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The Depths of the Left's Duplicity

  

Category:  News & Politics

Via:  heartland-american  •  6 years ago  •  11 comments

The Depths of the Left's Duplicity

We've known for years that we have a "ruling class" (as author Angelo Codevilla dubbed it), which looks out for their own interests. We also know that they despise the rest of us. Barack Obama was responsible for the term "bitter clingers" when he referenced small town dwellers as "bitter" people who "cling to their guns and their religion." Ruling-class spokeswoman Hillary Clinton infamously referred to Trump supporters during the 2016 presidential campaign as "a basket of deplorables." Not to be outdone by her own condescension, she doubled down on her criticisms while traveling in India last week, explaining that married women didn't vote for her for president because they caved in to pressure from the men in their lives (a baldly specious claim that her shills in the press were only too happy to echo).

But their duplicity has sunk to new depths. We see daily that laws that apply to the rest of us do not apply to them.

Former President Barack Obama's first attorney general, Eric Holder, was held in both civil and criminal contempt for refusing to comply with congressional subpoenas. Obama's Justice Department declined to prosecute on grounds of executive privilege.

Obama's second attorney general, Loretta Lynch, held a completely inappropriate, (and arguably unethical, if not illegal) private meeting with Bill Clinton while his wife, Hillary, was -- in theory -- under investigation by the FBI. The Justice Department's primary concern thereafter was finding and punishing the person who leaked the story about the meeting.

Former FBI Director James Comey bent the rules when Hillary Clinton was under investigation for improper use of a private email server: Her aides were allowed to claim attorney-client privilege; she wasn't put under oath when the FBI interviewed her (nor was the interview recorded); Clinton lied; she destroyed evidence that was under subpoena; the decision was made to exonerate her months before she was even interviewed.

Any of the rest of us would be in prison by now.

The left can scream "collusion with Russia!" and "election manipulation!" at Donald Trump, and the accusation alone is meant to discredit him and his election. Meanwhile, the investigation which Democrats insisted upon has revealed that it was the Clinton campaign that funded the dossier that listed a serious of fabricated events tying Trump to Moscow; that phony dossier was used to persuade a FISA judge to authorize spying on Trump and some of his associates; FBI personnel were exchanging emails plotting ways to prevent Trump's election and discussing an "insurance policy," (which some pundits suggest sounds an awful lot like an aggressive Russia probe) in case he did. These emails included references to friendships with a FISA court judge, Rudolph Contreras.

Nearly 17 months after the 2016 presidential election, special counsel Robert Mueller and his team have found no evidence that the Trump campaign colluded with Russia. Still, the investigation grinds on. Mueller is now subpoenaing business records of Trump's businesses. Meanwhile, the millions of dollars that flowed into the Clinton Foundation's coffers from foreign nationals -- including Russians -- while Hillary Clinton was secretary of state, is pooh-poohed as insignificant. Similarly, there are no consequences for Clinton's successful efforts to derail the Democratic primary process and deprive Bernie Sanders of the 2016 nomination.

But we're all supposed to freak out because of Trump's alleged affairs with large-breasted porn stars and Playboy bunnies.

*yawn*

Democrats dispensed with niceties like strong moral character in political candidates decades ago. (Hello? Ted Kennedy? Bill Clinton? "It's just sex," remember?) And as I've noted before, the GOP candidate in 2012 was the moral and faithful Mitt Romney. The left promptly went into full-blown deceit mode, painting him as a killer of cancer victims and a tax fraud. Those were all lies, and the Democrats knew it, but again, the rules are different for them. When called out on the deceit, then-Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid said smugly, "Romney didn't win, did he?"

Now we see this same dynamic playing out with use of data collected by social media leviathan Facebook, by political campaigns. It was brilliant campaigning when the Obama campaign did it, but somehow morphs into a national crisis warranting internal investigation when that same data is used by a Republican campaign.

This smells to high heaven. But it's typical. The left has been in a state of perpetual outrage since Trump's victory in 2016. In truth, they're as incensed as they are because they stacked the deck and broke the rules to win. All the rules, including those that should apply to political campaigns, media coverage and even law enforcement.

Now we're supposed to be dutifully distracted by the sleight-of-hand that is their daily barrage of hysteria, and ignore the evidence of their corruption that's right before our eyes.

But the public isn't playing along like the good little sheep they're supposed to be. Worse, they are using the internet and social media to spread the word and expose the deception. That is a source of further outrage, and it is behind the current efforts to silence conservatives and others who refuse to toe the left's party line.

