I-5 wrote:I don't understand how a third party like Hillary could manipulate the Conman to make a phone call and say all the stupid things he says. If anyone orchestrated anything, it's Giuliani.
My coworker and I were saying today that when it comes time for the Senate to vote, assuming the House does indeed send his impeachment case to the Senate, it will come down to what the public thinks. Senators care about backing Trump only inasmuch as it will help them with their own agenda, ie staying in office. If they think they see the wind is shifting, I don't think it would take much to get to 20.
Hawktawk wrote:Completely agree I 5. This has nothing to do with a third party political hack . This is happening because a deranged lawless president made a phone call a day after mueller testified that was so bad it triggered a whistleblower complaint . It’s easy for the public to grasp this. An unpopular president abusing power to try to smear a political opponent far more popular than himself and getting caught red handed in no mans land. Hiding a complaint and transcript that was legally to be delivered to the congress only , releasing it to try to get out ahead of the controversy and realizing it was so damning in itself it was simply gasoline on the fire. It’s the smoking gun most didn’t see in Russia but it’s here in the presidents own words and actions . You’re overthinking it Asea. It’s truly amazing to me this moment hasn’t com much sooner .
I-5 wrote:I think you’ve got him all wrong. He’s neither as dumb or as smart as you think. He behaves exactly as a malignant narcissist would, because that’s exactly who he is. You’re right though that he has people around him who are good at protecting his narcissistic ways. Read the textbook definition and tell me if it reminds you of anyone we know:
“Malignant narcissism is a psychological syndrome comprising an extreme mix of narcissism, antisocial behavior, aggression, and sadism.[1] Grandiose, and always ready to raise hostility levels, the malignant narcissist undermines families and organizations in which they are involved, and dehumanizes the people with whom they associate.[2]”
obiken wrote:I hate to use the Litard term what if Obama had done it. However IF Obama had called the Ukrainian leader and said I want to investigate Mitt Romney's Son, and IF you do not I will withhold funds appropriated for your defense by the Congress and signed off on by me, you cannot tell me all these NeoCon Bubbas would not have split a gasket? Come on.
RiverDog wrote:At this point, I'd bet against removal from office. It's very predictable that an impeachment question would see some sort of an uptick when this story first broke, but they're going to have to sustain it if they're going to have a chance at swaying enough public opinion in order to get 20 R Senators to go along. I said in another thread that they need to get Trump's job approval down into the 30's if they're going to make any headway on 20 R Senators.
I just read in a polling taken Wednesday where 32% of all Americans weren't following the story and 42% haven't heard enough to venture an opinion. That 42% probably includes mostly swing voters as the far right and left sides of the spectrum have already formed their opinions and won't come off them no matter what they hear. It means that the Dems do have an opportunity if they can get their story out in a manner that's simple enough for the average Joe to understand.
And let's keep in mind that impeachment and removal from office are two entirely different things. IMO the chances of impeachment are pretty good as the Dems control the House and need just 50% +1 to approve an article of impeachment and send it to the Senate for trial. Removal from office requires 2/3 of the Senate where the R's rule the roost.
So, at this point, I'd give 2-1 odds for impeachment, 2-1 against removal from office.
Hawktawk wrote:Forget the quid pro quo argument. There doesn't need to be one proven. The act of asking a foreign leader to investigate an opponent is enough.
Hawktawk wrote:Then yesterday at a public event he's on tape saying the whistleblower and those who confided in him about the cover up of this call are "like spies" treasonous" and that "we used to deal with people who are spies and commit treason a little differently when we were smart". He drew a few laughs but mostly stone silence.
2 points about this. If there's nothing wrong with the call who cares ? also its a clear attempt to intimidate potential witnesses in his impeachment inquiry, another impeachable act in itself.
Hawktawk wrote:Then yesterday at a public event he's on tape saying the whistleblower and those who confided in him about the cover up of this call are "like spies" treasonous" and that "we used to deal with people who are spies and commit treason a little differently when we were smart". He drew a few laughs but mostly stone silence.
2 points about this. If there's nothing wrong with the call who cares ? also its a clear attempt to intimidate potential witnesses in his impeachment inquiry, another impeachable act in itself.
