Bitcoin Forum
June 23, 2024, 12:32:33 AM *
News: Voting for pizza day contest
 
  Home Help Search Login Register More  
  Show Posts
Pages: « 1 ... 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 [151] 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 ... 606 »
3001  Other / Politics & Society / Re: [POLL] Trump Impeachment Poll: Who's Fault Is It? on: October 26, 2019, 04:53:33 PM
Yeah I figured as much. Another "master" above having a discussion. Words do mean things, so don't attribute words to me I didn't use. Tell dear leader I said hello.
3002  Other / Politics & Society / Re: [POLL] Trump Impeachment Poll: Who's Fault Is It? on: October 26, 2019, 03:41:37 PM

Yeah, I know you are. That's why you rely on memes to cover up for your inability to defend your ideas in a logical debate.


...

You live under a dictator who runs death squads, I am not sure you really should be pointing fingers at the USA or have any right whatsoever to tell us here what we should be doing with our nation when you ran away like a puss and wag your finger from afar. This impeachment is a complete farce, and the only argument you have is forced memes and cartoons. Just be sure you have your mommy change your nappies before you get a rash.

I suggest that you spend some time on the ground before you speak with authority about 'dictators' and 'death squads'.  Much of the 'information' about the situation is highly filtered by the very same people who's programs are getting royally fucked up by certain policies of 'the dictator' who 'runs death squads.'  If nothing else, ponder just a wee bit about why so many of his countrymen support him and his policies given that he is so evil.  Remember that the Philippines is a country where people are fairly free to read what they want so they have access to both sides of the story.

As for 'running' you are probably one of the Americans I would rather have around.  Unfortunately it implies that you'd be on the short-list of enemies of the neo-state and neutralized early on without making any lasting contribution whatsoever if/when the shit hits the fan.  In the mean time you (or anyone else in the country) are also unlikely to be able to do much of anything positive.  There is simply no base upon which to gain leverage and I don't see a way that there will be.  There will the potential for a base after a proposed 'event', but again, I expect that you'll be no longer.  And if by some stroke of luck you are, you'll be glad that there is some support from 'outside'.

I never said he was evil. I was simply pointing out the reject above doesn't have any grounds to point fingers. He is of the type neither of us want around and would not be a help to anyone, even himself. I know enough about the Philippines to know it is a low trust nation where everyone is suspicious of everyone else and rule of law is not stable. I would prefer that not become the standard here, and I find people wagging fingers from afar with plenty of their own domestic problems don't hold much water. If you are done being upset I was critical of your dear leader, do you care to actually comment on the topic or just want to continue tribing up?
3003  Other / Politics & Society / Re: [POLL] Trump Impeachment Poll: Who's Fault Is It? on: October 26, 2019, 02:18:26 PM
Any chance you are going to debate the topic or are you just going to continue to force stale memes while you simultaneously try to blame me for the childish level of discourse you are personally responsible for?
3004  Other / Politics & Society / Re: [POLL] Trump Impeachment Poll: Who's Fault Is It? on: October 26, 2019, 08:57:43 AM
I made poopie in my diapey.

Pretend time is fun.
3005  Other / Politics & Society / Re: REEEEE: PussyGate, a Collection of Trump Investigations on: October 26, 2019, 08:52:24 AM
"Trump accuses Obama of treason for ‘spying’ on his 2016 campaign"

https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/washington-secrets/trump-accuses-obama-of-treason-for-spying-on-his-2016-campaign


"FBI Entrapped Flynn With Manipulated Evidence As Clapper Allegedly Issued 'Kill Shot' Order: Court Docs"

https://www.zerohedge.com/political/fbi-entrapped-flynn-manipulated-evidence-clapper-allegedly-issued-kill-shot-order
3006  Other / Politics & Society / Re: [POLL] Trump Impeachment Poll: Who's Fault Is It? on: October 26, 2019, 08:33:48 AM
Very impressive. You can jerk each other off, make character attacks, and force memes. Quite convincing debate tactics. That might have worked in grade school but everyone wears big boy pants now, time to put away the pullups and learn to stop shitting in your pants.

