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Zeb_Carter said:No point...well maybe one, that both parties are a fraught with corruption in this day and age. Both parties have so removed themselves from the American people as to be unrecognizable to our forefathers.
That's just ridiculous Zeb, everyone knows that Scooter Libby lying about something that turned out to not be a crime is far more corrupt than William Jefferson having $100,000 of bribe money in his freezer. After all, Pelosi immediately appointed him to the Homeland Security committee after taking her new position. Don't you feel safer already?Zeb_Carter said:No point...well maybe one, that both parties are a fraught with corruption in this day and age. Both parties have so removed themselves from the American people as to be unrecognizable to our forefathers.
S-Des said:That's just ridiculous Zeb, everyone knows that Scooter Libby lying about something that turned out to not be a crime is far more corrupt than William Jefferson having $100,000 of bribe money in his freezer. After all, Pelosi immediately appointed him to the Homeland Security committee after taking her new position. Don't you feel safer already?
shereads said:Don't forget those girls that Clinton raped and murdered when he was governor of Arkansas.
Where do you people get this stuff? Does the Heritage Foundatioin have a comic book?
BTW, this trial didn't determine that no crime was committed, but only that Libby lied during the investigation of a crime for which no one has yet been charged - or will be. Valerie Plame was working undercover; revealing her identity placed informants in danger and - as you people would be shrieking if this had happened under a Democratic administration - abetted terrorism.
The fact that the wrong man was charged and not the ones responsible is the primary topic here. Not pardons, and not the seriousness of poor Scooter's attempt to help with the cover-up. GWB did promise, after all, a "new era of accountability."
Who's been held accountable so far? Not Ahmad Chalabi, who continued on our payroll for nearly a year after it was revealed that he provided false intelligence. Not the man himself, who set the tone for Abu Garaib when he publically dissed the Geneva Conventions. Not Cheney, who was on record as wanting to invade Iraq before he was elected to office, and who will ultimately benefit from Halliburton Industries' lucrative post-war contracts. (Iraq may be a mess, but it's the kind of mess that makes rich pickings for the shrewd and the conscienceless.) Not Karl Rove, who specializes in smearing enemies of the White House, and is almost certainly the brain behind the attempt to discredit Joseph Wilson by using his wife.
So far, Bush/Cheney's era of accountability has netted only the red-shirts: expendable, easily targeted, easily forgotten. The half-dozen low-ranking military personnel who took the fall for Abu Garaib, having committed acts they had reason to believe their were commander in chief would applaud. Scooter Libby, the man least likely to be missed and most likely to keep quiet about his bosses in exchange for the party's gratitude and a likely pardon.
Get real. You people have a lot to answer for, and you might as well accept it.
S-Des said:You know the first sign of a bigot? Liberal (pun intended) use of the phrase "you people". I've seen you do it to a number of AHers who disagreed with you about things. At what point did I ever identify myself as a conservative (let alone a Republican)? Valerie was undercover? Really? What a surprise, considering the person who wrote the law was on last night and pointed out she never was, let alone at the time of the "outing". Also, the guy who leaked to reporters (Armitage) was known by the FBI before Fitzgerald was appointed, yet he was given immunity so he could testify against Libby. There is no further trail for this case, Fitzgerald said before the trial ever started that the investigation was over. All we got out of the millions spent (and a reporter jailed) was 4 guilty verdicts for lying to a guy who has never been elected to anything.
She never had her cover blown, the FBI or CIA never said she did (and Fitzgerald never claimed she did). Oh yeah, about the "plot" to discredit Wilson...A reporter asked why they would send a Bush administration critic with no specific expertise in the area to investigate the claims and was told it was because his wife recommended him for the job (which was true). Guess we've officially stretched the definition of discrediting.
And who says I was in favor of the Clinton impeachment? You really are a peach. You realize you sound exactly like every other racist, sexist, homophobe, etc... And I should explain myself to you why?shereads said:How do I know you're a conservative? Because you recite the party line.
Yes, I use "you people" to describe the half-dozen or so neocons here because your debate tactics and talking points are so similar it's as if you're reading from cue cards. When confronted with the inexcusable, quote Fox News or some other embedded source and carefully avoid the use of the name; or change the subject. When in doubt, bring up Bill Clinton.
Which brings me to the point that you will either ignore or use as inspiration for a new, quasi-related topic - because you must not, cannot, acknowledge the simple truth of it: How ironic that your defense of Scooter Libby refered to him as having been convicted "of lying about something that turned out not to be a crime." Adultery is also not a crime. But you people (Republicans, neocons, Bush apologists, etc.) used a lie about adultery as a reason to impeach a president.
