vendic wrote:Just another thing to the list of things that make me not trust her.
Thumper wrote:And of course it's more than Powell and Rice. It appears to be a common practice that high ranking officials in the US gov't have been doing for years.
SciFi Chick wrote:I'll go on record and say that geonuc's explanation and the responses that followed have convinced me that I don't think she should be prosecuted whether she did it willingly or not.
I'm not sure where we draw the line. As an example, if President Bush and Vice President Cheney really did commit war crimes, I think they should still be prosecuted, but all I know about them comes from the media and I trust them about as much as I trust Hillary.
Federal employees are still forbidden to use their authority to affect the results of an election.
SciFiFisher wrote:Given the low probability of winning a criminal case AND the appearance of trying to affect the result of an election if I were Lynch I would RUN from this one. I wouldn't touch it with a 400 foot pole. If there were a "better" smoking gun it might be a different story.
SciFi Chick wrote:I'm guessing we'd also agree that we should let everyone who has ever smoked marijuana out of jail, assuming that's why they're in jail. I honestly think prison should be for very heinous crimes, and I include some white collar crimes in the realm of heinous. Other things can be punished in more effective ways.
Stavro wrote:The question should never have been, should we prosecute Hillary. That's a dumb easy question to answer yes to.
The question should have been, why is there a set of standard that can be flouted by the higher ups while I would go to jail for the same? One set of rules for you, another for me. Sounds like a good premise for a book, if only someone would have written a book about that. What kind of name could we have given it?
geonuc wrote:We do agree on that, but marijuana crimes are different than what we have here.
SciFi Chick wrote:geonuc wrote:We do agree on that, but marijuana crimes are different than what we have here.
Indeed. I was just going off topic, as I have a tendency to do.
geonuc wrote:Stavro wrote:The question should never have been, should we prosecute Hillary. That's a dumb easy question to answer yes to.
The question should have been, why is there a set of standard that can be flouted by the higher ups while I would go to jail for the same? One set of rules for you, another for me. Sounds like a good premise for a book, if only someone would have written a book about that. What kind of name could we have given it?
I'm answering no to your 'dumb easy question'. Given that the Director of the FBI, and his staff that investigated the situation, also answer in the negative, perhaps it's not such a 'dumb easy question'.
Your next paragraph speaks to my first point. Stripping the sarcasm, you don't agree with it, I gather.
Thumper wrote:And of course it's more than Powell and Rice. It appears to be a common practice that high ranking officials in the US gov't have been doing for years.
I believe I agree with Geo. Maybe we need to tweak the processes and requirements so that people don't feel the need to violate these rules and look at the intent as to why the rules were broken. I believe there's at least as much of a case to pursue charges in the previous administration as there is here. But where to we go from here aside from just slinging crap back and forth?
SciFiFisher wrote:Disclaimer: I think Manning is filthy dirt bag who deserves the death penalty. And Snowden is a douche bag who is quilty of high treason and should also get the death penalty.
Anyone who compares Clinton to Snowden or Manning is either being sarcastic, facetious, or is very ignorant. Clinton did not knowingly aid the enemies of the U.S. and most of the rest of the Western world. Snowden and Manning did.
geonuc wrote:Stavro, I see you have difficulty carrying on a serious discussion without resorting to snark and sarcasm. So I'll say this final thing to you (unless your manner of discourse changes dramatically): my opinion matters to me and it matters in the context of a forum discussion on the right and wrong of a situation. Obviously I know my opinion does not have weight with respect to what actually happens to the former secretary. Your opinion, however, not only carries no weight with respect to the latter, it also now carries no weight with me in this discussion or any other.
pumpkinpi wrote:Ok. So there are two issues here. If it was illegal for her to use a private server, she should suffer whatever consequences are commensurate with that crime.
The second is....what was in the content of the emails? The reason her work emails need to be done on a government server is so that they can be read by outside parties if needed, right? So, what do people expect to find? What if the only thing she did wrong was use the private server, but if all of the deleted emails were recovered and there was absolutely no evidence of anything but poor jokes and scheduling meetings, what then?
I understand the trust issue, I guess. If she is trying to hide something as secretary of state, then how can we trust her not to do that as president? So, to those of you (here, or in the media) who think that, I genuinely want to know what people think she might try to hide and how it would be detrimental to our country. At least, more detrimental to our country than what Trump would do.
Ok, that last part came out a little more loaded than I had intended....you know me, I don't like to stir up controversy. But there's already enough her so I might as well add to it.
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