However, there are additional questions for Mueller like:

1 If you knew before you submitted the report on March 22, 2019 that, according to Barr, you could and should indicate that a sitting President had acted criminally if you concluded that the President had indeed engaged in a crime, would you have included that determination in your report if you considered the evidence supported it?
2 Upon concluding your work and submitting your final report, did you anticipate the Attorney General reaching and publicly announcing a conclusion on whether the President had obstructed justice? Would you have recommended that the Attorney General do so?
3 AG Barr said that he offered you the opportunity to review his March 24, 2019 letter to Congress and you declined. Is that accurate? If so, why did you decline?
4 How did you select your legal team?
5 You spend the entire first half of your Report, Volume I, explaining that “the Russians” sought to manipulate our 2016 election via social media and by hacking the Democratic National Committee. Though there is a lot of redacted material, at no point in the clear text is there information on whether the Russians actually did influence the election. Even trying was a crime, but given the importance of all this (some still claim the president is illegitimate) and the potential impact on future elections, did you look into the actual effects of Russian meddling? If not, why not?
6 Some of the information gathered about Michael Flynn was picked up inadvertently under existing surveillance of the Russian ambassador. As an American, Flynn’s name would have been routinely masked in the reporting on those intercepts in order to protect his privacy. The number of people with access to those intercepts is small, and the number inside the Obama White House with the authority to unmask names is even smaller. Yet details were leaked to the press and ended Flynn’s career. Given that the leak may have exposed U.S. intelligence methods, that it had to have been done at a very high level inside the Obama White House, and that the leak violated Flynn’s constitutional rights, did you investigate? If not, why not?
7 Prosecutors do not issue certificates of exoneration. The job is to charge or drop a case. That’s what constitutes exoneration in any practical sense. Yet you have as your final line that “while this report does not conclude that the President committed a crime, it also does not exonerate him.” Why did you include that, and so prominently?
8 You also wrote, “if we had confidence after a thorough investigation of the facts that the president clearly did not commit obstruction of justice, we would so state.” You argue elsewhere in the Report that because Trump is a sitting president, he cannot be indicted, so therefore it would be unjust to accuse him of something he could not go to court and defend himself over. But didn’t you do just that? Why did you leave the hint of guilt without giving Trump the means of defending himself in court? You must have understood that such wording would be raw meat to Democrats, and would force Trump to defend himself not in a court with legal protections, but in an often hostile media. Was that your intention?
9 The New York Times wrote that “some of the most sensational claims in the [Steele] dossier appeared to be false, and others were impossible to prove. Your report contained over a dozen passing references to the document’s claims but no overall assessment of why so much did not check out.” Given the central role the Steele Dossier played in your work, and certainly in the investigation that commenced as Crossfire Hurricane in summer 2016, why did you not include any overall assessment of why so much did not check out inside such a key document?
 
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Although NY has had its share of scumbags in politics (Giuliani, for example), overall it's been blessed with fairly competent leadership, leading to unusually good lives for its residents. If you compare NY to the nation in terms of pretty much any indicator of how nice a place is to live (life expectancy, infant mortality, education levels, home values, incomes, incarceration rate, violent crime rates, obesity rates, etc.), NY is pretty much always better than average, and usually among the ten best states (e.g., sixth-longest life expectancy of any state). If you want to see poorly governed areas of the country, you'd do better to look South, to places like Mississippi, Alabama, Kentucky, South Carolina, etc., where life is nasty, brutish, and short.

Spoken like a true New Yorker. People like you can't see the trees for the forest. New York is better thanks to Giuliani but it is still a big crime infested filthy city. Thus my dear your opinion holds no more weight than mine. BTW if I was alone and in need of immediate help I would rather be in the states you bad mouth than your city. Have you ever spent any time in the south? I've been to NYC and speak from experience, do you speak from experiences in the south?
 
Those are some of the questions Mueller has to clarify before congress(good job).