So I take it that lying about a White House coverup is not that bad a thing, but lying about your personal life makes someone unfit to hold public office? Which is it?
S-Des said:And who says I was in favor of the Clinton impeachment? You really are a peach. You realize you sound exactly like every other racist, sexist, homophobe, etc... And I should explain myself to you why?
could you please explain why Fitzgerald didn't prosecute the person who actually leaked her name to the press (which was what the investigation was about in the first place).
In Prosecutor Fitzgerald's comments he said, because of the way the law is written, it would have been very difficult to gain a conviction for outting Plame. Furthermore, if he had gone after Libby, Rove or Chaney for the crime, suddenly every document in the government would suddenly have been classified and would have been unattainable by either the defense or prosecution. As it is, the White House felt protected enough from prosecution that they didn't classify anything but the most dammning records in a spin to appear to be helping their friend Libby.S-Des said:Speaking of party lines, since you insist that Plame was 007 in a dress, could you please explain why Fitzgerald didn't prosecute the person who actually leaked her name to the press (which was what the investigation was about in the first place).
On another point, why is Rove still working at the White House after Bush swore on national television that anyone involved in breaking the law or leaked classified information would be fired? It's absolutely known now from testimony at the Libby trial that Rove was the leak.shereads said:To put it another way, if the whole thing was blown out of proportion and no real harm was done - none of it intentionally - then why didn't the White House cooperate immediately?
Why did the President express outrage over the incident?
Why, after the outrated president pledged to make sure the responsible person was held accountable, did it take months for the Justice Department to appoint an investigator?
Why did the Justice Department then give the White House a day of warning before seizing e-mail records and other evidence that might have proven no crime was committed - or might have led to someone more culpable than Scooter Libby?
And why, if this was no big deal, did Scooter Libby twice contradict his own account of what happened?
As for why you should explain yourself, especially regarding the separate standards for Clinton's lie and Libby's, I never imagined for a moment that you'd try.
Jenny_Jackson said:On another point, why is Rove still working at the White House after Bush swore on national television that anyone involved in breaking the law or leaked classified information would be fired? It's absolutely known now from testimony at the Libby trial that Rove was the leak.
Not my party I'm a card carrying Libertarian so don't blame me for Bush, either of them.shereads said:Yes, but your party beats up puppies and stomps kittens and chose Jesse Helms to represent us in the U.N. You elected George W. Bush president, for chrissake. Not president of the Kiwanis Club, but of the whole United States! Not once, but twice. WTF?
For worst political party, this presidency alone qualifies the Republicans to have their jersey retired. It's no contest.
Yeah, so safe I turned in all my firearms 'cuz I know I can sleep safe now that there are honest politicians heading up the committee on Homeland Security.S-Des said:That's just ridiculous Zeb, everyone knows that Scooter Libby lying about something that turned out to not be a crime is far more corrupt than William Jefferson having $100,000 of bribe money in his freezer. After all, Pelosi immediately appointed him to the Homeland Security committee after taking her new position. Don't you feel safer already?
Jesus H. Christ! Half the fucking West Wing was leaking! Rove, Libby, Armitage, Fleischer in admitted testimony, at the direction of Cheney and with Bush's approval! [The NIE was declassified by the President and only he, Cheney and Libby knew about it] Armitage was never given immunity - he wasn't prosecuted because A. they couldn't prove he knew she was covert, and B. he cooperated with the rest of the investigation. He didn't testify at the trial, only before the grand jury. The "person who wrote the law", I assume you mean Victoria Toensing, is now a well-known partisan hack. Her hyped op-ed in the WaPo was full of inaccuracies and distortions and was widely construed as a thinly-veiled attempt at jury-tampering.S-Des said:...Valerie was undercover? Really? What a surprise, considering the person who wrote the law was on last night and pointed out she never was, let alone at the time of the "outing". Also, the guy who leaked to reporters (Armitage) was known by the FBI before Fitzgerald was appointed, yet he was given immunity so he could testify against Libby.
I know you didn't bring up the Clinton investigations, but do you have any idea how many tens of millions was spent on those? How many people involved? How fruitless they were in bringing any charges, let alone convictions? How Clinton's associates were jailed and/or threatened for refusing to shape their testimony to Starr's liking? And what does the fact that Libby was never elected have to do with anything?S-Des said:All we got out of the millions spent (and a reporter jailed) was 4 guilty verdicts for lying by a guy who has never been elected to anything.
