lawtig02
Inconceivable Member
- Messages
- 3,669
First of all, you were right about this, and I don't think many people were suggesting you were not. It was pretty clear for a long time that, as you were saying, most Americans were not really following the Trump prosecutions, and many of that group concluded they were politically motivated and therefore invalid. So I'm not disputing you were right about the optics of this.I never claim to be the perfect average man, but I’m way closer to a political moderate/swing voter than 99% of people who post on here, based on the mere fact that so few here vote for any Republicans - while I routinely split my ticket and vote based on the candidate and not simply the party.
I’ve always said I’m center-right and not dead center. But I do bring a perspective to the board that could be valuable to people if they would take some of my posts as a differing perspective that comes from a place of good faith.
But that still leaves the question -- what are you suggesting DOJ should have done? If DOJ concludes crimes were committed and a grand jury agrees, are you suggesting DOJ should decline to prosecute simply because the indictee is a high-profile political figure? How can that possibly be reconciled with the idea that we're a country committed to the rule of law, and no person, no matter how powerful, is above the law?
I'm really curious how you square that circle in your head.