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HORIST: Court-of-public-opinion v. court-of-law in the Mueller investigation

<p>The court-of-public-opinion operates on speculation&comma; gossip and preconceived beliefs&period;&nbsp&semi; There are no rules-of-evidence or legal precedents&period;&nbsp&semi; The jury &ndash&semi; we the people &ndash&semi; are not selected to be fair minded and non-judgmental&period;&nbsp&semi;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Unlike the court-of-public-opinion&comma; the court-of-law &ndash&semi; as imperfect as it may be &ndash&semi; provides a number of safeguards against demagoguery&comma; false witness&comma; unsubstantiated claims&comma; gossip &lpar;hearsay testimony&rpar; and one-sided representation&period;&nbsp&semi; These are&comma; however&comma; the mainstays in the court-of-public-opinion&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Our court-of-public-opinion is currently corrupted by a biased media&period;&nbsp&semi; The court-of-public-opinion works best when there is a court-like relationship between the conflicting sides&period;&nbsp&semi; The prosecution or defense is best handled by those of opposing views &ndash&semi; Republicans v&period; Democrats&comma; conservatives v&period; liberals or any issue where there is a bifurcation of opinion by stakeholders&period;&nbsp&semi; The media then serves as the judge&comma; allowing both sides to be fairly represented&comma; and with both sides having ample opportunity to press their best arguments&period;&nbsp&semi; When the &ldquo&semi;judge&rdquo&semi; takes sides&comma; you have something more akin to a &ldquo&semi;kangaroo court&comma;&rdquo&semi; where the verdicts are influenced or even predetermined by the court&period;&nbsp&semi; Unfortunately&comma; that is the case in America today&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>When the court is not impartial&comma; you have judges who impose verdicts not based on truth or evidence&comma; but on pure bias&period;&nbsp&semi; This corruption of the real court system was evident in all those Democrat-controlled southern courts that wreaked injustice on so many black Americans&period;&nbsp&semi; We can find it in many courts run by urban political machines&comma; where political interest trumps justice&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>And we see the same problem in the court-of-public-opinion&comma; with the media taking up the gauntlet for one side of the public debate&period;&nbsp&semi; The bias is clearly seen in what news producers and editors choose to report&comma; and not report&period;&nbsp&semi; In telling half truths out of context &ndash&semi; literally reversing the meaning of actions and statements&period;&nbsp&semi; It can be seen in the lack of alternative viewpoints on panels and in interviews&period;&nbsp&semi; It creates narrative designed to mislead rather than inform&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Nowhere can this corruption of the public information process be more clearly seen than in the coverage of the many aspects of the Mueller investigation&period;&nbsp&semi; One can expect the Democrats and the political left to prosecute the case against Trump in an aggressive and partisan manner&period;&nbsp&semi; It is the elitist media&comma; however&comma; that has abrogated its journalistic responsible and necessary roles as the provider of a fair forum and balanced presentations&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>As an example &hellip&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>There are clearly two views on the constitutional powers of the President of the United States&period;&nbsp&semi; The Democrats&comma; being out of power&comma; proffer the argument that traditional powers are limited&period;&nbsp&semi; They contend that a President has very limited power over the Executive Branch&period;&nbsp&semi; They see the Justice Department and the FBI as quasi-independent agencies&period;&nbsp&semi; They even argue that Press Secretary Sarah Sanders works for the people&comma; not the President&period; This is&comma; of course&comma; an extension of the Deep State theory &ndash&semi; where unelected bureaucrats have more power than any of our elected official&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In reality&comma; every one of these so-called quasi-independent individuals or agencies works for and at the pleasure of the President&period;&nbsp&semi; He can fire them at any time for any reason and it is not an abuse of power or a violation of the rule-of-law&period;&nbsp&semi; It is the President&rsquo&semi;s constitutional power and lawful authority &hellip&semi; period&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Does the President have a LEGAL right to shut down any investigation by the FBI&comma; the Justice Department or a special counsel&quest;&nbsp&semi; That answer is &ldquo&semi;yes&period;&rdquo&semi;&nbsp&semi; &nbsp&semi;The President is not only the chief-executive-officer and the commander-in-chief of the armed forces&comma; he is the chief law officer&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Can a President be indicted for obstruction of justice