3
0

Watch The Daily Show mock Fox News' confused man-crush on Vladimir Putin


 invite response                
2014 Mar 7, 5:34am   17,567 views  122 comments

by CL   ➕follow (1)   💰tip   ignore  

http://theweek.com/article/index/257636/speedreads-watch-the-daily-show-mock-fox-news-confused-man-crush-on-vladimir-putin

Fox News and their Republican guests being "fooled by this guy's bullshit?" Stewart asked. Republicans have been holding up the "strong" Putin as a favorable alternative to the "weak," "mom jeans"-wearing Obama. (Seriously, the "mom jeans" line is a thing.) In one of Stewart's clips, Rudy Giuliani gushes that while Obama dithers, Putin the leader acts quickly and makes the world react to him. That's not the definition of a leader, Stewart said, incredulously, "that's what you call a toddler." Also, when the Fox News crowd isn't calling Obama weak, they're calling him a "dictator king," Stewart said. And then...

#politics

« First        Comments 84 - 122 of 122        Search these comments

84   thomaswong.1986   2014 Mar 8, 1:19pm  

Iosef V HydroCabron says

Agreed.

Now go "peruse those interests", create great prosperity, and get out of here forever.

I am already there.. after all these years...a little no body like me .. make it big in SV.

85   thomaswong.1986   2014 Mar 8, 1:21pm  

Vicente says

Yes clearly everybody in the 1% is there because they work 1,000+ times harder & smarter than I do. Get real.

keep it up... your never going to get anywhere!

86   gsr   2014 Mar 8, 2:16pm  

Vicente says

However now that I've seen fighting in the trenches, I am no longer willing to play with people's lives like they are toys on a board.

So you think keeping artificially low interest rates over long time, inflating one bubble after another, bailing out well connected banks etc., do not constitute playing with people's lives? My goodness, you need your head examined!

87   tatupu70   2014 Mar 8, 11:36pm  

turtledove says

Well, you show me where I ever said that the crony rich achieve their wealth through "smarts, hard work, and sacrifice," (or anything even resembling that) and I will be more than happy to answer your question

Sorry-didn't know you were only referring to the "cronies". By the way--how can you tell a "crony" from a rich person that achieved their wealth through hard work? Or a "job creator"? Is there a special handshake? Or do they wear a special pin?

Seriously--show me one very wealthy individual that didn't donate to political campaigns. Or use their influence in Washington to their advantage.

88   tatupu70   2014 Mar 8, 11:38pm  

turtledove says

They refuse to distinguish between cronies and people who work hard and earn well.

Like I said--please educate me. How can I properly distinguish between the two different types?

89   Y   2014 Mar 9, 12:17am  

one smells like summers eve, the other, spaghettiOs...

tatupu70 says

Like I said--please educate me. How can I properly distinguish between the two different types?

90   Bellingham Bill   2014 Mar 9, 1:50am  

turtledove says

(the very shocks believed to be responsible for the crash) had turned positive in 1933. This should have resulted in a faster recovery (output and employment returning to trend), but it didn't

it was a global crash and the world went into protectionism.

everybody got slaughtered and the nascent flimflam credit-driven economy of the 1920s was but a dream in the 1930s.

Prosperity was still present, but it was much more unevenly distributed. Looking at the 1940 census I see my grandfather was still screwed up in Oregon (that census has rather personal employment information on it for perusal), while when I was looking at the West LA census (the tony neighborhood I lived in in the 1980s) I see many people were doing OK.

But people LITERALLY LOST THEIR LIFE SAVINGS in the crash of 1930-33. You don't just 'bounce back' from that like a 1970s Fed-created recession.

91   Bellingham Bill   2014 Mar 9, 1:52am  

tatupu70 says

How can I properly distinguish between the two different types?

you need the Praxeology. God Austrianism has the stink of Scientology about it. Wouldn't surprise me if there's volcanoes involved somewhere.

92   HydroCabron   2014 Mar 9, 3:32am  

Bellingham Bill says

God Austrianism has the stink of Scientology about it.

Yeah, but Scientologists talk about it less.

93   indigenous   2014 Mar 9, 3:46am  

Bellingham Bill says

you need the Praxeology. God Austrianism has the stink of Scientology about it. Wouldn't surprise me if there's volcanoes involved somewhere.

The Austrians have something to say, most of yous don't it is just chatter. You think the graphs indicate what ever you are saying, ceptin they don't.

It does not appear that T Dove is an Austrian.