Her covert status was not discussed at the trial because A. it wasn't germane to the charges of perjury and obstruction; B. it would have opened up the possibility of introducing a bunch of classified information that would have given the defense the opportunity to argue that they couldn't put up a defense because of national security concerns; C. the judge refused to admit arguments about her status, and D. IT'S AGAINST THE LAW FOR GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS TO TALK ABOUT THE STATUS OF A CIA AGENT! Toensing knows this, of course, yet uses the specious argument anyway. Some fucking authority.S-Des said:She never had her cover blown, the FBI or CIA never said she did (and Fitzgerald never claimed she did). Oh yeah, about the "plot" to discredit Wilson...A reporter asked why they would send a Bush administration critic with no specific expertise in the area to investigate the claims and was told it was because his wife recommended him for the job (which was true).
Toensing certainly has.S-Des said:Guess we've officially stretched the definition of discrediting.
Zeb_Carter said:Not my party I'm a card carrying Libertarian so don't blame me for Bush, either of them.
But I will blame you for Clinton and Ted Kenndy and the Hildabeast.![]()
It means that the persons who appointed and oversaw him are ultimately responsible, as opposed to the voting public (who can be held responsible for electing the Shrub in 2004... at least 51% or so)Huckleman2000 said:And what does the fact that Libby was never elected have to do with anything?
shereads said:But I'd be delighted to take credit for the 8 years when the Clintons were in charge of a safer, saner, more compassionate America. I didnt' fear the future. I was confident of keeping my civil liberties.
I'm proud to support public servants whose actions in office indicate that no matter what their flaws, they care about some things other than their own self interest.
The Clinton thing was a joke (despite SheReads attempt at mind-reading, I'm anything but a NeoCon). It showed that giving a single prosecutor unlimited resources and an unlimited scope of investigation was a bad idea. Clinton did lie, but it said a lot about the situation that he was being investigated for a 20 year-old land deal, but all they could get him on was lying about sex. My point about Libby being unelected is that you don't appoint an independant prosecutor to investigate the Vice-President's chief of staff, you do it to investigate Cheney (or at least Rove). Even the jury said they didn't think Libby was a bad guy, just that he wasn't being completely honest. One juror just said she hoped that Bush gives him a pardon and that they didn't feel he should get time. To spend millions just to get him for what they got is an incredible waste of time and money (IMHO).Huckleman2000 said:I know you didn't bring up the Clinton investigations, but do you have any idea how many tens of millions was spent on those? How many people involved? How fruitless they were in bringing any charges, let alone convictions? How Clinton's associates were jailed and/or threatened for refusing to shape their testimony to Starr's liking? And what does the fact that Libby was never elected have to do with anything?
And here's where I put my money where my mouth is. You're right! Fitzgerald (who I love, btw, due to his great work around here nailing corrupt public officials) came out and said clearly, with no hint of ambiguity that she WAS covert (I'm still not sure if there's legal maneuvering in that definition, but I'll give Patrick the benefit of the doubt). It's the first time I've heard anyone of authority say it, and I trust him. He's seen all the pertinent documents, so he'd know. I'm still bummed that he didn't go after anyone for anything more serious, but I got taken in by the spin machine (you were right that it was Toensing I had heard from). So although I still think this was a giant waste of time (especially when you have the jurors saying the only guy charged should go free), I was wrong about the disputed facts (at least until someone changes my mind againHer covert status was not discussed at the trial because A. it wasn't germane to the charges of perjury and obstruction; B. it would have opened up the possibility of introducing a bunch of classified information that would have given the defense the opportunity to argue that they couldn't put up a defense because of national security concerns; C. the judge refused to admit arguments about her status, and D. IT'S AGAINST THE LAW FOR GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS TO TALK ABOUT THE STATUS OF A CIA AGENT! Toensing knows this, of course, yet uses the specious argument anyway. Some fucking authority.![]()
).S-Des said:...Fitzgerald (who I love, btw, due to his great work around here nailing corrupt public officials) came out and said clearly, with no hint of ambiguity that she WAS covert (I'm still not sure if there's legal maneuvering in that definition, but I'll give Patrick the benefit of the doubt). It's the first time I've heard anyone of authority say it, and I trust him. He's seen all the pertinent documents, so he'd know. I'm still bummed that he didn't go after anyone for anything more serious, but I got taken in by the spin machine (you were right that it was Toensing I had heard from). So although I still think this was a giant waste of time (especially when you have the jurors saying the only guy charged should go free), I was wrong about the disputed facts (at least until someone changes my mind again).

Seattle Zack said:Clinton was the best Republican president we ever had. An unheralded reign of peace and prosperity. And, he balanced the budget, something no Republican reign has ever attempted.
He got his dick sucked by a fat chick, and so the neocons despise him. Who wouln't lie about that? Now, lying about the identy of a CIA agent is no big thing. Long as Uncle Dick told you it would turn out OK. Let's watch Scooter run.