RiverDog wrote:The whistle blower himself (or herself) is unlikely to be a witness in any trial as it's second hand information to them. Their testimony would be thrown out as hearsay. All they've done is give the investigators a road map. If anyone testifies, it will be those that took the notes during the phone conversation, most likely CIA agents.
You can think of the whistle blower as Deep Throat from Watergate fame. It was decades before we knew his identity, an FBI agent by the name of Mark Felt.
c_hawkbob wrote:Who cares about the whistle blower! Address Tawk's point that I've bolded and italicized ... that's where the rubber meets the road in that statement.
It was clear witness intimidation and it in and of itself a crime. Trump's so used to doing it at rallies and and on twitter he can't help himself even when it's bound to become another nail in his own political coffin. This isn't just more evidence of wrongdoing, it's more actual wrongdoing even while the impeachment proceedings have just begun.
Hawktawk wrote:No
It’s an impeachable crime whether the senate ratifies it or not. He’s committed at least half a dozen impeachable offenses that are public knowledge already and should have been removed by impeachment or under the 25th amendment long ago.whether it happens depends on whether these senators care more about their seat or their place in history. As for the threats they are against witnesses. Trump said “ who told this whistleblower about the call?” That’s like a spy “. He’s trying to intimidate witnesses. If he survives this impeachment should be just done away with. There’s never been a more crooked unfit occupant more deserving of immediate removal.
c_hawkbob wrote:Who cares about the whistle blower! Address Tawk's point that I've bolded and italicized ... that's where the rubber meets the road in that statement.
It was clear witness intimidation and it in and of itself a crime. Trump's so used to doing it at rallies and and on twitter he can't help himself even when it's bound to become another nail in his own political coffin. This isn't just more evidence of wrongdoing, it's more actual wrongdoing even while the impeachment proceedings have just begun.
RiverDog wrote:Of course, it's an act of intimidation. My only point is that the whistle blower himself is unlikely to be a witness because all of his information is 2nd hand, so it's not clear in my mind if it would qualify as witness intimidation. Perhaps obstruction of justice would be a more fitting potential crime.
And as far as whether or not it's an impeachable crime, an impeachable crime is whatever 218 Representatives and 67 Senators says it is, so I couldn't really tell you if it's an impeachable crime or not. Hell, I thought perjury was an impeachable crime, but I was wrong.
c_hawkbob wrote:I see now, so your point wasn't to deflect from the seriousness of his latest crime ("impeachable" is not my qualifier) it was to question whether it would actually be a crime if the target of the intimidation were not in fact to wind up a witness. I'm not sure of the legal fine points involved with that question, but I believe that his status as a whistle blower already has made him a witness.
RiverDog wrote:That's correct. It was not my intent to trivialize the charges, and I'm not sure of the legal fine points, either. I ain't no Perry Mason. I was just repeating what I've been taught, that second hand information, ie hearsay, usually does not stand up in court, so it's my opinion that should the whistle blower ever be called to testify that their testimony would be deemed irrelevant. I felt it important to point that out.
As far as the issue with Trump's tweets calling the whistle blower a spy, I would treat those actions exactly the same as intimidation of a potential witness. That cell phone and Twitter account is going to be his undoing.
The other thing I felt important to note is that, unlike our justice system where there are specific definitions for each crime, such as the difference between felony crimes and misdemeanors (monetary thresholds, for example), there are no such definitions in an impeachment process, nor are there any rules or procedures that Congress must follow during hearings and a Senate trial. An impeachable offense is truly whatever Congress says it is.
Hawktawk wrote:The whistleblower is the person who implicated numerous WH officials, lawyers etc in a cover up of a phone call. They will be the witnesses who actually heard the call and some were almost certainly involved one way or another in covering it up and trying to bury it. The whistleblower heretofore referred to as WB may have had direct knowledge of that but reported that numerous WH officials had expressed concern that the president had broken the law. Now word breaks that calls with Putin and Crown Prince of SA are also hidden away in the same top secret computer system in the situation room.
RiverDog wrote:
The whistle blower's complaint reads as follows: "In the days following the phone call, I learned from multiple U.S. officials that senior White House officials had intervened to 'lock down' all the records of the phone call, especially the official word-for-word transcript of the call that was produced as is customary by the White House situation room," the complaint says.
