Please register to participate in our discussions with 2 million other members - it's free and quick! Some forums can only be seen by registered members. After you create your account, you'll be able to customize options and access all our 15,000 new posts/day with fewer ads.
Of course you are dishonest enough to purposefully misquote Rosenstein to fit your narrative. He actually said, "There is no allegation in this indictment that any American was a knowing participant in this illegal activity."
The absence of allegations of specific American witting participation in this particular indictment does not equate to a statement that no American wittingly participated in the meddling.
More to the point...did Robert Mueller expect that indicting Russian nationals who had never and will never set foot in the U.S., involuntarily or otherwise, to be a worthwhile enterprise?
If he did, then there's even less intellectual firepower in the office of the Special Counsel than we thought, to the limited extent that may even be possible.
Um, yeah, it's certainly worthwhile to have solid evidence of Russian interference in our elections and to make that evidence publicly known.
It also calls into question even more urgently why Trump continues to refuse to enforce Congressionally mandated sanctions on Russia, and why he seems to have such a penchant for cohorts, family members, staff members, advisors and other administration members who have close ties with Russia.
It also give credence to reports that Russia is holding something very unsavory over Trump's head in order to bend his actions towards Russian wishes by threatening him with revelations of whatever this unsavory thing is, and blackmailing and/or bribing him for their silence. The rumors of the nature of this unsavory item seem to line up with some of this incredible week's other revelations and allegations of Trump's womanizing.
There are also questions about whether Trump is in cahoots with Putin for some sort of grand world-control partnership plan - I personally don't think he's bright enough for this, but think Putin might string him along with flattery and promises, only to knife him in the back - literally or figuratively - when the time is right.
Putin's time, that is.
Look beneath the very obvious surface. There's much more to come, and actually bringing to justice the Russians and their little organizations named in the indictment is not Mueller's true object. But these disclosures are a huge step in the right direction and provide very solid evidence that there's a lot yet to be uncovered.
That's the deteriorating mindset of the liberal fanatics we have to deal with today. Their rage and hate are overflowing, their hysteria rising to the screaming point, they're misspelling the simplest words like "waving", and saying things that a normal six-year-old would laugh at.
The mental collapse of a political party is never pretty. But the Democrats are showing us here how it's done.
Oh please. They learned from the best. You cons wrote the book on hate.
I read the dossier. I also read Glenn Simpson's testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee, three times. I read "Fire and Fury", which was sketchy in places, but still an interesting look behind the scenes of a White House that sould have been the set of a Three Stooges movie.
I know exactly who Steele is, how he came to be involved, how and when that dossier was created and why, and how the FBI came to see it. Do you?
I guess you missed the story about a dossier full of Russian misinformation.
Steele even lied to the FBI, and said he wasn't disseminating the dossier to the media.
When is Mueller going to indict Steele?
What was the Russian "misinformation"? The only thing that has been proved wrong in the dossier is that it identified the wrong Cohen being in Prague. Many other things have actually been verified as true.
More to the point...did Robert Mueller expect that indicting Russian nationals who had never and will never set foot in the U.S., involuntarily or otherwise, to be a worthwhile enterprise?
If he did, then there's even less intellectual firepower in the office of the Special Counsel than we thought, to the limited extent that may even be possible.
It's just another stunt by Mueller.
He knows his investigation is under serious fire, and it's getting almost impossible to even justify it at this point.
Please register to post and access all features of our very popular forum. It is free and quick. Over $68,000 in prizes has already been given out to active posters on our forum. Additional giveaways are planned.
Detailed information about all U.S. cities, counties, and zip codes on our site: City-data.com.