Tat cannot be taught as he likes to use that faux Socratic method instead of listening.

94   tatupu70   2014 Mar 9, 4:04am  

indigenous says

Tat cannot be taught as he likes to use that faux Socratic method instead of listening.

Let me translate for you--I believe in looking at history with an open mind and letting data do the talking. I believe in things like science too.

You cannot look at history because it always disagrees with your religion. Therefore you pretend that it's specious and that all data is incorrect.

You are very much like an ostrich with his head in the sand...

95   indigenous   2014 Mar 9, 4:15am  

tatupu70 says

-I believe in looking at history with an open mind

When ever I hear this I know that this is the last thing you are doing.

tatupu70 says

You cannot look at history because it always disagrees with your religion. Therefore you pretend that it's specious and that all data is incorrect.

The complete opposite as you who think you are Looking when you look at graphs and arithmetic. This is where the bulk of your assertions come from, but they do not parallel reality.

tatupu70 says

You are very much like an ostrich with his head in the sand...

Projecting

96   tatupu70   2014 Mar 9, 4:18am  

indigenous says

The complete opposite as you who think you are Looking when you look at graphs and arithmetic. This is where the bulk of your assertions come from, but they do not parallel reality

Gibberish. Try again and write slowly so I can at least understand what you are attempting to say.

97   marcus   2014 Mar 9, 5:30am  

turtledove says

"New Deal labor and industrial policies did not lift the economy out of the Depression as President Roosevelt had hoped. Instead, the joint policies of increasing labor’s bargaining power and linking collusion with paying high wages prevented a normal recovery by creating rents and an inefficient insider‐outsider friction that raised wages significantly and restricted employment(Cole, et al)."

THe question isn't only whether FDRs policies got us out of the depression the fastest way possible.

What we eventually got was a booming middle class with a rapidly increasing standard of living.

I don't believe it to be the case, but lets say that there are polices that would have led to slave labor conditions, that is workers having far less leverage, that would have gotten us out of the depression faster. That is if the high wages your quote alludes to did not occur. (THese high wages were the problem with FDRs policies - according to your quote.)

It seems likely that this in turn would have made 1948 through 1980 and beyond look much different than it did.

In other words, even if FDRs policies were slower than some alternate policies that were better for business in the short run, people and even business and the economy in general were better off in the long run for FDR's policies, that made for a more affluent middle class.

turtledove says

If you feel that the mere suggestion that the New Deal prolonged the Depression must be coming from people who want government removed from the economy then a conversation is impossible.

This is not logical. He can still back it up with facts, even if he is biased. And bias is sometimes based on facts as well.

Who would deny that there is a huge segment of AMericans and a lot of propaganda out there that is anti socialist. Many fear and hate FDRs policies, because they think they resemble or would lead to the socialist or communist policies that our religion says is evil.

A sample of what I would call the kind of bias that gets in the way of understandng. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_R6uC_ZCTLw

(Note: I'm not a socialist - but I have enough balance in my perception to know that many in this country have a strong bias against social spending and an irrational fear that social spending, and all government spending, even on infrastructure, or schools, is "socialism")

It's a fact that there is a lot of bias out there, and that a lot of analysis of FDRs policies starts with a prejudice and preconceived desire to prove his policies were bad. Because otherwise, it might mean admitting that for example those who say that the "Stimulus" should have been much bigger in 2009, were right.

God forbid, it might even mean that taxes should be higher (at least on upper increments of income). Gee, I wonder if there are any wealthy people, or very high income people that have a bias about progressive taxation ?

WE can't even properly fund infrastructure spending these days while we're conducting multiple wars and middle class earnings are dropping. Meanwhile those at the top are getting richer.

98   HydroCabron   2014 Mar 9, 6:07am  

For fuck's sake: Hoover did all the sensible austere things, as well as some sideways attempts to loosen credit, but the economy gagged even more.

Roosevelt took office when the U.S. was still a low-infrastructure country (sort of third-world), and there were many things the government could do that private industry lacked the means or the nerve to do, such as water projects and electrification.

Roosevelt saw the opportunity, and did something which worked at that te and under those conditions. This does not mean that government spending is always a good idea during economic contractions, but it worked that one time.

For some reason, however, the hard right theologians need to believe n simple nostrums, in particular that government is always bad. So Roosevelt's record, which until the 1980s was totally uncontroversial - Reagan was a prominent admirer of FDR - must now be demolished, at a cost to logic and truth.

Thanks to the absolutism of the libertarian oversimplifiers and their binary Manichean world, we can't say that massive pump-priming might be a good or bad idea, depending on the nature of the recession and the economy: we have to listen to endless refutations of every possible case where it did good. And, ironically, we get to argue about this on the Internet, which still might not exist had it not been for government research and infrastructure.

Libertarian simpletons: the reason why we can't have nice things.

99   turtledove   2014 Mar 9, 6:16am  

tatupu70 says

Like I said--please educate me. How can I properly distinguish between the two different types?

Hey Tat. That's easy. I just use my crime-o-meter to detect all criminals infesting our population, at large. It's available on Amazon. I recommend trying to find version 7, as version 8 is reported to be pretty buggy. The app is supposed to be out soon, too. ;)

100   turtledove   2014 Mar 9, 6:22am  

tatupu70 says

Seriously--show me one very wealthy individual that didn't donate to political campaigns. Or use their influence in Washington to their advantage.

Donating to political campaigns, in and of itself, isn't evil. Plenty of people, both rich and poor, do it.

Where it went wrong is when we started treating corporations as people. And clearly, people who are funneling enormous donations through other channels as a way to provide more financial support than is allowed by law are part of the "cronies" and should be held accountable for the fraud they are committing.

101   turtledove   2014 Mar 9, 6:45am  

marcus says

(THese high wages were the problem with FDRs policies - according to your quote.)

Here's what the idea is based on (from journal article linked above):

"There is a large gap in this condition during the New Deal. Compared to 1929 values, the 1939 real wage is 120 percent higher than the 1939 marginal rate of substitution."

NIRA was the first piece of legislation passed:

"The cornerstone of the NIRA was a “code of fair competition” for each industry. These codes were the operating rules for all firms in an industry. Firms and workers negotiated these codes under the guidance of the National Recovery Administration (NRA). The codes required presidential approval, which was given only if the industry raised wages and accepted collective bargaining with an independent union. In return, the act suspended antitrust law, and each industry was encouraged to adopt trade practices that limited competition and raised prices. By 1934, NRA codes covered over 500 industries, which accounted for nearly 80 percent of private, nonagricultural employment."

After Nira was found to be unconstitutional, the NLRA followed:

"The NLRA allowed labor to form independent unions with significant bargaining power (see Millis and Brown 1950; Taft 1964; Kennedy 1999, pp. 290–91). Union membership and strike activity rose considerably under the NLRA, particularly after the Supreme Court upheld its constitutionality in 1937. Union membership rose from about 13 percent of employment in 1935 to about 29 percent of employment in 1939, and strike activity doubled from 14 million strike days in 1936 to about 28 million in 1937...."

"The uniform wage feature of NIRA labor policies continued in post‐NIRA union contracts.6 The strengthening of NIRA labor provisions was accompanied by an NIRA‐type industrial policy that promoted collusion. Even though the government could not suspend antitrust law after the NIRA, the government permitted collusion, particularly in industries that paid high wages. Hawley (1966, p. 166) cites Federal Trade Commission (FTC) studies from the 1930s that report price fixing and production limits in a number of industries following the court’s NIRA decision.

Some of the post‐NIRA collusion was facilitated by trade practices formed under the NIRA. Hawley reports that basing point pricing, which was adopted under the NIRA, allowed steel producers to collude after the act was ruled unconstitutional. Interior Secretary Harold Ickes complained to Roosevelt that he received identical bids from steel firms on 257 different occasions (Hawley 1966, pp. 360–64) between June 1935 and May 1936. The Interior Department received bids that were not only identical but 50 percent higher than foreign steel prices (Ickes 1953–54, 2:466). This price difference was large enough under government rules to permit Ickes to order the steel from German suppliers. Roosevelt canceled the German contract, however, after coming under pressure from both the steel trade association and the steel labor union."

102   indigenous   2014 Mar 9, 6:51am  

jojo says

Bill Clinton’s $80 Million Payday, or Why Politicians Don’t Care That Much About Reelection

Why would the pay him that much after he left office? The derivatives thing was superfluous as Glass Steagal didn't regulate derivatives anyway.

103   tatupu70   2014 Mar 9, 6:54am  

turtledove says

Where it went wrong is when we started treating corporations as people. And clearly, people who are funneling enormous donations through other channels as a way to provide more financial support than is allowed by law are part of the "cronies" and should be held accountable for the fraud they are committing

So criminals are "cronies"? The other rich folks are the smart ones?

I'm being serious here. I hear lots of people on pat.net throwing around the word crony but nobody can really tell me who they are or why they are categorized as such.

104   turtledove   2014 Mar 9, 7:06am  

marcus says

God forbid, it might even mean that taxes should be higher (at least on upper increments of income). Gee, I wonder if there are any wealthy people, or very high income people that have a bias about progressive taxation ?

But the problem is that such things are proposed without any effort made to audit the particular budget. We've all heard the jokes about $300 wrenches and $1200 toilet seats. No credible effort is made to identify waste. The answer is always to just throw more money at it.

Now this is an anecdotal example, but it illustrates precisely what I'm talking about. For about a year, we worked in a high-needs area in North Carolina providing medical care. By high needs, I mean that 80% of the patients were on Medicaid. I couldn't believe how many people were on Medicaid who, under no circumstances, should be been. There were working professionals presenting NC Medicaid cards! It was crazy and, unfortunately, too prevalent.

Using this example, is it really so unreasonable to ask that NC Medicaid fix their gaping loopholes? Do they have no responsibility to the tax payers to make sure that the tax money is well spent. I'm not against Medicaid. I'm against unchecked abuse. I see that as waste, and as a stakeholder of the system, I have every right to demand that they fix problems instead of just asking for more money -- and pretending that the waste doesn't exist.

The sad thing I learned from that experience is that the very people who need the program are the ones least likely to know how to take advantage of it. I spent a lot of time helping patients fill out their Medicaid paperwork and gather the appropriate documents. I was happy to do it... To make someone less worried about how she was going to pay for her own medical care. But when I see a PhD biologist or an OBGyn present a Medicaid card, I get a little pissed that I'm paying into a system that has so little accountability.

105   thomaswong.1986   2014 Mar 9, 7:13am  

Bellingham Bill says

where dozens of Japanese manufacturers became household words in the US due to their rather awesome products that we couldn't get enough of.

product dumping... selling products below the cost to manufacture to
drive out competition and capture market share ! it wasnt only the US, but Europe, South Ameria and other parts of Asia... THEY went after the whole Enchilada with the Works...

106   turtledove   2014 Mar 9, 7:18am  

tatupu70 says

So criminals are "cronies"? The other rich folks are the smart ones?

I'm being serious here. I hear lots of people on pat.net throwing around the word crony but nobody can really tell me who they are or why they are categorized as such.

Here's how I see it. Crony means friend. Crony capitalists use their relationships (or friends) with other businesses and government officials to advance their agenda, even when that agenda is harmful to everyone else living in that economy. Crony capitalists use their influence with their friends to enrich themselves at the expense of almost everyone else. The cronies (friends) are all those who participate in this process of using regulation/legislation/unfair business practices (b2b) as a means for private profit.

107   tatupu70   2014 Mar 9, 7:21am  

turtledove says

Crony capitalists use their relationships (or friends) with other businesses and government officials to advance their agenda, even when that agenda is harmful to everyone else living in that economy. Crony capitalists use their influence with their friends to enrich themselves at the expense of almost everyone else

OK, fair enough. But again I'll say that that definition pretty much includes every wealthy person in the US.

108   indigenous   2014 Mar 9, 7:26am  

turtledove says

By 1934, NRA codes covered over 500 industries, which accounted for nearly 80 percent of private, nonagricultural employment."

Wow I did not know FDR had metastasized into that much of the US economy. When NIRA was found unconstitutional, must have been when FDR threatened to pack the court.

It is laughable, the hubris required to think that anyone could think they could tell people what they need through micromanaging. I guess you get so much sunshine blown up your ass that you think you "know best", and have the same regard for people that you would for a fish?

Even at that he did not allow collective bargaining for public employees. But this did not stop Jerry Brown...

I went to school on that post.

109   bob2356   2014 Mar 9, 7:50am  

SoftShell says

By this logic any country who has troops stationed anywhere other than there own cohntry regardless whether the host country approved it deserves to have three thousand of its citizens slaughtered and have multimillion dollar buildings toppled.

I take it you hated Zero Dark Thirty...

By what logic? I said bin laden was provoked by US troops stationed in Saudi Arabia. Simple atatement. How you managed to jump to any country having troops in any other country is a deep mystery. Project much?

110   turtledove   2014 Mar 9, 8:09am  

tatupu70 says

OK, fair enough. But again I'll say that that definition pretty much includes every wealthy person in the US.

Well, not really... It lacks the air of pushing legal limits. Cronies, for example, might use their government friends to legalize the transfer of wealth from government programs to a purpose unintended by the government program. Technically legal because they got their friends to make it so, but shady to any reasonable person.

Here I go with another anecdote. My uncle is a first generation Italian-American. After serving in the military, he was a construction worker building houses. When he had enough money, he bought two lots. He built one house on one lot and he and his family moved in. Then, he would build another house on the other lot. He would then sell both. This continued and his projects grew in scope over the years. It took him a long time, but by the time he was 50, he was a very rich guy.

Now he wasn't book smart. He didn't have friends in high places. I doubt he watches much news or pays too much attention to politics. But every line on his 80-year-old weather beaten face demonstrates the effort he put in to building what he has.

111   marcus   2014 Mar 9, 8:14am  

indigenous says

tatupu70 says

-I believe in looking at history with an open mind

When ever I hear this I know that this is the last thing you are doing.

tatupu70 says

You cannot look at history because it always disagrees with your religion. Therefore you pretend that it's specious and that all data is incorrect.

The complete opposite as you who think you are Looking when you look at graphs and arithmetic. This is where the bulk of your assertions come from, but they do not parallel reality.

tatupu70 says

You are very much like an ostrich with his head in the sand...

Projecting

Wow, a new record even for disingenuous, he found three different ways to say " I know you are, but what am I" all in one comment.

112   marcus   2014 Mar 9, 8:30am  

turtledove says

But the problem is that such things are proposed without any effort made to audit the particular budget. We've all heard the jokes about $300 wrenches and $1200 toilet seats. No credible effort is made to identify waste. The answer is always to just throw more money at it.

Really ? Those classic examples, are I think ways that the defense dept. hid the way some money was spent. Who knows. But you know that they have gotten after it.

You don't think governments have been belt tightening and finding ways to cut costs in the past 5 years ?

turtledove says

I'm not against Medicaid. I'm against unchecked abuse. I see that as waste, and as a stakeholder of the system, I have every right to demand that they fix problems instead of just asking for more money -- and pretending that the waste doesn't exist.

So is it like this ?

I'm all for government spending, if only it could be done right. But since it can't be done right, I'm against it ?

I appreciate wanting to fix things. But this isn't the attitude that republicans take. (you should read this thread - if you want to understand your party better http://patrick.net/?p=1239471).

Why don't we hear republicans saying lets work together to fix the flaws in Obamacare ? Instead they fight for regime change, saying it's enitrely evil. Because if they helped make it work, the enemy (commie democrats) might get some credit.

I digress, but your reasoning is typical. You're just looking for a reason to be against sufficient taxation.

Trust me, if upper increments of income were taxed half as high as they were in the 60s, all the powerful people would be watching eachother to make sure they didn't take advantage, and the kind of auditing and watching of spending you were talking about would occur.

THe way it is now though, we don't pay for our spending with taxes. We borrow. And the powerful don't begrudge the other guy from getting his cut, as long as they get theirs.

113   mell   2014 Mar 9, 8:34am  

tatupu70 says

I'm being serious here. I hear lots of people on pat.net throwing around the word crony but nobody can really tell me who they are or why they are categorized as such.

No, it has been explained to you thousands of times, you just don't want to comprehend. What part of crony capitalism don't you get? Buffet's backdoor deals, the TBTF bailouts, nobody at JPM and GS prosecuted for clear fraud, Corzine losing half a billion in - by law untouchable - customer funds yet roaming free? The reo-to-rental program, the farmer's subsidies, the defense contractors shitting all over Iraq, the Fed printing money like no tomorrow and buying MBS, the fact that a hospital can charge $80000 for an antidote worth $750 on the free market without having to disclose the costs upfront and without anybody going to jail for usury? Undeclared wars, NSA spying? It was always bad, but the last two administrations have been trying to take the record and when this one is done in 2016 they will take the trophy of most corrupt administration from Dubya. Next time you keep asking that question for the umpteenth time, please refer to this thread.

114   tatupu70   2014 Mar 9, 8:47am  

turtledove says

He would then sell both. This continued and his projects grew in scope over the years. It took him a long time, but by the time he was 50, he was a very rich guy.

I think we're talking about different kinds of rich there. But even so, I would wager that he had occasion to push the limits with the local inspectors back in his day...

115   indigenous   2014 Mar 9, 8:49am  

marcus says

Wow, a new record even for disingenuous, he found three different ways to say " I know you are, but what am I" all in one comment.