That's still second hand information. It's like a news reporter quoting an unnamed source. How many times have you heard Andrea Mitchell say something like "aids close to the President" in a news report? That statement of his don't mean squat unless he can point out who the "U.S. officials" and "senior White House officials" are so that Congress can interview or subpoena them.
We're arguing over minute points. I'm in agreement with you that Trump's threats to the whistle blower are a very serious incident as is the suspected cover-up. Even if it's not considered threatening a witness as I am arguing, it's the act of a person who has a consciousness of guilt. Trump's acting like the cat that ate the canary.
RiverDog wrote:A Senate impeachment trial would be the Republicans worst nightmare. They're already defending twice as many seats as the Dems, and there's a number of them besides Collins that are in 'purple' states, like Gardner in Colorado and McSally in Arizona. That's why I'm saying to watch the poll numbers, because you can damn well be sure that the R Senators will be looking at them for guidance. If it were a private vote, I'm confident that Trump would be a goner. But that's not how it works. The R Senators are going to lose their fig leaves if they are forced to vote on impeachment.
Hawktawk wrote: I think this inquiry, how it's handled, what additional facts are developed ( and the leaks of other conversations with the likes of Putin and the Saudi CP are extremely damning if true) the dam may break and this blight on american history might be able to be cleaned up. Reportedly Schiff has reached an agreement with the whistleblower to testify before the congress , other witnesses are being subpoenaed with lightning speed and its anticipated a vote on impeachment might be coming as early as October with a senate trial by December at the latest. This has a different feel than Clinton for sure, more like Nixon and watergate...
Hawktawk wrote:I tend to agree on the whistleblower testimony thing. Trump has been threatening in his comments and demanding to know the identity of this person . There are conflicting reports as to the degree this individual has already received some protection from law enforcement. Clearly breaking their secrecy will make them a target in many ways including possibly their physical safety. Regardless Schiff says he has a deal , never mind his clownish skit imitating a mob boss opening the DNI hearing was the only nakedly political moment in the hearing . Pelosi for her part I truly believe has opened this inquiry out of a sense of constitutional responsibility . Asked yesterday about losing the house over this she said” I don’t care” I’ve not been a fan but good for her. And politically polls clearly show a majority of Americans favor this inquiry to continue with a poll just this morning saying 55%!!!!! Favor impeachment. It stands to reason that with that being his general disapproval # it was only a matter of time till this simple to understand scandal would convince all of them to support it.
You're getting ahead of yourself. Public opinion still has a long ways to go before it starts turning the heads of those R Senators that will ultimately be the ones that pass judgement and determine if that ass clown stays or goes. As Kung Fu would say..."Patience, Grasshopper."
c_hawkbob wrote:And I think you are understating (as is your usual stance, so kudos for consistency) the significance of the amount of recent movement in the polls. I guarantee you those moderate R's you keep talking about needing to shift sides of the aisle on Trump are paying attention to those polls and they all have a threshold beyond which they will not be willing to keep their political careers tied to his. Over 50% is significant, whether the questions about favoring actual impeachment or just having the inquiry (I don't think most respondents would answer either question any differently).
“You don’t even have to be convicted of a crime to lose your job in this constitutional republic if this body determines that your conduct as a public official is clearly out of bounds in your role. Impeachment is not about punishment. Impeachment is about cleansing the office. Impeachment is about restoring honor and integrity to the office.”
c_hawkbob wrote:Searching the term "impeachable crimes" from this conversation I ran across an interesting quote:
“You don’t even have to be convicted of a crime to lose your job in this constitutional republic if this body determines that your conduct as a public official is clearly out of bounds in your role. Impeachment is not about punishment. Impeachment is about cleansing the office. Impeachment is about restoring honor and integrity to the office.”
Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham, Jan. 1999 speaking on whether Clinton's "crimes" rose to the level of impeachment.
Of course now that same hypocrite says he has no problem with what the current President has done ...
I-5 wrote:The 2 things I'm looking at if Impeachment makes it to the Senate, is 1) how quickly McConnell will attempt to run the trial and/or dismiss it, and 2) how the national mood is regarding impeachment. I think if the 50/50 split we have today is eclipsed, and we're at 55%-60% or higher by the time the Senate trial begins, including the independent and republicans starting to flip, republicans will be stuck between circling wagons around their guy, and worrying about their careers. It's more scary than exciting what will happen, but I have some optimism.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest