Bush should just pardon him now, its not like he has a political advantage to loose.
6/5/2007 5:21:21 PM
ok goddammit.LOSE is the opposite of FINDLOOSE is the opposite of TIGHT.how hard is this? I am NOT a grammar nazi, but i see this mistake EVERYWHERE. even on professional corporate websites. even in academic papers. and its not just a typo, because i see it done multiple times in both versions, in the same paper.i mean WTF, people? (*breathe*)oh, and yeah... ^ i agree. and i really hope he does.[Edited on June 6, 2007 at 2:46 AM. Reason : ]
6/6/2007 2:43:06 AM
Dammit, where is Webster when you need him? He thinks correcting people's spelling allows him to ignore points.
6/6/2007 3:03:56 AM
^ You harangued? It's a clever play on words, you see? Oh, forget it.If mathman really wanted to push the bounds of grammar, he could argue that he meant the word at issue as a verb. An example might be "He loosed the dogs of war." At any rate, mathman is entitled to an occasional solecism. After all, he is mathman. [Edited on June 6, 2007 at 6:48 AM. Reason : .]
6/6/2007 6:47:58 AM
Don't enjoy talking to yourself too much now.
6/6/2007 7:20:48 AM
^ It was only a rhetorical question?
6/6/2007 7:44:50 AM
ha ha "loose" although, joe_schmoe you are only fueling the fire thatyou and hooksaw are one and the same.(no offense hooksaw, but you do pick on the grammar, obviously ifI ever did such a thing then it would be easy to pwn me soundly with past grammaticalattrocities)
6/16/2007 12:43:00 AM
now wait a cottonpickin minute.wtf is this bullshit? how could anyone in their right mind think that I am hooksaw.you're trying to troll me, arent you?dont troll a troll, motherfucker. I will cut you.
6/16/2007 4:17:33 AM
^ ya, well I'm Iron Man so good luck with that.
6/16/2007 10:14:37 AM
^^^ Hey, I defended you, mathman. I thought we were all right. PS: joe_shithead is not me--but he does want to be me. He is not ready, though.[Edited on June 16, 2007 at 6:09 PM. Reason : .]
6/16/2007 6:07:05 PM
dont worry. he wasnt attacking you.making a "joe_schmoe --> hooksaw" comparison can only be interpreted as an insult to me.[Edited on June 16, 2007 at 7:49 PM. Reason : ]
6/16/2007 7:48:49 PM
^ joe_schmoe again finds the way to get the thread back to what every thread must eventually become... a hooksaw trolling-fest. Ok, so I admit you two are not the same person, but if you were it would be the funniest thing I've seen on TWW for a while. Personally, I've done that kind of thing on the CB back in the day, talking to one's self can be very funny if you can get another person in the conversation to boot...Alright, lets get back to the issue at some point here.W gimme my pardon already!!!
6/17/2007 1:43:57 AM
I want to see a pardon come from the White House ASAP. lets just get it done with. every administration pardons their favorite criminals. pardons are nothing new.the only thing i think is different about this one, is all the harsh words GWB had to say at that time, about the then-unknown person(s) who outed the CIA agent. i cant remember the specific language (maybe someone can find the quote), but it was something along the lines of:
6/17/2007 2:09:55 AM
^sure, but technically it wasn't Libby who did that anyway, it was Armitage, correct ?leaving aside the question of her "covert status" for the sake of discussion.
6/17/2007 10:04:10 PM
^ Yes.
6/18/2007 12:17:40 AM
okay, point. but regardless, all of them had something to do with it, from at least Cheney on down. Armitage took the "fall" because, conveniently, he couldn't be held accountable for it since he was no longer at his position. Libby, as we all know, lied to the grand jury about his role and what he knew.and furthermore, to complain that Plame was not currently covert, implying that somehow invalidates the more serious charges, either shows an ignorance of what CIA operatives do, or a willfully disingenuous effort to conceal this administration's Jacobinesque purges of the intelligence community, criminally destroying their political opponents livelihoods and careers in retaliation for daring to challenge their "facts".whether or not Plame was currently covert is irrelevant. it is criminal because there is an entire network of american and friendly foriegn operatives who worked with Plame in one manner or another, and by exposing her, it risks exposing them as american agents and puts their and their families' lives in danger[Edited on June 18, 2007 at 1:33 AM. Reason : ]
6/18/2007 1:22:33 AM
^ (Sigh.) Possibly the dumbest post ever. WTF does Armitage no longer being in his position have to do with a damned thing?! Oh, since he left his job we can't charge him with revealing the name of a covert agent?! BULLSHIT! ARMITAGE WAS NOT CHARGED BECAUSE THERE WAS NO FUCKING CRIME! PLAME WAS NOT COVERT! GOD DAMN!!!Libby was convicted on four counts in a five-count indictment alleging perjury, obstruction of justice and making false statements to FBI investigators--but is was lying about whether he had discussed the Wilson case with reporters. Libby wasn't the source of the so-called leak--he just got caught up in this political shitstorm.David Broder--who is widely considered the dean of Washington correspondents and no conservative--wrote the column below about this stinking mess. It is illuminating.
