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@TWS1405
This is completely irrelevant to the point I just made.
And did you have a point of your own?
The circumstantial evidence is overwhelming. Hunter had no skills that were of any value to burisma. Hunter did not speak Ukrainian. The only possible reason to pay Hunter a single dollar much less how much he was paid was his connections. We know from the laptop, emails, and the whistle-blowing partner that Hunter was financially entangled with his father to the point of sharing bank accounts. The "Big guy" has been fingered as Biden and contextual evidence of texts strongly supports this.Biden was the "policy maker" in Ukraine.
You're stubbornly sticking to an absurdity
It is in US interests to not have its foreign policy sold for personal enrichment, it is also in US interests to know when a candidate for public office does things like that.
I said nothing about "starting over" but a "good job letter" does indicate that there was not at that time an international consensus that Shokin must go.
The push by the US executive branch to remove Shokin cannot be separated in time with what can only very generously be called international angst against him. Biden was the "policy maker" in Ukraine and it is therefore reasonable to believe that despite what may be written in your civics power point Biden was the US executive branch when it came to Ukraine. As such his personal motivations could very well have steered focus and his orders led to US officials (like ambassadors) pushing a narrative against Shokin.
Greyparrot understood, because he read it.Clearly you did not.
Fkn edgelord brownshirts should be exposed.
Moreover, the two quotes from that article is a matter of settled case law. If Clinton and every president before him and after him can do it, so can Trump. The fact that the raid took place is of grave concern to us all.
If the Biden administration really believed Trump had dangerous secrets, if they really thought Donald Trump possessed documents that posed an imminent danger to American national security, then you have to wonder, why did they wait a year and a half to do anything about it?
Despite superficial appearances, the raid of Mar-a-Lago was not an act of law enforcement. It was the opposite of that. It was an attack on the rule of law.
The circumstantial evidence is overwhelming. Hunter had no skills that were of any value to burisma. Hunter did not speak Ukrainian. The only possible reason to pay Hunter a single dollar much less how much he was paid was his connections. We know from the laptop, emails, and the whistle-blowing partner that Hunter was financially entangled with his father to the point of sharing bank accounts. The "Big guy" has been fingered as Biden and contextual evidence of texts strongly supports this.Biden was the "policy maker" in Ukraine.I asked you for evidence of a money laundering case, which is what you have been claiming. Yet you seem to have forgotten the most important part... Money. An email suggesting they may have shared a bank account is not evidence of money laundering. Please connect your dots.
The seizure does not prove that Shokin was actively investigating Burisma at the time Biden engaged in the "quid pro quo". That's the point. That's the only point here.
It is in US interests to not have its foreign policy sold for personal enrichment, it is also in US interests to know when a candidate for public office does things like that.We don't just investigate things because some guy on Fox news made an allegation. There has to be actual evidence of wrongdoing first, not merely the potential.
And once again, the "good job letter" only spoke of his agenda and ambition, not his results, so the idea that there was some consensus that he was doing a good job is just silly.
The push by the US executive branch to remove Shokin cannot be separated in time with what can only very generously be called international angst against him. Biden was the "policy maker" in Ukraine and it is therefore reasonable to believe that despite what may be written in your civics power point Biden was the US executive branch when it came to Ukraine. As such his personal motivations could very well have steered focus and his orders led to US officials (like ambassadors) pushing a narrative against Shokin.Once again, you show a remarkable disregard for basic critical thinking in favor of classic conspiracism. You presume, with no evidence nor supporting reason, that various individuals within our government and throughout the world have no idea what's going on and cannot form their own opinion, but instead defer to the ultimate conspirators to tell them what to believe.
You disregard example after example provided to you of displeasure regarding Shokin from within our own government, around the world, and even within Ukraine, but latch onto one letter written months before the time period in question as evidence that outweighs all of it. It's confirmation bias personified.
when was the affidavit from the Trump insider actually submitted
Let's assume, just for the sake of argument, that Trump was in violation of the law by storing top secret documents in an unsecured location posing a threat to national security, and then despite multiple requests to give them back including a subpoena that Trump ignored and Trump's lawyers lying to the FBI telling them all of the documents were returned when they were not... What should the FBI have done?
This is why establishing a timeline is rather important
What we can judge, however, is his handling of classified material, as he once did with Hillary.
Pretty sure Trump didn't destroy any evidence. Are you claiming that he did?