Of course you can't, it would challenge the doctrine of your religion, its heresy. The faithful must avoid such evil. The world is binary, Resistance or MAGA, there can no other option.
Sooo, not taking a stance based on belief is somehow the "doctrine of [my] religion"? Do you read your comments to yourself in your head as you write? Possibly after? You really should.
Nope. Independents notice it all the time.
Notice what? That people don't like Trump? That's not some sort of revelation. It's also not a mental illness. It's a simple formula, people who are rude, vulgar, accused of multiple rapes of both adult women and children with at least strong circumstantial evidence (and one civil case with the conclusion that, in colloquial terms, he did commit rape), run fake charities that are so badly "mismanaged" that they and their family are banned from running one in the state, cheat on every one of their multiple wives, apparently wanted to get one of his daughters aborted despite there being no medical or financial issues, had his personal lawyer pay off a playboy model to get an abortion, make numerous misogynistic remarks, barge into the dressing room of teenage (from 14 up) girls to catch them in a state of undress when he was many decades older than them, import illegal immigrants to work for him in construction, import illegal immigrants to work for him as models, hang out with and treat like a super close friend someone he knew to be a child molester, be involved in a scheme to deny housing opportunities to people on racial grounds, repeatedly use fake identities to tell self-promoting lies about himself, break multiple promises to preserve things (protected architectural features, protected natural features/wildlife areas, etc.), falsely take credit multiple times for inventing common words and phrases, tell massive numbers of lies, etc., etc., etc. (and I am only stopping because this is so long, not because I'm remotely close to listing objectionable things) tend to not be liked by perfectly normal people. Basically, just about any single thing off that list will cause a normal person to decide that they like something, certainly most combinations will. Yet, somehow, saying that not liking Trump is a mental illness (one referred to as TDS that has a history as a partisan attack coming from explicitly Republican leaning media and Republican campaigns) is not partisan to you? However, noting that using the term TDS is, in fact, partisan is, itself, partisan to you? But it's actually something that "independents" recognize? And somehow, independents are a homogeneous group that you, specifically, represent? For crying out loud, I'm an independent. Why should I let you speak for me?
No, Biden lowered that bar. As I said, when you lower the bar, toss away the norms, don't be surprised when the opposition joins you on that lower level.
Once again, I provide a specific example, and you just utilize DARVO, but with no details. No, it wasn't Trump that lowered the bar, it was Biden, and he did it at an indeterminate time and place with an indeterminate action. Also, he must have used a time machine since Trump was President before he was.
Actually I cited the Mueller report, which I read at the time. As I read various other primary sources, at the time
Name dropping is not the same as citing. This is like on technical threads when someone basically blurts out "the laws of thermodynamics" as a reason for something without specifying how those laws actually apply to the actual question at hand.
You not hearing about these inconvenient truths inside you info silo does not make then untruths
See, the whole point here is that this is not an information silo. This is a discussion where, if you have specific information, you can provide it. The fact that you don't and just seem to be claiming that, if I weren't inside some posited information silo, I would just know the things you claim to know, suggests it is you that lives inside a silo. One were you are taking certain things as axiomatic truths that people outside the silo want actual proof and details for.
Irrelevant. His prosecution has nothing to do with Trump's prosecutions. Or the false claims against Trump debunked by the Mueller investigation.
It's not irrelevant to the assertion made: that "lawfare" in that context is just a whiny excuse for being prosecuted for crimes by Republicans. Republicans frequently seem to use a form of what could be termed "lawfare" in constant attempts to use obscure loopholes, obscure legal reasoning, or the simple fact that things like the constitution has no teeth, allowing them to simply repeatedly ignore it. Not that they're the only ones who abuse the law like that, but Republicans have been really leaning into it for years.
It is also interesting that you say that his prosecution has nothing to do with Trumps. I was expecting you to claim that his prosecution was all part of a plot to persecute Republicans affiliated with Trump.
Also, which false claims against Trump in the Mueller investigation are you talking about? The Mueller investigation explicitly avoided making claims against Trump citing DOJ policy forbidding indictments against a sitting President. It was very clear that the report couldn't and wouldn't make claims about Trump being involved in a crime (though the language was also pretty clear that it was, in no way exonerating him. You claim to be big on primary sources, but that is something anyone who has read the report should be aware of.
It was delivered to the FBI fraudulently in terms of the person handing it over and its provenance.
How was it delivered fraudulently? Who was the fraud against? Was the person delivering it to the FBI defrauding the FBI? You need to be a bit more specific. It was delivered to the FBI without any concealment of what it was and where it came from. It was known that it was opposition research gathered by a former British intelligence operative.
Wrong. You are mistaken to think the goal of the lawfare was a conviction in court. The goal in the lawfare was to deter voters from considering Trump as a candidate.
The first part of that statement: "Wrong." is about me stating that they did not use the dossier in court. Then you go on about the "goal in the lawfare", which has nothing to do with the first part. So your only answer is literally just: "Wrong." No explanation of why it is supposedly wrong. No facts, no details, just nothing.
Actually, no. FISA expect evidence to be of a certain quality and legitimacy.
Sure. As I have already pointed out, in 99.96755% of cases, the FISA courts grant a warrant for the request. It boggles the mind to even consider the possibility that their standards are so incredibly stringent that the evidence provided was lacking.
Does not change the fact that suspected fraudulent evidence is not permitted. Even in your straw man police informant scenario. The informant's "evidence" still needs some credibility.
Only you seem to be claiming that it's fraudulent. There was sufficient credibility for the FISA court. Also, how is the police informant scenario a "straw man"? You keep using that phrase, I don't think it means what you think it means.
Its never loose enough to accept suspected fraudulent evidence.
You can keep telling yourself whatever you want, but there's never been any evidence of any outright fraud. Just verified and unverified information with the standards of what counts as "verified" up for debate. The evidence provided was and is sufficient for the warrant.
Pointing out the infinitesimally small likelihood that 99.97% of evidence is at face value likely fraudulent is sufficient to show the "all other things being equal" is being violated.
Wow. Talk about wallowing in ignorance. I mean, not being able to look up the numbers yourself is one thing, but not even knowing what the numbers actually are supposed to represent, even though it's right there in my post. To clarify, since you seem to have somehow missed it. The "99.97%" is not about any percentage of evidence being fraudulent (I can't really parse your sentence to quite figure out what you're even claiming there, but it's clear you're talking about fraudulent evidence. The "99.97%" is the percentage of FISA warrants that are approved. In other words, the percentage rejected is vanishingly small.
To tarnish Trump, and Mueller says Trump, the campaign, and the administration were not colluding. Reinforcing that the point of it all was not conviction, just theatre to sway potential voters against Trump.
Or in other words, you can't actually stick to what is actually being discussed, you have to distort whatever the other person is saying to twist things so that you can write about your own pet peeves.
Actually the investigation showed money going into efforts to soe chaos, to attack all viable candidates. It also showed the efforts were sufficiently small that they likely had no effect.
You do understand that operatives in US campaigns accepting money from foreign governments intended to "soe [sic] chaos" is still something that is a perfectly legitimate basis for an investigation, right. Of course, plenty of sources seem to confirm that the Russians did, indeed, favor Trump as their candidate. While I know that Russian state television obviously lies a lot, they certainly claim that Russia influenced the election and owns Trump a lot. Also, the Mueller report very specifically did not exonerate Trump.