if he should take such action&quest;&nbsp&semi; If you listen only to the New York&sol;D&period;C&period; media cabal you would be led to believe that he could&period;&nbsp&semi; Actually&comma; the answer is&comma; &ldquo&semi;no&period;&rdquo&semi;&nbsp&semi; In fact&comma; according to current legal interpretation&comma; a SITTING President cannot be indicted for damn near anything &ndash&semi;including shooting the former director of the FBI &&num;8212&semi; WHILE IN OFFICE&period;&nbsp&semi; That has been the opinion of most constitutional scholars and the policy of the Justice Department&period;&nbsp&semi; The only remedy for abuse of power&comma; criminality or unacceptable conduct by a President is impeachment and removal from office&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>When former New York mayor and current Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani used an extreme example of the President shooting former FBI Director James Comey&comma; and said that Trump could not be indicted&comma; he was perfectly correct&period;&nbsp&semi; Of course&comma; the media jumped on the statement &ndash&semi; sensationalizing it &ndash&semi; to suggesting that Trump would be immune from ANY prosecution&period;&nbsp&semi; That is a lie meant to mislead we the people of the jury&period;&nbsp&semi;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Shamelessly&comma; the &num;NeverTrump media fails to point out that a President can be impeached and removed from office &ndash&semi; and most certainly would be in such a theoretical case &ndash&semi; and then could and would be indicted and face justice just like any other citizen&period;&nbsp&semi; That latter point was intentionally left out of the many lopsided analysis on MSNBC and CNN&period;&nbsp&semi; In a very real sense&comma; they blocked exculpating facts from being presented to the public jury&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>To further move the jury in the court-of-public-opinion&comma; folks like Joe Scarborough took Giuliani&rsquo&semi;s hypothetical academic example and claimed that he said the President could legally assassinate the head of the FBI&period;&nbsp&semi; In a court of law&comma; there would have been an objection to such a provocative and misleading statement &ndash&semi; and it would have been sustained&period; In the court-of-public-opinion&comma; the media controls the testimony and the flow of facts&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The Democrats and the press suggest that the January 29&comma; 2018 letter to Robert Mueller claims that the President is exempt from the rule-of-law&period;&nbsp&semi; Nothing could be further from the truth&period;&nbsp&semi; Trump&rsquo&semi;s attorneys were expressing their opinion and judgment on what the law says&period;&nbsp&semi; They were expressing the long-held constitutional and legal rights of a President&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Then there is the issue of pardons&period;&nbsp&semi; The left and the media argue that the President&rsquo&semi;s power to grant pardons is limited &ndash&semi; especially if the pardon is given for &ldquo&semi;corrupt purposes&period;&rdquo&semi;&nbsp&semi; That argument may sound good in the court-of-public-opinion&comma; but it has no validity in a court-of-law&period;&nbsp&semi; Presidents have an unlimited and unfettered power to pardon anyone for any reason &hellip&semi; period&period;&nbsp&semi; The only possible question is a self-pardon&comma; and that has never been determined by the Supreme Court&comma; so whether Trump can or cannot pardon himself is a meaningless public debate at this point &ndash&semi; even when expressed by partisan lawyers&period; That is an unsettled question&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So much of this media banter over the constitutional authorities of a president is what lawyers would call a &ldquo&semi;moot point&rdquo&semi; &ndash&semi; it has no relevance&period;&nbsp&semi; Just like the oft-predicted firing of Attorney General Jeff Sessions&comma; Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein or Special Counsel Robert Mueller&comma; the reporting on the powers of the President have no relevancy until there is an action&period;&nbsp&semi; The President has not been indicted&period;&nbsp&semi; He has not been subpoenaed&period;&nbsp&semi; He has fired none of the aforementioned law officials&period;&nbsp&semi; He has not pardoned anyone associated with the Mueller investigation&period;&nbsp&semi; And he has shown no interest in pardoning himself&period;&nbsp&semi; In fact&comma; President Trump has not been formally accused of any wrongdoing&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>All the controversy is hypothetical and designed to undermine President Trump for political reasons&period;&nbsp&semi; The central villain is the anti-Trump&comma; anti-Republican&comma; anti-conservative news media that has abused its privilege as the impartial arbiter of public issues to put its ink-stained thumb on the scales of justice in the court-of-public-opinion&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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