However, there are additional questions for Mueller like:

1 If you knew before you submitted the report on March 22, 2019 that, according to Barr, you could and should indicate that a sitting President had acted criminally if you concluded that the President had indeed engaged in a crime, would you have included that determination in your report if you considered the evidence supported it?
2 Upon concluding your work and submitting your final report, did you anticipate the Attorney General reaching and publicly announcing a conclusion on whether the President had obstructed justice? Would you have recommended that the Attorney General do so?
3 AG Barr said that he offered you the opportunity to review his March 24, 2019 letter to Congress and you declined. Is that accurate? If so, why did you decline?
4 How did you select your legal team?
5 You spend the entire first half of your Report, Volume I, explaining that “the Russians” sought to manipulate our 2016 election via social media and by hacking the Democratic National Committee. Though there is a lot of redacted material, at no point in the clear text is there information on whether the Russians actually did influence the election. Even trying was a crime, but given the importance of all this (some still claim the president is illegitimate) and the potential impact on future elections, did you look into the actual effects of Russian meddling? If not, why not?
6 Some of the information gathered about Michael Flynn was picked up inadvertently under existing surveillance of the Russian ambassador. As an American, Flynn’s name would have been routinely masked in the reporting on those intercepts in order to protect his privacy. The number of people with access to those intercepts is small, and the number inside the Obama White House with the authority to unmask names is even smaller. Yet details were leaked to the press and ended Flynn’s career. Given that the leak may have exposed U.S. intelligence methods, that it had to have been done at a very high level inside the Obama White House, and that the leak violated Flynn’s constitutional rights, did you investigate? If not, why not?
7 Prosecutors do not issue certificates of exoneration. The job is to charge or drop a case. That’s what constitutes exoneration in any practical sense. Yet you have as your final line that “while this report does not conclude that the President committed a crime, it also does not exonerate him.” Why did you include that, and so prominently?
8 You also wrote, “if we had confidence after a thorough investigation of the facts that the president clearly did not commit obstruction of justice, we would so state.” You argue elsewhere in the Report that because Trump is a sitting president, he cannot be indicted, so therefore it would be unjust to accuse him of something he could not go to court and defend himself over. But didn’t you do just that? Why did you leave the hint of guilt without giving Trump the means of defending himself in court? You must have understood that such wording would be raw meat to Democrats, and would force Trump to defend himself not in a court with legal protections, but in an often hostile media. Was that your intention?
9 The New York Times wrote that “some of the most sensational claims in the [Steele] dossier appeared to be false, and others were impossible to prove. Your report contained over a dozen passing references to the document’s claims but no overall assessment of why so much did not check out.” Given the central role the Steele Dossier played in your work, and certainly in the investigation that commenced as Crossfire Hurricane in summer 2016, why did you not include any overall assessment of why so much did not check out inside such a key document?

It's not Mueller who needs to clarify, it's y'all and Trump who have to clarify the why.

So once again, you are avoiding answering for the specifics in the report for a strategy of gaslighting the whole report.
 
It's not Mueller who needs to clarify, it's y'all and Trump who have to clarify the why.

So once again, you are avoiding answering for the specifics in the report for a strategy of gaslighting the whole report.

Then why on earth is the House calling for Mueller to testify instead of "y'all and Trump"?

https://nypost.com/2019/05/31/nadler-says-hell-call-on-mueller-to-testify-before-congress/

https://www.politico.com/story/2019/04/08/house-gop-mueller-testify-1261116
 
Those are some of the questions Mueller has to clarify before congress(good job).

However, there are additional questions for Mueller like:

