When the FBI and Justice Department have become weaponized and politicized, democracy is gone. How much more of this do they think they can do and not face a public backlash?
Showing posts with label Department of Justice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Department of Justice. Show all posts
August 23, 2022
January 19, 2018
In Canadian politics, if you erase emails, you pay the consequences
Unlike Hillary Clinton, In Canada the Ontario provincial liberals were engrossed in a gas plant scandal and some emails implicating top politicians were deliberately erased. Today, someone paid the price with a conviction:
Maybe someone in the Justice Department in America could perhaps buy a vowel on this notion?
BREAKING: Laura Miller not guilty, David Livingston guilty in Liberal gas plan email scandal. #onpoli https://t.co/1fgpH5elWe— Toronto Sun (@TheTorontoSun) January 19, 2018
Maybe someone in the Justice Department in America could perhaps buy a vowel on this notion?
Labels:
Canada,
Department of Justice,
Hillary Clinton,
liberals,
Ontario,
scandal
December 16, 2017
The Injustice Department
Via Politico a story on how those within the Justice Department discussed collusion against a Trump electoral victory. Both agents had been part of special counsel Muller's Russia probe, evidence again that highly partisan people are involved in a systemic anti-Trump agenda.
Two FBI agents assigned to the investigation into alleged collusion between President Donald Trump's campaign and Russia exchanged text messages referring to the future president as an "idiot," according to copies of messages turned over to Congress Tuesday night by the Justice Department...“I want to believe the path you threw out for consideration in Andy’s office — that there’s no way he gets elected — but I’m afraid we can’t take that risk,” Strzok wrote to Page in August 2016.It’s unclear who Andy is, but other messages suggest he may be FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe. He recused himself from Clinton email-related issues one week before the presidential election, but Republican critics have said he should have done so sooner because of his wife’s campaign for the Virginia state senate was supported by Clinton allies...Shortly after the election, Page suggested Trump might be brought down by scandal.“Bought all the president’s men,” she wrote. “Figure I needed to brush up on watergate.”
The fact that they have been removed is of zero consolation to those of us who believe this probe is a government-run lynching of a sitting president. They are merely symptomatic of a larger problem and their removal does not address the underlying flaws with the investigation.
Labels:
agents,
Department of Justice,
FBI,
injustice,
Lisa Page,
Peter Strzok
June 5, 2013
IRS files - Alinsky said pick the target, freeze it...
![]() |
Yeah, what if? |
A few years ago, I made a list of counter-tactics to Saul Alinsky's Rules for Radicals because the left was almost constantly engaged in using these tactics to defeat conservatives repeatedly and often. It's time to revisit those rules and counter-rules because there's a lot going on with the current IRS scandal that Alinsky's manifesto is playing a role in shaping.
In fact Saul Alinsky (who is connected at least spiritually to president Obama) in his manifesto Rules for Radicals, said the following;
Pick the target, freeze it, personalize it, polarize it. Ignore attempts to shift or spread the blame.
There are some interesting points in this that relate to the IRS unjust (and most certainly illegal) persecution of Tea Party and other conservative organizations, aside from the obvious ones but lets start with those.
How the IRS used Alinsky tactics on multiple conservative organizations
Firstly, the IRS has clearly picked the target (and perhaps it was picked for them) - conservative organizations were targeted for tax exempted status denial. But it goes deeper. Having picked the target they not only denied those organizations that status while granting liberal organizations status, they used that denial and delay to demand significant amounts of member details, and personal information. That can be viewed as intimidation and unfair treatment, and it certainly was that, but it also means that they are able to collect more information about their political opposites. They even shared some of that information about those conservative organizations with liberal ones. That is clearly political. The point is there is multiple political benefits to the big government left in these IRS actions. They stalled many of these organizations from being as effective as possible during the 2012 elections. They also collected opposition information. It's like a football team getting to see their opponents' playbook before game day.
In pressing those conservative organizations, the IRS clearly personalized the attacks. They demanded personal information.
And one of the most confounding impacts for these groups was how they were persecuted in isolation. While this was apparently happening to hundreds of these groups, they all were handled as if they were alone in their difficulties. More organizations are bound to come forward as they realize what was happening to them was not happening to just them.
![]() |
You think the targeting is bad now? |
Notice that Susan Rice is being promoted National Security Advisor today? Why? She was flat out wrong on Benghazi where four Americans were killed by a terrorist attack. Was this the worst of the scandals? It was certainly fatal. So perhaps the mea culpa on the IRS scandal is entirely a diversion that the left hopes the right will get wrong on prosecuting anyway.
Now the counter-tactic
The counter is pretty straight forward and quick. User the Alinsky tactics on the IRS. Isolate the IRS, and hammer it and keep digging and keep them back on their heels. There is more information bound to come out. This house of cards will crumble and somewhere in an effort to save their own bureaucratic jobs, someone will eventually give up where this directive came from.
Meanwhile, as the scandal unfolds, the other two scandals can't be ignored. Digging into the Justice Department and the State Department screw ups has to continue. The only caveat is that it doesn't make sense to have the scandals compete for headlines. They should be brought forward sequentially because that will hold the public's attention about corruption, malfeasance and lack of qualified leadership for a longer time period leading up to 2014 and 2016. The side benefit of that is that it allows those investigating the other two scandals time to get their details together and to present a much stronger case before bringing the details forward. As with the IRS scandal the final point is to never let up.
May 23, 2010
U.S. Drops Case Against AIG
The Department of Justice declined to comment.
I guess it was just too much of a can of worms for Holder and company.
I guess it was just too much of a can of worms for Holder and company.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)