Winstonm, on 2018-March-18, 12:13, said:
I rather like
this NBC News analysis about the McCabe firing as it takes a larger view and speaks to the motivations:
Quote
WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump had to cheer the firing of former Deputy FBI Director Andrew McCabe to sell the narrative that he is the victim of a bipartisan conspiracy, carried out over two administrations, to deny him the presidency and then discredit him once he won it.
For the president's version of events to hold up, the FBI and Justice Department have to be infested with his political enemies, with those so bent on destroying him that they will violate the public trust to do it. It's a case Trump and his allies have been making for so long and with such conviction that condemning the FBI, the Justice Department and special counsel Robert Mueller has become conservative liturgy by now.
And it's the predicate to push the case that the Russia probe should end, as Trump's lawyer did Saturday.
Oh, look! It's another gigantic conspiracy - most likely Obama's fault - (who isn't, btw, a real American). And yet, there are still those who believe. Reminds me of a song.
If I listen long enough to you
I'd find the way to believe that it's all true
Knowing that you lied straight face
While I cried
And still I look
To find a reason to believe
Whatever is so necessary to hide from the past that the creation of all this faux ruckus becomes priority...could it be hiding something of a criminal nature...?
Winston,
In all fairness, it is quite plausible that the U.S. government will knowingly and willfully violate the public trust to achieve its own objectives (even under President Obama's Administration).
Let us not forget that Edward Snowden revealed that the NSA and CIA (along with complicity of the White House) violated the 4th amendment by masterminding a PRISM program that would vacuum e-mail data without federal warrants and maintain copies for future reference in case of terrorist activities. These agencies did not use the judicial system to make the case for their search and seizure of electronic e-mails of certain individuals who could potentially be terrorists. In fact, they saw the judicial system and the process of "proving" the need for a federal warrant burdensome and time consuming, so as per usual they took shortcuts by knowingly violating federal law and even keeping certain high-level Congressional officials in the dark about these electronic surveillance programs.
The CIA and NSA also knowingly violated privacy laws to achieve its own ends.
Source:
http://america.aljaz...ernalaudit.html
Source on NSA and CIA violations:
http://www.businessi...timeline-2016-9
These agencies violate the public trust because "all's fair in love and war and espionage". . . even the war on TERROR.
The NSA and the CIA use the United States Constitution as toilet paper and we, the citizens of the United States, accept these violations without significant protest because we are willing to surrender our liberty and freedom for the illusion of temporary safety.
Are we to believe that the FBI and Justice Department are immune to the human frailty of becoming corrupted by absolute power and are thus, beyond reproach for "dirty politics"?
Source for Justice Department violations:
https://www.washingt...m=.d7a24f35ec6a