You live under a dictator who runs death squads, I am not sure you really should be pointing fingers at the USA or have any right whatsoever to tell us here what we should be doing with our nation when you ran away like a puss and wag your finger from afar. This impeachment is a complete farce, and the only argument you have is forced memes and cartoons. Just be sure you have your mommy change your nappies before you get a rash.
3007  Other / Politics & Society / Re: 800,000 Californians To Lose Power After Midnight on: October 26, 2019, 12:54:24 AM
Clearly the problem is that one of the richest places on the planet most socialist places in the USA cannot afford to build power lines. 

Fixed that for you.
3008  Other / Politics & Society / Re: 2020 Democrats on: October 26, 2019, 12:50:03 AM
Kamala Harris is a slightly more brown, slightly less homicidal version of Hillary Clinton.

I actually think that I'd prefer Hillary over Kamala. When I watch some really old videos of Hillary, I get the sense that she had some actual beliefs and passions. I think that she might've started out as a true believer (in some ideology), but being in the swamp for so many decades corrupted her substantially. But maybe she's only 99% evil instead of 100%.

Kamala on the other hand I think is and always has been rotten to the core.

Nah, she is 330% evil. She has left a trail of bodies behind her since before Arkansas. In fact it is multi-generational, her dad was a bootlegger who took up the mantle of Al Capone once he was gone.

Also saw this today...


"Bernie Supporters Just Gave Democrats An Ultimatum, Nominate Bernie Or Trump Wins 2020"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AGcTqqqAxU8

BWAHAHAHA... put a fork in the Dems, they're done.
3009  Other / Politics & Society / Re: 800,000 Californians To Lose Power After Midnight on: October 25, 2019, 09:37:55 PM
Burying the lines would wipe out profits but benefit everyone.  This is why a big utility that everyone relies on should never be private.

If only waving a magic Communism wand made the resources and labor required for this to happen magically appear, you might have a point.
3010  Other / Politics & Society / Re: REEEEE: PussyGate, a Collection of Trump Investigations on: October 25, 2019, 12:27:05 PM
"Justice department opens criminal inquiry into origins of Russia investigation"

https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2019/oct/24/justice-department-opens-criminal-inquiry-into-origins-of-russia-investigation-source
3011  Other / Politics & Society / Re: [POLL] Trump Impeachment Poll: Who's Fault Is It? on: October 25, 2019, 09:24:53 AM
Since you are only capable of communicating in the form of cartoons, this is what you sound like...

https://i.imgur.com/bm7BQYy.png


Funny you talk about changing the rules when you don't like them when that is all the Democrat party has been doing since 2016, including this sham impeachment. As usual, more of this...


https://i.imgur.com/6g39sr3.jpg

Thats... that's not a counterargument. That is saying "no u" while posting a meme that says "no u." You've clearly lost it by this point. Its ridiculous to think you deserve a better response than a meme.

https://i.imgur.com/dhDgSu2.png




That meme is free for anybody to use in the future. I'm sure it will come in handy time and again.

Edit: TS is probably furiously creating his own supermeme right now that will not only destroy me but all libs as well.

No, my counter argument with sources was my counter argument. I went to bed, that's how concerned I am with your verbal fecal/vomit combo.
3012  Other / Politics & Society / Re: 2020 Democrats on: October 25, 2019, 05:25:19 AM
I'm surprised to see some people here named Kamala Harris as a preference to win.

Harris is a bad egg-- with a history full of overly aggressive prosecution of victimless crimes. Her naked ambition drove her to engage in the most absurd prosecutions just to make a name for herself.  For example, the prosecution of backpage is obviously outrageous even if you view the entire thing through the lense of law enforcement's own claims of what happened.

In her role as prosecutor she abused the states power to the maximum extent possible and treated the rule of law as just a PR game.  And she was effective at it.  There are other candidates who might aspire to such abuses, but for the most part they haven't demonstrated the competence to pull them off......

So it's more or less "From the pack of lying sociopaths who am I going to pick to be my lying sociopath?"

