And y'all bitched about the pardons...
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Now if this poor man could afford the best attornies like his dear leader, he wouldn't have seen 1 day in jail.
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@NobodySock said in And y'all bitched about the pardons...:
Now if this poor man could afford the best attornies like his dear leader, he wouldn't have seen 1 day in jail.
Thank you for making a great point!
Regardless of where one landed on the January 6 scale, the Just-us Department threw unlimited resources at people who could not afford to defend themselves effectively against a legal tsunami. Many of the convictions were not based on simple justice - after all, who gets months or years in jail for trespass? - but on vengeance and a burning desire to teach those ruffians who is actually in charge. Sign the plea deal or we'll bankrupt you, take your home away and turn your family out into the street.
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@Jolly said in And y'all bitched about the pardons...:
@NobodySock said in And y'all bitched about the pardons...:
Now if this poor man could afford the best attornies like his dear leader, he wouldn't have seen 1 day in jail.
Thank you for making a great point!
Regardless of where one landed on the January 6 scale, the Just-us Department threw unlimited resources at people who could not afford to defend themselves effectively against a legal tsunami. Many of the convictions were not based on simple justice - after all, who gets months or years in jail for trespass? - but on vengeance and a burning desire to teach those ruffians who is actually in charge. Sign the plea deal or we'll bankrupt you, take your home away and turn your family out into the street.
My point was the lack of justice on both ends of the spectrum. I am not discounting your post nor its validity, only pointing out something just as bad if not worse. Let's put the shoe on the other foot for a second. If Joe Biden had stayed in and lost the election but cried foul, that it was rigged, then staged a rally on January 6, 2025, telling his minions you have to fight if you want to keep your country, thus creating a bullrush to the Capitol where mayhem ensued. Then, deciding to carry off hundreds of this country's most classified documents home with him upon leaving the White House, how do you think you personally would have felt about his actions? And then seeing how his attornies use the system to delay delay delay justice?
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Joe could cry foul, if they could have woke him up to do so.
Trump still thinks the 2020 election was rigged. I, and many millions besides me, think so, too.
I believe the last election helped prove that.
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There's always been a reasonable case to be made about how the election was affected by the Hunter laptop story, and how the swamp came out to disingenuously destroy its credibility. As for outright voting fraud, I mean beyond the invisible and untrackable fraud in the ID-free precincts, that's a much less supportable argument.
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@Jolly said in And y'all bitched about the pardons...:
Joe could cry foul, if they could have woke him up to do so.
Trump still thinks the 2020 election was rigged. I, and many millions besides me, think so, too.
I believe the last election helped prove that.
and I think that Santa Claus is real, and millions support my notion. I believe the presents under my Christmas tree helped prove that too!
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@Horace said in And y'all bitched about the pardons...:
There's always been a reasonable case to be made about how the election was affected by the Hunter laptop story, and how the swamp came out to disingenuously destroy its credibility.
That case only became reasonable with hindsight. Remember the laptop’s origins were so dicey that even FoxNews and WSJ passed on the story. That’s how it ended up at the NYPost.
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@jon-nyc On the basic principle that when an expert weighs in on something, thereby abandoning the default position of "I don't know", and backs it with their credibility as black box thinkers with access to information and expertise that laymen do not have access to, and then they are proven wrong in retrospect, that those experts fell victim to a human failing. I'm uninterested in any attempt to disentangle motivated reasoning or tribal groupthink from outright dishonesty, because in the human mind, there is no bright line between them. In your world you can continue to believe that honest and well intentioned mistakes were made, while everybody else can see the convenience of that puzzle piece in your preferred narratives.
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Actually if you reread the letter they weren’t even wrong. They stated outright that they’re had no direct knowledge of the whether the emails were real or not. What they said is ‘it had the hallmarks’ of a Russian disinformation campaign and it’s hard to argue otherwise.
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Read the letter I’m not doing any magic here.
And you’re simply wrong. We can not know that they knew otherwise and all evidence would point the other way.
Not least that the editors of WSJ and FoxNews turned the story down. You didn’t need to be motivated by TDS to find it suspect that fully-beclowned Rudy Giuliani would show up with Hunters laptop at the last hour and that it would be legit.
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@jon-nyc You can live in a world where those intelligence officials made an honest mistake, and were not parlaying their credibility into convincing the electorate of something they wanted the electorate to believe. Get as granular as you need to get, ignore implications of the weight of expertise and experience, frame it as an innocent message about how there are certain "hallmarks" and that's just objective fact. You employ this line of thinking selectively, either zooming in or zooming out on any given situation, in order to find the best framing for your preferred narratives. Meanwhile, the message, in practice, broadcasted by that letter, was that the experts who should know, believed the laptop to be fake Russian disinformation, and they're confident enough to publish a letter about it.