1 If you knew before you submitted the report on March 22, 2019 that, according to Barr, you could and should indicate that a sitting President had acted criminally if you concluded that the President had indeed engaged in a crime, would you have included that determination in your report if you considered the evidence supported it?
2 Upon concluding your work and submitting your final report, did you anticipate the Attorney General reaching and publicly announcing a conclusion on whether the President had obstructed justice? Would you have recommended that the Attorney General do so?
3 AG Barr said that he offered you the opportunity to review his March 24, 2019 letter to Congress and you declined. Is that accurate? If so, why did you decline?
4 How did you select your legal team?
5 You spend the entire first half of your Report, Volume I, explaining that “the Russians” sought to manipulate our 2016 election via social media and by hacking the Democratic National Committee. Though there is a lot of redacted material, at no point in the clear text is there information on whether the Russians actually did influence the election. Even trying was a crime, but given the importance of all this (some still claim the president is illegitimate) and the potential impact on future elections, did you look into the actual effects of Russian meddling? If not, why not?
6 Some of the information gathered about Michael Flynn was picked up inadvertently under existing surveillance of the Russian ambassador. As an American, Flynn’s name would have been routinely masked in the reporting on those intercepts in order to protect his privacy. The number of people with access to those intercepts is small, and the number inside the Obama White House with the authority to unmask names is even smaller. Yet details were leaked to the press and ended Flynn’s career. Given that the leak may have exposed U.S. intelligence methods, that it had to have been done at a very high level inside the Obama White House, and that the leak violated Flynn’s constitutional rights, did you investigate? If not, why not?
7 Prosecutors do not issue certificates of exoneration. The job is to charge or drop a case. That’s what constitutes exoneration in any practical sense. Yet you have as your final line that “while this report does not conclude that the President committed a crime, it also does not exonerate him.” Why did you include that, and so prominently?
8 You also wrote, “if we had confidence after a thorough investigation of the facts that the president clearly did not commit obstruction of justice, we would so state.” You argue elsewhere in the Report that because Trump is a sitting president, he cannot be indicted, so therefore it would be unjust to accuse him of something he could not go to court and defend himself over. But didn’t you do just that? Why did you leave the hint of guilt without giving Trump the means of defending himself in court? You must have understood that such wording would be raw meat to Democrats, and would force Trump to defend himself not in a court with legal protections, but in an often hostile media. Was that your intention?
9 The New York Times wrote that “some of the most sensational claims in the [Steele] dossier appeared to be false, and others were impossible to prove. Your report contained over a dozen passing references to the document’s claims but no overall assessment of why so much did not check out.” Given the central role the Steele Dossier played in your work, and certainly in the investigation that commenced as Crossfire Hurricane in summer 2016, why did you not include any overall assessment of why so much did not check out inside such a key document?

Excellent Mullet questions lol.

Particularly #8: How is Mullet can, on the one hand, claim he was prevented from drawing a guilty conclusion—even as he clearly attempts to *insinuate* that Trump was guilty of obstruction. Mullet can’t have it both ways.

And it was a blatant attempt to provide a ‘road map’ to impeachment. So someone needs to ask Mullet if working for partisan ends is a role of the office of Special Counsel.
 
Then why on earth is the House calling for Mueller to testify instead of "y'all and Trump"?

1. Trump refused to be interviewed by the Special Counsel and is ordering his officials to ignore subpoenas.

2. Because Mueller testifying about his report will contradict Barr's claims of the report; claims to which you have made your central argument despite not reading the actual report yourself.

3. Having Mueller testify strengthens the contempt and perjury charge against Barr since Barr lied about his communication with Mueller about Mueller's conclusions while testifying before the Senate in April.
 
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even as he clearly attempts to *insinuate* that Trump was guilty of obstruction. .

How does Mueller insinuate that?

By detailing actual instances.

You all have yet to reconcile a defense for those instances in the report.

Do you think they just didn't happen?

We know they did because McGahn's phone message was leaked yesterday; Mueller talks about Trump obstructing justice by having his Counsel reach out to Flynn once they learned of Flynn's cooperation with Mueller in Mueller's report.
 
1. Trump refused to be interviewed by the Special Counsel and is ordering his officials to ignore subpoenas.

2. Because Mueller testifying about his report will contradict Barr's claims of the report; claims to which you have made your central argument despite not reading the actual report yourself.

3. Having Mueller testify strengthens the contempt and perjury charge against Barr since Barr lied about his communication with Mueller about Mueller's conclusions while testifying before the Senate in April.


omg , are you still crying baby girl?
 
President Donald Trump has answered written questions posed to him by special counsel Robert Mueller’s office, Trump’s legal team announced Tuesday.
 
How does Mueller insinuate that?

By detailing actual instances.

You all have yet to reconcile a defense for those instances in the report.

Do you think they just didn't happen?

We know they did because McGahn's phone message was leaked yesterday; Mueller talks about Trump obstructing justice by having his Counsel reach out to Flynn once they learned of Flynn's cooperation with Mueller in Mueller's report.

What I think is that Mullet had insufficient evidence to file a charge—and he admitted as much, in the sentence you goof balls quote incessantly. ‘We can’t be certain a crime wasn’t committed”=no charge in prosecutorial language.

The rest of it I addressed in a prior post. I don’t need to read the report to recognize a weak obstruction case when I see one. And if I was wrong, Democrats would have had the impeachment vote by now.

I guess the evidence isn’t all that great after all.
 
I read the entire report, more damaging to the left because it is actually full of evidence of collusion on the DNC, prior to the investigation, and the FISA lie problem


we wait for Mr. Barr, because he will be bringing the hammer with him
after he talks with Cristopher Steele that is

nut**bags aren't going to like this next investigation I'll tell you that much
 
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