6/18/2007 1:49:33 AM
snarkyboldy
6/18/2007 2:17:29 AM
^ Worthless--he's got nothing.
6/18/2007 2:49:34 AM
^ OMG, you are just so damn typical blah blah blah blahthe fact is LIBBY LIED TO THE SPECIAL PROSECUTOR AND GRAND JURY TASKED WITH INVESTIGATING A CRIME yet you go on and on about how Clinton lied about a GODDAMN BLOWJOB so should be removed as Chief Executive blah blah blah blah blah blahthen you pull a single quote by David Broder out of context, why dont you feel the need to post the FULL quote, and not JUST THE PART THAT YOU AGREE WITH BLAH BLAH BLah blah blah blahdy blahdy blah
6/18/2007 3:00:25 AM
^ Man, fuck you! I didn't mention shit about Clinton in the last post, you stupid motherfucker. And any quotation you don't like is "out of context," you stupid piece of shit--that was Broder trying to be balanced.
6/18/2007 10:22:25 AM
damn, you misspelled something.
6/18/2007 10:37:04 PM
and pardoned...
7/2/2007 6:08:28 PM
^link http://www.charlotte.com/news/ap_news/story/182522.html
7/2/2007 6:11:30 PM
commuted, not pardoned.
7/2/2007 7:53:58 PM
7/2/2007 8:19:27 PM
omg, flip-flop.
7/2/2007 8:50:32 PM
omg, surprise.
7/2/2007 9:11:48 PM
“reputation … damaged” Yeah, being less popular is really a fitting replacement for legal consequences after breaking the law.
7/2/2007 10:43:15 PM
Interesting note, Scooter Libby was Marc Rich's attorney for 15 years.
7/3/2007 9:36:31 AM
it bugs me that he just commuted it, but wouldn't go out on a limb and just pardon Libby... i guess he's just waiting to do that until the december before he leaves office...
7/3/2007 9:54:27 AM
it's almost clintonesque
7/3/2007 10:01:45 AM
He didn't pardon so that congress couldn't hall Libby's ass out and make him talk. By commuting, he can still keep appealing and pleading the fifth.Still a bitch move, but when you have dirty shit to keep quiet, you do what you have to do.
7/3/2007 10:21:11 AM
^ i dont know if you understand what a presidential pardon means. no one can challenge a pardon (or a commutation) by a president. not attorneys, not Congress, not the Supreme Court. Perhaps one might say there was danger that Libby would snitch on Bush and Pals had he been faced with prison time -- but I doubt it. he'd have done the time standing on his head if he had to, and returned to the Neocon family with a hero's welcome.i found this article to summarize the whole sordid affair rather nicely:
7/4/2007 2:50:51 PM
This is interesting. Bush may have wiped out his probation in addition to his jail time. If this happens, I wonder what his response will be. I wonder if he’d honestly try to play dumb as if his legal team didn’t realize they could be getting rid of practically all of the punitive consequences.http://www.cnn.com/2007/POLITICS/07/03/libby.sentence/index.html
7/4/2007 3:22:31 PM
In any event, thank God that Roger Clinton was pardoned for cocaine charges. Pardons may tarnish Clinton legacy
7/6/2007 4:47:28 PM
Clinton did it!
7/6/2007 4:49:14 PM
^ Not the point and you know it.PS (man-on-the-street interview): Who is this?Blank stare. [Edited on July 6, 2007 at 4:55 PM. Reason : .]