Kamala Harris is a slightly more brown, slightly less homicidal version of Hillary Clinton.
3013  Other / Politics & Society / Re: [POLL] Trump Impeachment Poll: Who's Fault Is It? on: October 25, 2019, 05:23:37 AM
No, fuck you. This is America

This is what you sound like:


They're not entitled to transparency. Fuck 'em.....

Why not?

I just posted why. You cut out the part that explains it. You don't suddenly get to change the rules just because you are upset about something.

Quote
Republicans knew they would be turned away from the closed-door deposition; only members who sit on the authorized committees are permitted to sit in on the sessions...

In reality, more than 45 House Republicans — nearly a quarter of the House GOP conference — already have full access to the depositions through their membership on one of the three panels leading the impeachment inquiry. During the depositions, Republican lawyers are given the same amount of time to question witnesses as Democratic counsels.

https://www.politico.com/news/2019/10/23/impeachment-republicans-trump-055688

So the idea that Republicans are being cut out of the process entirely is simply absurd.

Since you are only capable of communicating in the form of cartoons, this is what you sound like...




Funny you talk about changing the rules when you don't like them when that is all the Democrat party has been doing since 2016, including this sham impeachment. As usual, more of this...





"“This morning, I was denied access to any and all classified documents related to impeachment. In my nearly 17 years in Congress, this is the first time that I’ve been unable to review documentation being held at the House Intel Committee. This is completely unacceptable,” Rep. Mario Diaz-Balart (R-Fla.) said in a statement.

Rep. Andy Biggs (R-Ariz.) said he tried to join the impeachment inquiry closed-door session being held on Oct. 16 but was denied access.

Rep. Matt Gaetz (R-Fla.) gained access to an impeachment inquiry hearing on Monday but was thrown out."

https://www.theepochtimes.com/house-republicans-say-theyre-being-blocked-from-impeachment-inquiry_3118345.html


“House regulations clearly permit all House members to attend depositions,” the letter states. “You have also consistently denied the right of non-committee members to view the transcripts of depositions and interviews without specifying any authority to do so. These transcripts are committee records. Committee records are the property of the whole House and under House rules, no Member can be denied access to committee records.”

https://townhall.com/tipsheet/leahbarkoukis/2019/10/18/house-republicans-demand-democrats-release-rules-on-impeachment-inquiry-n2555022


"Rep. Gaetz, Freedom Caucus hold a 'transparency' press conference"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hd8Uq-OEg1g


Don't pretend you care about rules. In your book rules are only for thee and not for me and are only to be used as a cudgel to attack your opponents, not as a means to protect the overall system which they are intended to maintain.

3014  Other / Politics & Society / Re: 2020 Democrats on: October 25, 2019, 02:34:03 AM
"Biden FORGOT To Buy Campaign Website So Trump BOUGHT IT, Trump Made Biden Look Very Stupid"  

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N0xHhrosohE

http://www.todosconbiden.com

https://twitter.com/todosconbiden/
3015  Other / Politics & Society / Re: Best way to combat the cartels: Legalization of Drugs on: October 25, 2019, 02:15:19 AM
What in the world do you think police, judges and lawyers should be doing? Actually going after violent robbers, murderers, rapists and thieves?

Maybe if they passed a law that law enforcement could take all the assets of murderers and rapists this country would be the safest place on Earth. That is until they ran out of murderers and rapists and had to start brown bagging it. I should say I am not one of those types who thinks its cool and trendy to hate police just for being police, but I am also not a blind retard and I see they are operating within a bloodstained racket regardless if they know it or not on an individual level.
3016  Other / Politics & Society / Re: Best way to combat the cartels: Legalization of Drugs on: October 24, 2019, 11:09:39 PM
People don't understand this, espically with Marijuana in the US. People are already using weed in the US and we know that, it's not something thats hidden. Though when people talk about legalization all we hear in the news is how all the children are going to start smoking, more car accidents, etc.

Peopel don't get it. These people are already smoking and they just want to do it without having to fear arrest and then prosecution.


All these arguments against drug use are totally just as applicable to alcohol and tobacco among other things. The arguments against marijuana are just down right fraudulent in this context as it is far safer than either of those. Nanny state aside, drug prohibition is not constitutional. During alcohol prohibition they had to get a constitutional amendment to prohibit alcohol. Why? Because they government never had any authority to restrict it. The same goes for illicit drugs, but they just skipped the whole pesky constitution thing that time. The drug war itself has done far FAR more damage to the USA and the world than drug addiction EVER could have. You can go to the doctor and go get prescribed pharmaceutical grade meth, drink a 5th of vodka, and go shoot some guns, and no one would blink an eye. However if you have a condition that you use legal medical marijuana for, well then, they will kick in your door and take your firearms, because God knows those crazy potheads will kill themselves or others, even if it was weeks since they last consumed any THC.

The drug war is nothing more than a racket, and civil asset forfeiture is one of the primary motivators to keep drugs illegal. How else are police going to buy those shiny new Dodge Chargers with the sweet camo vinyl wraps if they don't get to rob anyone who carries cash and just label them a drug dealer? Also if the drug war ended, vast numbers of law enforcement from federal to local agencies would have to cut back staff because their main revenue sources are from drug interdiction, specifically marijuana. God forbid we don't have standing armies across the nation arbitrarily stripping people of their rights in the name of "the children".
3017  Other / Politics & Society / Re: Best way to combat the cartels: Legalization of Drugs on: October 24, 2019, 06:53:44 PM
@squatz1 I don’t think this is a wise idea because people will have easy access to drugs then, and could cause more damage under it’s regular influence. Even if the government were to have authorised distributors I yet feel people would misuse it, e.g. look at guns they’re freely available and see the damage they’re causing. In current scenarios people fear getting caught, and this fear will go away if it’s legalised hence I feel government should not legalise it.

Are you of the opinion that people aren't misusing drugs now under the rule of prohibition? Remember what happened under alcohol prohibition? All it did was fund violent criminal cartels, and alcohol was still widely available with no quality control and no way to get restitution if product quality caused harm. You can wag your finger about guns too, but there are something like 300 million guns in the hands of US citizens. In reality the amount of gun crime we have is quite low and has been falling for some time in spite of media hype pushing gun control.

All drug prohibition does is fund criminal cartels and allow the police state to infringe upon the rights of citizens in the perpetual effort to enforce unconstitutional drug laws. If drug use is treated as a medical condition rather than a criminal issue, people can get medical help and not fear incarceration, and will be more likely to change their habits. Drugs are already widely available. Legalizing drugs is not going to cause the sky to fall, except for a few racketeers on both sides of the law.
3018  Economy / Reputation / Re: My thanks to all who have been helping with reports on: October 24, 2019, 04:27:04 PM
1Hz3HZT4v8qxtyYiRQ66UHTUSK3dKCnVMW

Thanks!
3019  Other / Politics & Society / Re: [POLL] Trump Impeachment Poll: Who's Fault Is It? on: October 24, 2019, 04:20:52 PM

They're not entitled to transparency. Fuck 'em.

No, fuck you. This is America, not the Philippines. You keep your death squads, we will keep our due process. Speaking of death squads, your president recently just threatened the life of George Soros if he sets foot in the Philippines. I wonder why.
3020  Other / Politics & Society / Re: Playskool Internet Lawyer Totally Ignorant About How The Law Works on: October 24, 2019, 06:26:22 AM
Their subpoenas are different. i.e. they're not the same as a legal subpoenas.

Really? Looks pretty clear to me you are saying congressional subpoenas are not legal subpoenas.

Their subpoenas are different. i.e. they're not the same as a legal subpoenas. His argument is that they don't have the "force of law". Which would be correct except they have the "force of the constitution".
Cherry picking one line is just lame on your part. It was in reference to the entire debate that had been going on and as you can see, I had more to say on it and I've cut out all the rest.

Either you don't know what you're talking about, or you have a damn hard time actually putting your arguments into any sort of coherent form which makes it very difficult to have any sort of rational debate with you.

What subpoena from an impeachment did you post that you say I had provided a site for? I provided info on an investigation into bengazi, not an impeachment.

