Markk wrote:
He either knew about Russian interference, or didn't. He either acted to stop it, or he didn't.
This is reductionist to the point of stupefyingly wrong. The
public knew about Russian interference before the election. Obama knew about it in much more detail and sooner. The Obama admin took multiple actions to stop it. It's not an all or nothing thing. There was a range of options the Obama admin could take ranging from doing nothing to engaging in nuclear war. I criticized the Obama admin for not taking more aggressive steps, starting with more detailed public notification. That's why I talked about being "more aggressive."
He was commander and chief and by your own pen you write he chose to do nothing.
Quote me saying that. I can find a quote of me telling you that I didn't say that, but I just can't seem to find an example of me saying that. Note: I am not saying that.
In one breath you are saying he knew, and yet we know elsewhere he stated it wasn't or couldn't happen.
The heck?
He didn't deal with Russians spying on the election process because he did not want to look like a partisan? Are you kidding me, he was maybe the most vocal sitting president ( that has termed out) against a opposing party candidate in our history, at least that I can remember. And your saying he did not want to seem like a partisan so he chose not to stop direct interference with a foreign goverment interfering with a presidential election?
Yeah, Obama's hyperpartisanship is one of those right-wing media creations that is so far afield of reality that it's difficult to interact with someone so captured by propaganda. Happily, it can be ignored in this case. I'm saying that Obama appears to have calculated that one of the risks of being more aggressive in response to Russian interference by doing things that either directly notify the public or involve actions that the public can infer that the US is taking countermeasures against Russia, is that this make have looked like a partisan act on behalf of Clinton. This could warp voting choices. It could harm Clinton and inadvertently assist Russia in its mission to harm Clinton's election chances. Yeah. That's a risk Obama took seriously. Too seriously in my estimation. That's what I'm saying. Because you can't tell the difference between "do nothing" and "be more aggressive" you start out with a confusion then multiply more confusion on top of it.
For example, after the election, the Obama admin ratcheted up sanctions and removed a large number of Russian diplomats from the United States. When doing so, he also made a public announcement of covert measures against Russia that we still don't know about. He could have done that before the election. He didn't.
You are saying because Trump had no chance (they were imploding)...he had time to deal with it later. You wrote it not me. In other words you are stating Obama thought Hillary would win so he ignored Russia infiltrating the election process. I see no other way to read that .
Lol, yep. No other way.
Not according to the affidavit, which read that her attempts were not "Candidate Specific."
Her job was to set up connections between conservative leadership and Russian interests to hopefully warp conservative politics around Russian interests. Within this broad goal, when those connections had been set up, they then were used to funnel millions of dollars to an organization that in turn spent a fortune backing Donald Trump and Republican allies in Congress. This matched Russia's goals in US election inference.
At any rate their is no evidence that Trump colluded with Putina in 2015. If you have further evidence Trump colluded, fine, that can be discussed but Doc's smoking gun is just not there and your making it direct collusion between the two is just not there.
You spent several pages in this thread demanding a "best piece of evidence" while multiple posters, including Doc, tried to explain to you that the case is made up of a variety of mutually reinforcing evidence lines and that it would be a disservice to the totality of the evidence to try and isolate one example. After badgering Doc for an example repeatedly, you dismiss it and go "so much for your smoking gun." The idea that there should be a single piece of smoking gun evidence is a fiction of your own creation. There's almost never a smoking gun, even when a crime has been committed by a literal smoking gun.