7/6/2007 4:50:20 PM
if we can get off of what Clinton did for a minute, right or wrong as it was, and just concentrate on this one case....How can you not agree that what is going on up there reeks of corruption? It's quite obvious now that this was planned from the very beginning. The administration has no credibility if they "demand justice" ("whoever did this will be taken care of"), then when justice is served, the sentence is just overridden because they don't want their guy to go to jail. You might argue that Libby is just a fallguy for someone else. Does that make this situation any better? If that's the case, and Cheney or Rove or someone else more important than Libby was actually behind all this from the start, then it's pretty obvious that they intended to give the impression that someone, anyone "was going to pay" for this, while behind the scenes they were just telling him "hey - don't worry about it. You'll take the fall to protect us, but we'll just commute/pardon you if you get convicted anyway, so it's not like you'll go to jail or anything". That's just fucked up. That kind of system basically gives the Administration free reign to do whatever they want, because even if they're caught and get in trouble for a crime, Bush will just let them off later on.
7/6/2007 5:20:41 PM
Since Libby's punishment was so "severe", as W. put it, then why doesn't he just commute the sentence of the 1000+ other people convicted of the same exact thing? Oh that's right. They weren't one of his cronies. Another free pass for W. given by Hooknuts.
7/6/2007 6:56:40 PM
only republican presidents pardon their friends
7/6/2007 8:00:06 PM
^ that's not the point. Address the point ^^ concerning Bush giving anyone in his administration a free pass to do whatever they want, because if they get caught and convicted, he'll just pardon them anyways
7/6/2007 9:21:43 PM
Point of order.What relevance do Clinton's pardons have on Bush's commuting of Libby's sentence? This President's inauguration was marked by promises to restore honor and dignity to this White House, unquestionably holding itself to a higher ethical standard than the previous administration. Further, no former President's pardons are relevant to this matter.What this President has done is reject the sentence of a judge he appointed, on a case prosecuted by a man he selected, that was unanimously upheld by a 3-judge panel two-thirds of which probably voted for him.There are few secrets left, folks. Without that Justice Department to shield this administration by providing the legal basis for their flagrant abuses of authority such as this, the whole stack of cards would fall down.[Edited on July 6, 2007 at 9:39 PM. Reason : ...]
7/6/2007 9:38:37 PM
7/6/2007 9:52:35 PM
au contraireI think Iraq has a lot to do with this.
7/6/2007 10:05:39 PM
this administration is without a doubt, the absolutely most corrupt government we've had in modern history.bush/cheney makes nixon/agnew look like boy scouts.now, if you can find something in that to be proud of, okay. but you cant deny it
7/6/2007 10:33:28 PM
without a doubt? cant deny it? more like you cant quantify "amount of corruption"
7/6/2007 10:35:40 PM
Its so horrible Libby failed to recall a few things in a 6 hour politically charged witchunt. He could have just said "I don't recall" but instead he followed the goodwill instruction of the Whitehouse and was forthcoming. His reward, a trumped up charge that has not been applied to similar incidents that actually involved willful perjury, for example Clinton. The Clinton's had the good sense to be anything but forthcoming in their hearings, " I do not recall" was their mantra. Even that withstanding it is public record that Clinton lied before congress, and it was for damn sure on purpose. You can argue well that was about Clinton's personal sex life wheras Libby's testimony was about innerworkings of the Whitehouse, but Libby was not tried for the Whitehouse misdeeds, at least not according to the charges leveled against him. Yet that's what this was, it was not really a trial about what Libby did wrong. It was a trial against Bush, and the unquestioned perception that Bush and Co. are evil incarnate in motion.Not to mention we still do not have a clear answer to if there was a crime commited in the first place, if so you guys should be screaming for Armitage to be hanged. But, I know, Bush evil must put this first in mind and proceed from this premise.So lets look at this from a different angle for a moment,1.) Plame was NOT covert in any meaningful sense of the word.2.) Everybody knew that she was outed by Armitage early on, so why continue the investigation?3.) the only answer is politics coupled with prosecutorial overambition.4.) Since Libby actually committed no crime then it stands to reason he should not go to jail.This is really not that hard to understand. Has the Bush Whitehouse done bad stuff, probably. Is this an example? No.
7/6/2007 11:37:35 PM
7/7/2007 12:44:25 AM
7/7/2007 4:14:48 AM