The premise is that the subpoenas had force of law because they originated from a criminal investigation, making the comparison illegitimate. A crime is not required, but in order for a subpoena to exist, it must have the force of law including a penalty for defying it, which requires a vote in the house, or in Nixon's case a criminal investigation from which to issue the subpoena, the violation of which having legal penalty was the basis of that article of impeachment. In Trumps case there is neither a crime to base a subpoena on, nor a house vote, making them not legally even subpoenas.

I suggest you go and read some of the actual government documents etc I've previously posted. The republicans changed the rules and no vote or anything like that is required for them to open up an investigation and issue subpoenas with the "force of law" behind them as you say. I feel like you're so stuck on this that I should throw you a bone for something you could actually argue about them.

As for you claiming the court case I posted aren't valid. That's your opinion although since any discussion of the power of those subpoenas includes those cases I'd say you're wrong. But if you were right, then I guess since all the court cases the WH put in their letter have nothing to do with impeachment either, then they don't apply. Thus, their arguments and yours are invalid and they should be complying with the subpoenas.

No The White House doesn't acknowledge they are subpoenas.

"The House's failure to provide co-equal subpoena power in this case...". Complaining that Republicans haven't been given the power is an implicit admission that the other side has the power to issue subpoenas. Course that entire thing is false as well since they can, except that the committee has to vote and the majority (Democrats) could vote it down. They're only complaining that they can't issue them on their own.

As you posted yourself "without any legal basis and before the Committee even issued a subpoena---" Looks to me like they recognize them as subpoenas as they used a past tense to say that they have issued subpoenas.

And elsewhere regarding what they had received "it transmits a subpoena". Once again, they recognize them as subpoenas.

No where do they argue that they aren't valid subpoenas. They argue about "precedent". They argue that it's not in the legislative sphere. They argue that there's no due process (as I pointed out, since you think the cases I posted don't apply, then that same thing can be said about theirs). All of that stuff is just bogus and is only in there to force a court case that would draw everything out which they could then use to bolster the other argument in that letter that "impeachment" should be handled in the next election. But in that letter they didn't invoke executive privilege which I find odd. In that case, Pelosi etc know they would need to have a vote in order to strengthen they're case for their subpoenas in regards to executive privilege. Makes me think they don't actually want the vote so they can carry on using the argument to leave people with the impression he's being railroaded. Makes sense I suppose.

Just because you said other things doesn't mean you didn't say "Their subpoenas are different. i.e. they're not the same as a legal subpoenas."

That's not cherry picking, that's called a quote. You literally claimed congressional subpoenas are not "legal subpoenas". This quote is important because it shows your total ignorance of law. They are in fact issued in different ways, but they still have the same basic requirements to have legal effect, and they are both still very much legal documents.

You are correct that was a subpoena issued by The Congressional Committee On Oversight and Government Reform related to Hillary Clinton's private server, not an impeachment, still it was an example of an actual subpoena you yourself provided issued from congress itself as you are arguing was done in the case of Trump.

Here is the subpoena issued to Monica Lewinsky during the Bill Clinton impeachment for good measure and comparison: https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/GPO-CDOC-106sdoc3/pdf/GPO-CDOC-106sdoc3-14-4.pdf


This is an actual subpoena: https://oversight.house.gov/sites/democrats.oversight.house.gov/files/documents/(70)%20Chaffetz%20Subpoena%20to%20Pagliano%2009-16-2016.pdf

This is NOT a subpoena: https://oversight.house.gov/sites/democrats.oversight.house.gov/files/documents/2019-09-27.EEC%20Engel%20Schiff%20%20to%20Pompeo-%20State%20re%20Document%20Subpoena.pdf


You will notice one has very distinctive legal terminology fitting specific legal requirements to make it an actionable legal document, and one does not.

here are the requirements for a subpoena to be actionable: https://www.law.cornell.edu/rules/frcp/rule_45

Very clearly the recent so called "subpoenas" issued to Trump and other related officials regarding his impeachment DO NOT meet these basic foundational legal requirements.


The house COULD in fact issue actual subpoenas, but they have not. If they did however it would largely be a moot point, because as I explained before the legislative and executive branches are constitutionally of equal authority because of the separation of powers of the three branches of government. The office of the president can simply exercise executive privilege and not comply with any subpoenas issued unless the issuing party can demonstrate it falls outside of executive privilege. Of course Nancy Pelosi could simply call a vote to officially engage in an impeachment investigation and severely limit the executive privilege of the office of the president, but she won't do that, because it would allow the president to present his own evidence which would implicate many influential people in the Democrat party in exactly the type of corruption they are attempting to frame Trump for.

"The recipient of a duly issued and valid congressional subpoena has a legal obligation to comply, absent a valid and overriding privilege or other legal justification. But the subpoena is only as effective as the means by which it may be enforced. Without a process by which Congress can coerce compliance or deter non-compliance, the subpoena would be reduced to a formalized request rather than a constitutionally based demand for information."

"Summary" Page 2: https://fas.org/sgp/crs/misc/R45653.pdf

"Executive Privilege

The use of some contempt procedures against an executive branch official invoking executive privilege at the direction of the President could be viewed as frustrating the President’s ability to protect the confidentiality of his communications—a protection rooted in the separation of powers.(172) In general, executive privilege is an implied legal doctrine that permits the executive branch to “to resist disclosure of information the confidentiality of which [is] crucial to fulfillment of the unique role and responsibilities of the executive branch of our government.”(173)
Because past subpoena enforcement disputes between Congress and the executive branch have involved such assertions, it is necessary to outline briefly executive privilege’s general contours. The Supreme Court has only rarely addressed executive privilege, but its most significant explanation of the doctrine came in the unanimous opinion of United States v. Nixon.(174) Nixon involved the President’s assertion of executive privilege in refusing to comply with a criminal trial subpoena—issued upon the request of a special prosecutor—for electronic recordings of conversations he had in the Oval Office with White House advisers.(175) The Court’s opinion recognized an implied constitutional privilege protecting presidential communications, holding that the “privilege of confidentiality of presidential communications” is “fundamental to the operation of Government and inextricably rooted in the separation of powers.”(176) The justification underlying the privilege related to the integrity of presidential decision making, with the Court reasoning that the importance of protecting a President’s communications with his advisers was “too plain to require further discussion,” as “[h]uman experience teaches that those who expect public dissemination of their remarks may well temper candor with a concern for appearances and for their own interests to the detriment of the decision making process.”(177) Even so,the Court determined that when the President asserts only a “generalized interest” in the confidentiality of his communications,that interest must be weighed against the need for

disclosure in the given case.(178) In conducting that balancing, the Court held that the President’s “generalized” assertion of privilege “cannot prevail over the fundamental demands of due process of law in the fair administration of criminal justice,” and therefore“must yield to the demonstrated, specific need for evidence in a pending criminal trial.”(179) The Nixon opinion (180) established three key characteristics of executive privilege, at least as it relates to presidential communications. First, the Court expressly rejected the assertion that the privilege was absolute. Instead, the Court found the privilege to be qualified, requiring that it be assessed in a way that balances “competing interests” and “preserves the essential functions of each branch.”(181) Second, to protect the “public interest in candid, objective, and even blunt or harsh opinions in presidential decision making,” the Court viewed confidential presidential communications as “presumptively privileged.”(182) As a result, the Court appeared to suggest that some degree of deference is due to a President’s initial determination that certain information is protected by the privilege.(183) Moreover, the burden would appear to be on the party seeking the information to overcome that “presumption” through a strong showing of need for the information.(184) Third, the Court viewed the privilege as limited to communications made “‘in performance of [a President’s] responsibilities,’‘of his office,’ and made ‘in the process of shaping policies and making decisions. . . .’”(185) Thus, the privilege does not appear to apply to all presidential communications. "

(I added selected bold)

Pages 20-21: https://fas.org/sgp/crs/misc/R45653.pdf

As you can see, the only reason the subpoenas were enforceable against Nixon was the fact that the subpoenas were issued in relation to a criminal trial, otherwise he would have been able to exercise his executive privilege to not comply with them. This is what I was arguing a while ago, but the peanut gallery here insisted on making some retarded argument about impeachment not being a criminal proceeding to distract from this documented precedent.


"In addition, the House has not provided the Committees' Ranking Members with the authority to issue subpoenas. The right of the minority to issue subpoenas-subject to the same rules as the majority-has been the standard, bipartisan practice in all recent resolutions authorizing presidential impeachment inquiries.11 The House's failure to provide co-equal subpoena power in this case ensures that any inquiry will be nothing more than a one-sided effort by House Democrats to gather information favorable to their views and to selectively release it as only they determine. The House's utter disregard for the established procedural safeguards followed in past impeachment inquiries shows that the current proceedings are nothing more than an unconstitutional exercise in political theater. "

Page 4: https://www.whitehouse.gov/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/PAC-Letter-10.08.2019.pdf


Didn't you just get done ridiculing me for "cherry picking" because I quoted you? Clearly they are explicitly saying they DO NOT have the constitutional authority to issue subpoenas without also providing that same authority to the minority via a vote to engage in an official impeachment investigation. Sure they can call a bag of rocks an "impeachment investigation", but in order for them to exercise the issuing of constitutional and legally enforceable subpoenas, a vote is in fact required.

"As if denying the President basic procedural protections were not enough, the Committees have also resorted to threats and intimidation against potential Executive Branch witnesses. Threats by the Committees against Executive Branch witnesses who assert common and longstanding rights destroy the integrity of the process and brazenly violate fundamental due process. In letters to State Department employees, the Committees have ominously threatened­ without any legal basis and before the Committees even issued a subpoena-that "[ a ]ny failure to appear" in response to a mere letter request for a deposition "shall constitute evidence of obstruction."12 Worse, the Committees have broadly threatened that if State Department officials attempt to insist upon the right for the Department to have an agency lawyer present at depositions to protect legitimate Executive Branch confidentiality interests-or apparently if they make any effort to protect those confidentiality interests at all-these officials will have their salaries withheld. 13"

You have severe reading comprehension problems in addition to your cherry picking. They are clearly stating that these letters were issued before any subpoenas were even produced. They are in no way validating the requests for information as actionable subpoenas.


No where do they argue that they aren't valid subpoenas. They argue about "precedent". They argue that it's not in the legislative sphere. They argue that there's no due process (as I pointed out, since you think the cases I posted don't apply, then that same thing can be said about theirs). All of that stuff is just bogus and is only in there to force a court case that would draw everything out which they could then use to bolster the other argument in that letter that "impeachment" should be handled in the next election. But in that letter they didn't invoke executive privilege which I find odd. In that case, Pelosi etc know they would need to have a vote in order to strengthen they're case for their subpoenas in regards to executive privilege. Makes me think they don't actually want the vote so they can carry on using the argument to leave people with the impression he's being railroaded. Makes sense I suppose.

Here you are literally just pulling a string of unsupported baseless assertions directly from your ass. Your cases don't apply because they are unrelated to impeachment and the adversarial legal situation between the executive and legislative branches. Essentially you are arguing a manager from McDonald's can write up a cashier at Burger King. It makes no sense. They are not even in  the same arenas. The precedent they address in this document is DIRECTLY addressing precedent set in past impeachment processes. They didn't have to invoke executive privilege because IT WASN'T AN ACTUAL SUBPOENA. They could have literally not even responded and they would have legally been able to do NOTHING about it, because it was nothing more than a request. No one is preventing Pelosi from calling a vote, so your argument that they aren't invoking executive privilege to prevent a vote is fucking retarded.

This was fun and all but you are kind of a moron and this is a waste of time because you don't have the capacity to understand anything I am presenting you. If anyone else thinks I am wrong and cares to continue on where Viper1 left off, feel free, and I will be happy to respond. Until then I refuse to engage in a battle of wits with an unarmed man.

Pages: « 1 ... 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 121 122 123 124 125 126 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 150 [151] 152 153 154 155 156 157 158 159 160 161 162 163 164 165 166 167 168 169 170 171 172 173 174 175 176 177 178 179 180 181 182 183 184 185 186 187 188 189 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 ... 606 »
Powered by MySQL Powered by PHP Powered by SMF 1.1.19 | SMF © 2006-2009, Simple Machines Valid XHTML 1.0! Valid CSS!