![]() |
Logic 101 quiz
Instructor: R. Mueller
If the President did not commit a crime, we would have said so. We did not say so. Ergo________________ |
To simple for some.🙄
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
what I think he said, was that if he could prove trump didn’t commit a crime, he would
have said so. he couldn’t prove trump didn’t commit a crime. that’s not nearly the same thing as saying you can prove he did commit one. your quiz is flawed and misleading. Trump doesn’t have to prove he didn’t do it, he is presumed innocent. we have to prove he did. We haven’t proven that. how does one prove that they didn’t commit obstruction or conspire to collide? Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
Keep believing, read the report, it’s clear obstruction happened.
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
Quote:
As to obstruction, I want him charged if he did it. But the long list of examples of liberals willing to say ANYTHING to make him look bad, makes me skeptical. I heard for two years that there'd be an indictment on collusion with Russia, then Buzzfeed and CNN said Trump ordered his lawyer to lie to Congress under oath. I praise him when he deserves it, I criticize him when he deserves it. I don't have an agenda to defend him at all costs, nor do I have an agenda to get rid of him at all costs. His attackers have the same amount of credibility as Sean Hannity, they are fools who are not to be taken seriously. That doesn't mean he didn't do it. |
Quote:
It is illogical to compare what you imply that Mueller said to what he actually said, then proceed to "ergo" into a conclusion. Mueller said "if we had confidence after a thorough investigation of the facts that the President clearly did not commit obstruction of justice, we would so state.” That is nowhere near what you imply that he said. Saying that he did not have confidence that Trump did not commit obstruction is saying that he is not sure that Trump did not obstruct. DOJ rules did not prevent him from saying that he had "confidence" that Trump obstructed, nor did they prevent him from saying he had confidence that Trump didn't obstruct. Your "If the President did not commit a crime" proposes a fact--that the President did not commit a crime. And your "Ergo" leads us to the fact that he did. But Mueller's lacking confidence proposes uncertainty, unsurety, that Trump did not obstruct. So an "ergo" re that would be that Mueller is unsure that he did obstruct. Again, DOJ rules do not prohibit the Special Counsel from saying that his thorough investigation gives him "confidence" that Trump obstructed. Mueller did not say that . . . ergo . . . . . |
Quote:
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
Quote:
Keep obfuscating Mueller and Trump are opposite ends of the spectrum. Trump is a con man, always has been and always will be. Do you think Mueller has the ability to spin? Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
Quote:
|
Quote:
|
So simple yet incredibly revealing. Thanks for exposing this crazy evidence PeteF.
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
Quote:
Ergo_______ |
Quote:
democrats cried wolf too long, the wolf never appeared....now they want to cry sheep....and when that doesn't work they will cry something else....dummycrats have been running around yelling TREASON!! for 2 years.....yawn |
Quote:
based entirely, on something that’s demonstrably false. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
Quote:
claiming you lied here. Mueller said he couldn’t prove that Trump didn’t commit instruction. YOU are saying that means he did it. Absurd. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
Quote:
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
Quote:
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
Quote:
how do you prove you didn’t obstruct justice, anyway? i mean, you can prove you didn’t commit murder with DNA or by proving you were somewhere else when the murder happened. but obstruction of justice? there’s no conceivable way to prove you didn’t do it. Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
For two years we screamed under needing to wait for conclusions in the Mueller Report.
It came and it was underwhelming. I do suspect Trump did something wrong and illegal which means there is no difference than his competition or predecessors. The Mueller Report did not deliver anything earth shattering, damning, nor apparently something to prosecute with. |
Quote:
So sure no collusion, but volume 2 clearly is where the rubber meets the road and that part may be his downfall. Funny you say Trump may have down "something" wrong, when volume 2 details numerous things he did wrong, but I guess if you believe he is no worse than any other president in the past you are entitled to that opinion. If this is the new norm, we are in trouble people. |
Quote:
And, anyway, trying to frame it in a certain way is a subtle method of accusation. And he knows that. He knows that if there is not enough evidence to convict, an honest, reputable prosecutor would leave it at that, case closed, and not try to leave an aura of guilt, a stench in the public eye. A stench that cannot be verified to be certainly true is a smear. Reputable prosecutors and judges don't do that. As the video I posted above states, Mueller turned justice upside down--presuming guilt that must be investigated in order to determine innocence, rather than presuming innocence, but investigating to prove guilt. It was not Mueller's job to prove innocence, to "exonerate." By law, Trump is already presumed, at the start, to be innocent. That does not have to be proved. A prosecutor's burden is to prove, beyond a reasonable doubt, guilt. If he can't, and if he knows he can't after investigation, he doesn't even bring it to trial. And, if he's reputable, he doesn't make divisive comments later in order to leave a cloud of suspicion. Did you watch the video? |
Quote:
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
Quote:
Here are some historical notes: choose to do with them what you will, but I would highly suggest you go over Russian history for the past 300 years. Russia has been lying, "hacking", influencing, and sabotaging other countries positions and governments, and when available elections, for over 300 years. It is what they do. From the 1200s up into the times of the Great Game they did this to their nearby neighbors. In the Great Game they conquered or stole or influenced their expansion south and east through the Caucuses, the Stans, the steppes, and eventually to the Pacific. They have played games with all of Europe, Asia before we even fought among ourselves. From their revolution on they have been aligning with progressives and worker's parties in the US with varying levels of success, all the way up until heavy influence in the pre WW2 times and other than a small decade when they were licking their wounds, back again with the 60s through today. This is what they do. Frankly, I find it somewhat insulting that all of the people that complain about it now after ignoring it forever are often the same people that rush to McCain's defense now yet pilloried him prior to Trump. Quote:
Trump wasn't the cause, he was the result. |
Quote:
We need to drain the swamp, flush the toilet, and elect a new kind of politician, and start talking about what works and what doesn't, and stop incessantly shrieking about racism and sexism, and whatever other drummed-up hate du jour will get you another vote. The short term future is indeed terrifying, take a gander at your neighbor to the south, the state of CT. I don't believe the GOP has radicalized anywhere near to the extent of the democrats. Individual cases, sure, not national party leadership. The right-wing equivalent of where democrats are today (open borders, legalizing drugs, abortion until birth, use whatever bathroom tickles your fancy), is concentration camps and zero taxes and executing people for being on welfare. |
Quote:
I agree with all of what you said. Except I think that I "interpret" it a bit differently. Yes, Trump was the result not the cause. But I look at the result as being a corrective, not just a continuance of rushing to a mad end. And I see the "middle" to be different than what I gather folks on this forum who refer to it believe it to be. I don't think there is a middle between ideological extremes. Picking portions of each extreme just results in a variation of extremes. A variation that changes as extremes change. For me, the idea of a constant ideological "middle" is that which doesn't change, but is the point from which extremes diverge. It is an unchanging principle, a foundation, upon which a society is founded. My notion of losing our "middle" would be abandoning that founding principle. We no longer agree to even consider that middle when we discuss politics, much less act on it. |
Quote:
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
Quote:
|
Calling Mueller’s team “some of the worst human beings on Earth,” while saying he’s in love with Kim Jong-un, a dictator who murders people for sport, tosses thousands in gulags, and executes dissidents with anti-aircraft guns, tells me what I need to know about Trump.
What about all you want Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 12:15 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
Copyright 1998-20012 Striped-Bass.com