Mueller investigation cost $3.2M in its first 4 months. That's a long weekend at Mar-a-Lago for Trump and fam.
That is pretty ****ing good, to be honest.
Mueller investigation cost $3.2M in its first 4 months. That's a long weekend at Mar-a-Lago for Trump and fam.
The scope of Mueller's investigation seems pretty narrow to me.
While the Daily Signal (article linked above) might try to make a pro-Trump argument, I see the Russians employing a hybrid war strategy to their advantages pitting both sides against the other in the US and keeping political turmoil going.
Narrower than the Fitzgerald/Plame investigation?
Depends on your perspective. Depends on what you think Mueller is actually doing.
The Plame game covered a lot of ground; Niger, WMD, Joe Wilson, Rove, etc.
Depends on your perspective. Depends on what you think Mueller is actually doing.
The Plame game covered a lot of ground; Niger, WMD, Joe Wilson, Rove, etc.
Um, I guess so. But it seems like the Fitzgerald inquiry was about who leaked Plame's identity to the media, and necessarily spread into Wilson's trip and the forged yellowcake docs.
The Mueller investigation has already subsumed at least two existing cybercrime investigations and the existing counterintelligence probe. Plus the Manafort money-laundering investigation and Mike Flynn's personal entanglements. Add obstruction of justice and consider that it's looking at three distinct legal entities (campaign, transition, and administration) and it appears much larger in terms of its formal scope and actual breadth.
Serious question to the Russia collusion crowd. At what point is the integrity of the investigation compromised?
Um, I guess so. But it seems like the Fitzgerald inquiry was about who leaked Plame's identity to the media, and necessarily spread into Wilson's trip and the forged yellowcake docs.
The Mueller investigation has already subsumed at least two existing cybercrime investigations and the existing counterintelligence probe. Plus the Manafort money-laundering investigation and Mike Flynn's personal entanglements. Add obstruction of justice and consider that it's looking at three distinct legal entities (campaign, transition, and administration) and it appears much larger in terms of its formal scope and actual breadth.
When there is gross malfeasance, negligence, or misconduct that causes actual harm? It's an interesting question, but a purely academic one of you're asking for lay opinions.
For all of your hyperventilation over FBI Supervillain (TM) Peter Strzok, you haven't really explained exactly how his private political opinions compromise the investigation.
I feel like we're talking in circles here. Career public servants are allowed to have political opinions. They generally aren't allowed to take them to work, depending on the kind of work they do. Is this platonic ideal going to be universally upheld? No. Is there any evidence that political bias has affected this investigation in a meaningful way? No.
IMO it's silly to even engage in this discussion with you.
I find it interesting that you chose to characterize what essentially became a very broad and very public re-litigation of the grounds for going to war with Iraq as a 'necessary' component behind determining who leaked Plame to Novak.