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US Presidential Candidates

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Re: US Presidential Candidates
Post by Tenshinai   » Fri Dec 16, 2016 10:59 am

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biochem wrote:The cia analysts claim (at least from what is publically available) appears to be based on circumstantial evidence. In the spy world that's often the norm. The fbi looking at the same evidence (they get to see the classified stuff) finds it inconclusive. The nsa hasn't weighed in yet. All 3 have overlapping jurisdiction here ( cia foreign, fbi domestic, nsa cyber). The cia refuses to defend their position to congress. Possible reasons for this 1. The position is indefensible and the analyst who leaked the info lied or significantly misinterpreted the evidence. 2. There is an internal dispute at the cia. 3. They are afraid some politician will leak the name of their spy and get him/her killed.


#3 is ALWAYS used as an excuse, it´s the same as with how the USN goes with the "we don´t talk about what submarines are doing" crap.

Thing is, if it really was the Russians doing things, then this leak would make any such fear irrelevant because the number of potential spies is so limited that this leak by itself would be easily enough to identify the person.

More importantly, >99% of information CIA gets has absolutely nothing to do with "spies", spies are simply far too cumbersome and inefficient, and unless you have an insanely well placed spy(which nowadays is ridiculously hard, because the vast majority of nations have become very effective at making that not happen), you can get the same information by much easier means.

Seriously, it´s only a few years ago that the US department of defense had a PM structure that literally ANYONE could access.
Sure, the majority of messages there was petty and silly stuff, PMs of anything from grunts complaining about bad food at this or that base to a general arguing about grand strategy and why the latest vehicle X or weapon system Y was amazingly good/a stupid purchase etc etc..

I didn´t actively trawl it(unlike some), but i certainly went and read some stuff there, lots of so called "top secret" stuff openly and freely readable to anyone that could get on the internet, and they had that system ( supposed to be an INTERNAL PM system for the military and DoD ) for over half a decade(that i know of).

The point being however, is that that kind of nonexistant security, is not unusual, not in USA, not in most places, even if the US DoD was one big step above and beyond the usual lackadasial nonsecurity.


The cia refuses to defend their position to congress.


That pretty much confirms that they don´t believe in it themselves, and that its a politically hackjob. Like the "proof" of Iraqi WMDs in 2003.
Or like a lot of the "proof" a certain dood went with to the UN, despite the fact that it took me and others only MINUTES after seeing it to debunk most of it as complete rubbish, and the rest as nonevidence.


The cia analysts claim (at least from what is publically available) appears to be based on circumstantial evidence.


Nothing unusual about that, but we have a VERY reliable source contradicting that "evidence" which means it´s nothing BUT circumstantial, which is essentially rubbish.

Also, something you might not realise, is the fact that Russia is extremely opposed to "meddling in other countries", and have been so ever since becoming its own nation again, and even the USSR simply did not do "regimechange", it´s basically outside their zone of comfort/arrogance, both because they don´t want to cause escalation where it´s used against them, but also because they prefer not causing chaos(because that makes for unreliability in potential allies AND enemies, and Russians hate that).

Forcing regimechange however has become a favorite pastime for USA, and it tends not to care at all if a place is messed up by it, just another form of "collateral damage" apparently.
So, whoever is doing the mediawar against Russia is projecting USAs tactics on them.
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Re: US Presidential Candidates
Post by gcomeau   » Fri Dec 16, 2016 12:15 pm

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PeterZ wrote:
gcomeau wrote:
A more extensive investigation is more likely under the guy fighting to make sure even the less extensive investigation is blocked from occuring.

Riiiiight....

And what the hell do you mean by "it would reveal just what it did"? You mean the evidence of a problem in the vote that you thought was so darn important a few posts ago? Because *that* is what it revealed. That came to light because of the recount push.


A recount is an attack on the legitimacy of the election.



In what bizarro world?

A recount *confirms* the legitimacy of the election. It takes active steps to verify the integrity of the vote count to shore up confidence in the legitimacy of the final results. It is the exact polar opposite of an attack on its legitimacy.


You know what an attack on the legitimacy of an election looks like? It looks like this:

https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/sta ... 09664?s=03


**Unfounded declaration sent out to millions of people that the vote was illegally manipulated to HUGE degree just because a tantrum throwing crybaby hates that he lost the popular vote.

**Zero corroborating evidence provided.

**Zero corrective or investigative action proposed on follow up.


THAT is how you undermine people's confidence in the legitimacy of their elections. See the difference?


An investigation by the guy who won the election is an exercise in rightful authority. Big difference.