That is a subject for another day.       https://townhall.com/columnists/laurahollis/2018/03/22/the-depths-of-the-lefts-duplicity-n2463448


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XXJefferson51
Senior Guide
1  seeder  XXJefferson51    6 years ago

“The left has been in a state of perpetual outrage since Trump's victory in 2016. In truth, they're as incensed as they are because they stacked the deck and broke the rules to win. All the rules, including those that should apply to political campaigns, media coverage and even law enforcement.

Now we're supposed to be dutifully distracted by the sleight-of-hand that is their daily barrage of hysteria, and ignore the evidence of their corruption that's right before our eyes.

But the public isn't playing along like the good little sheep they're supposed to be.”

 
 
 
sixpick
Professor Quiet
2  sixpick    6 years ago
The left has been in a state of perpetual outrage since Trump's victory in 2016.

It's not only the Left.  There are Republicans who are in just as much perpetual outrage as the Left, but they are afraid to express themselves publicly for fear of losing their constituency.  The people who put Trump in office were tired of being ignored by both parties and the Republicans who are true to their constituency are not in perpetual outrage.

At the same time very few are coming out in defense of Trump.  The swamp is dark and smelly.  Many politicians are in it too deep.  Trump didn't need to run for President.  If you notice many, if not most politicians who are re-elected once or twice stay in Washington for about as long as they want to and when they leave office they must have made some really good decisions in their investments, because the salaries they earned can not begin to justify the wealth they have accumulated.

For example, collusion with foreign countries.

How McConnell and Chao used political power to make their family rich

Inside the shady private equity firm run by Kerry and Biden’s kids

The Washington Establishment had a pretty good thing going except it hasn't been representing the American people, but representing themselves and their families.  There are suppose to be two Parties in Washington, but there's really only one for the most part and that is the Washington Establishment Party.

 
 
 
XXJefferson51
Senior Guide
2.1  seeder  XXJefferson51  replied to  sixpick @2    6 years ago

Mark Levin covered that extensively today.  There are definitely establishment Republicans or RINO's/democrat lite that are helping the democrat party screw America over. 

 
 
 
luther28
Sophomore Silent
2.1.1  luther28  replied to  XXJefferson51 @2.1    6 years ago

Stop it!

The only people screwing over America is our electorate. We are the ones that keep electing these dolts, Left, Right or Center with few exceptions.

Perhaps for the next go around folks may want to think before they pull that lever in the booth (old school) that's if they get off their duppas and actually take the time to vote at all. 

 
 
 
Snuffy
Professor Participates
2.1.2  Snuffy  replied to  luther28 @2.1.1    6 years ago

I doubt it. For years we have heard about how people should vote that rascal out but they continue to re-elect their own incumbents.  In the 2012 election,  90 percent of incumbents to the US House and Senate were re-elected and that is in spite of the single digit approval ratings for both houses.

 
 
 
XXJefferson51
Senior Guide
2.1.3  seeder  XXJefferson51  replied to  Snuffy @2.1.2    6 years ago

That’s because many people like their own Congress person but not congress as a whole.  

 
 
 
sixpick
Professor Quiet
2.1.5  sixpick  replied to  XDm9mm @2.1.4    6 years ago
We truly need a viable third party with the ability to take on both major parties and work from the center isolating the 5% or 10% of the extreme left or right that controls the Republicans and Democrats.

A lot easier said than done in my opinion.  We need to find a way to get career politicians out of office.  The only way I can think of to do that is a 'Convention of States' and put term limits on these geezers and geezelles.  We've moved toward getting it, but I'm afraid we are going to now move away from getting it.  The Establishment is winning and America is losing, but too many can't conceive of that being true.

 
 
 
XXJefferson51
Senior Guide
2.1.6  seeder  XXJefferson51  replied to  sixpick @2.1.5    6 years ago

A convention of the states is the answer.  Something the federal government has no say over.  Not the President or congress or the Supreme Court.  It’s simply the states and the people.  It’s just 2/3 of the states rather than 2/3 of both houses to get it going and send things to the states for ratification. The 3/4 of states to ratify changes applies either way.  A convention of the states is what the founders gave us to deal with an unresponsive federal government.  

 
 
 
XXJefferson51
Senior Guide
2.1.7  seeder  XXJefferson51  replied to  XDm9mm @2.1.4    6 years ago

Today was proof of that.  Trump should have vetoed that criminal bill the establishment sent to him today.  It would have been better to shut down the government than to sign that abomination.  

 
 
 
XXJefferson51
Senior Guide
2.1.8  seeder  XXJefferson51  replied to  XDm9mm @2.1.4    6 years ago

Time to bring back the TEA Party and make it the 3rd party.  

 
 

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