Can I empathize with our embattled Toddler President — and still be considered reasonable?

© 2018 Peter Free

 

03 May 2018

 

 

Special counsel weasel, Robert Mueller has been at it for 12 months . . .

 

. . . and ain't come up with nuttin'.

 

In light of Mueller's face-plant, he is now trying to bait the President into incriminating himself. This via the released list of questions that the Special Counsel claims to need answers to.

 

This ploy is presumably justified as a result of James' Comey's published reasoning that the Federal Security Bureaucracy is a necessary substitute for God.

 

The Feds' "he lied to us" end-around is to be deviously watered in the absence of legally substantive rain. The President did not provably collude with Russians, but "we" will get him anyway. Presumably for lying about something (pick one) that is the equivalent of masturbating — in Our Holy Federal Church's confessional.

 

 

Former CIA analyst, Ray McGovern — and former NSA guy, Bill Binney — agree

 

They wrote that:

 

 

After a year of investigating whether the Trump campaign colluded with Russia, Special Counsel Robert Mueller has, in effect, admitted that he has hit a dry well.

 

He is under strong pressure to keep the charade going until the November elections . . . .

 

If there were any tangible evidence of Trump campaign-Russia collusion, Mueller would almost certainly have known where to look and, in today’s world of blanket surveillance, would have found it by now.

 

In a 2011 interview by Barton Gellman for Time magazine, Mueller made it clear his FBI had been using the “Stellar Wind” program since late 2001. This is the program by which the NSA has been collecting and storing domestic data on virtually all US citizens.

 

[I]n essence, Mueller and his FBI were fine with deceiving court and defendant alike, denying defendants the right to proper and full discovery.

 

[P]erforming surveillance on anyone in the Trump campaign or in his administration, would mean the NSA/FBI/CIA could “legally” . . . spy on everyone associated with the Trump administration even retroactively, going back to before the campaign began.

 

That means Mueller could have access to all the answers before he even asks Trump the first question.

 

© 2018 Ray McGovern and Bill Binney, Robert Mueller: Gone Fishing, ConsortiumNews (01 May 2018) (excerpts)

 

 

Consider what will happen if . . .

 

. . . Mueller et al tell the People that the President did lie, but that no one can see the (national secret) proof.

 

 

The moral? — The Constitution burns

 

There is no obvious respect for principled law enforcement demonstrated in Mueller's doings.

 

Instead, he — and his fellowly partisan witch-concocters — twist Law to consume itself.