That is what you got out of that, good thing you work for the government, you sure as fuck could not get a job in the private sector.

116   tatupu70   2014 Mar 9, 8:54am  

mell says

No, it has been explained to you thousands of times, you just don't want to comprehend

No--I understand what you think. But your reasoning is flawed. Every law that passes has some winners and some losers. Just because a law passes that benefits you, doesn't mean you are the reason it passed or that something nefarious was involved. What if I simply accurately predicted how things would turn out because I understand how/why congressmen think and vote and planned accordingly. How can you tell the difference??
mell says

Corzine losing half a billion in - by law untouchable - customer funds yet roaming free? The reo-to-rental program, the farmer's subsidies, the defense contractors shitting all over Iraq, the Fed printing money like no tomorrow and buying MBS, the fact that a hospital can charge $80000 for an antidote worth $750 on the free market without having to disclose the costs upfront and without anybody going to jail for usury? Undeclared wars, NSA spying?

So now anything you disagree with is "cronyism?" That's about what I thought.

117   mell   2014 Mar 9, 9:12am  

tatupu70 says

Every law that passes has some winners and some losers.

If you opened a money management business tomorrow and then "lost" your clients monies you would be in jail in no time. This is a law. What happened under this administration was not only a set of unfortunate new laws and regulations boosting crony capitalism, what also happened was selective abandonment of the rule of law. There is no excuse for this and if Dems and Repubs weren't the same this administration would have been impeached years ago as would have been W. This is why I think the current quagmire in the Republican party could have them realize that they cannot win without resurrecting Libertarian principles and break with the establishment. They actually have a much better chance of reformation due to their current incongruent state than the Democrats who have almost "solidified" in their corruptive policies.

118   tatupu70   2014 Mar 9, 9:22am  

mell says

If you opened a money management business tomorrow and then "lost" your clients monies you would be in jail in no time.

What the hell are you talking about. It's not against the law to lose clients money. Where the eff did you get that idea???

mell says

What happened under this administration was not only a set of unfortunate new laws and regulations boosting crony capitalism, what also happened was selective abandonment of the rule of law.

Wow--it never ceases to amaze me how many armchair quarterbacks there are here. You THINK that fraud was committed. I probably agree. But all that matters is what you can prove in a court of law. And you don't know that.

I'm assuming that's what you are referencing--no criminal action against Wall St. What other abandonment was there?

119   mell   2014 Mar 9, 9:37am  

tatupu70 says

mell says

If you opened a money management business tomorrow and then "lost" your clients monies you would be in jail in no time.

What the hell are you talking about. It's not against the law to lose clients money. Where the eff did you get that idea???

Better educate yourself, it is illegal to use segregated customer accounts for corporate purposes (in this case to cover the companies investment losses and looming bankruptcy), and that's what happened. The fact that he is not in jail is grounds for impeachment. But then again, he is/was a big time Obama campaign supporter. Any questions?

120   tatupu70   2014 Mar 9, 9:42am  

mell says

Better educate yourself, it is illegal to use segregated customer accounts for corporate purposes (in this case to cover the companies investment losses and looming bankruptcy), and that's what happened

Maybe--but that's not what you said.

mell says

The fact that he is not in jail is grounds for impeachment. But then again, he is/was a big time Obama campaign supporter. Any questions?

Sure--can you share the proof that he broke the law. And that his connection to Obama is/was the reason he wasn't prosecuted?

Any answers?

121   mell   2014 Mar 9, 9:50am  

tatupu70 says

mell says

The fact that he is not in jail is grounds for impeachment. But then again, he is/was a big time Obama campaign supporter. Any questions?

Sure--can you share the proof that he broke the law. And that his connection to Obama is/was the reason he wasn't prosecuted?

Any answers?

Absolutely - there is an email stating Corzine directing that transfer. The only defense he had was pleading "da fif" and saying that it was not customer money. But the money was missing (and not traceable to investment losses), that's a fact and if you had done that you'd be sent to jail for a long long time. That is on par with W pardoning scooter "treason" libby on his last day (though one could argue that at least libby was prosecuted and convicted and then pardoned which is fucked up but unfortunately not against the law).

122   tatupu70   2014 Mar 9, 10:40am  

mell says

Absolutely - there is an email stating Corzine directing that transfer

link? And not to a long story detailing the circumstantial evidence against Corzine-please link to the damning email.

« First        Comments 84 - 122 of 122        Search these comments

Please register to comment:

api   best comments   contact   latest images   memes   one year ago   random   suggestions