Election law specifies the legal avenues through which recounts may be pursued. THEY ARE ALSO AN EXERCISE IN RIGHTFUL LEGAL AUTHORITY.

Also, very few votes recounted in Wisconsin or Michigan switched but there were many more ballots than documented votes cast. Which 50 of the 306 ballots in that heavily Clinton precinct should be counted? Records show that precinct certified 50 votes but the sealed packet contained 306 ballots. 60% of Detroits precincts had similar problems. How does a recount fix that? It doesn't.we need an investigation.


YES WE DO!!!!!! *Because* of the recount you keep denigrating.

Guess who DOESN'T want one to happen? As evidenced by their fighting in the courts to make sure nobody looks at this any further?

I was right about election fraud leading up to the election.


That has yet to be determined. Detroit also had a ridiculously high incidence of reported broken voting machines that could be contributing to confusion over ballots cast.


Detroit is little different than Chicago. One party rule leads to election fraud.


Governor of Michigan: Republican.

Secretary of State of Michigan (in charge of elections In the Entire State ): Republican.

Majority in Michigan State Senate: Republican.

Explain to me which "one party rule" you are referring to here?


The re-count exposed the election fraud I cited in my prior post.



The recount exposed a PROBLEM which needs to be investigated to determine IF it was fraud or not. A recount the GOP and Trump have been fighting tooth and nail.


Pennsylvania wanted nothing to do with the re-count.


Correction, the GOP members of the PA government and the Trump team wanted nothing to do with the recount. Not "Pennsylvania".
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Re: US Presidential Candidates
Post by PeterZ   » Fri Dec 16, 2016 1:21 pm

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Dude, you forgot how Al Franken kept recounting his precincts and manufacturing votes until he finally had more than Coleman. Franken kept recounting until he won. Recounts challenge the legitimacy of the results. If the results are solid no matter how close, a recount is unnecessary. Recounts are only necessary if the results are disputed. If the results are disputed, the election's legitimacy is questioned. The more states agree to a recount the more disputed the election becomes.

Investigating after the fact is an exercise of authority by the legitimate winner of that election.

I know you don't agree. I doubt will come to agreement on this.
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Re: US Presidential Candidates
Post by gcomeau   » Fri Dec 16, 2016 1:46 pm

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PeterZ wrote:Dude, you forgot how Al Franken kept recounting his precincts and manufacturing votes until he finally had more than Coleman. Franken kept recounting until he won.


No he didn't. Candidates don't get to count the votes. For rather obvious reasons.

And state law REQUIRED a MANDATORY recount when the margin is under 0.5 percent. And that margin was WAY under 0.5%.

Of which there was exactly one. Not "over and over".

After that ONE recount showed Franken had actually won the rest of the delay in finalizing the results was actually from Coleman mounting legal challenges. Not Franken.


Recounts challenge the legitimacy of the results. If the results are solid no matter how close, a recount is unnecessary. Recounts are only necessary if the results are disputed. If the results are disputed, the election's legitimacy is questioned. The more states agree to a recount the more disputed the election becomes.

Investigating after the fact is an exercise of authority by the legitimate winner of that election.


So the North Koreans should be entirely satisfied with their election outcomes, since Kim Jong Un, the Winner, is fine with them and ANYBODY ELSE asking for the results to be verified is not acting in a rightful way.



Yeeeeah, somehow I think you and I would be agreed that that statement is complete and utter bullshit and the ability of BOTH sides to have the results verified is rather damn important to the integrity of an election system. Because if you don't have that then all you have to do is rig the win, and then once you're the winner declare that as the sole person who has any rightful authority to "legitimately" investigate the results, everything is fine! Nothing to see here!
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Re: US Presidential Candidates
Post by Tenshinai   » Fri Dec 16, 2016 2:01 pm

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PeterZ wrote:Dude, you forgot how Al Franken kept recounting his precincts and manufacturing votes until he finally had more than Coleman. Franken kept recounting until he won. Recounts challenge the legitimacy of the results. If the results are solid no matter how close, a recount is unnecessary. Recounts are only necessary if the results are disputed. If the results are disputed, the election's legitimacy is questioned. The more states agree to a recount the more disputed the election becomes.

Investigating after the fact is an exercise of authority by the legitimate winner of that election.

I know you don't agree. I doubt will come to agreement on this.


Seriously, get a grip. Or at least TRY.

You may want to check out antipsychotic drugs.
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Re: US Presidential Candidates
Post by gcomeau   » Fri Dec 16, 2016 4:36 pm

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biochem wrote:The cia analysts claim (at least from what is publically available) appears to be based on circumstantial evidence. In the spy world that's often the norm. The fbi looking at the same evidence (they get to see the classified stuff) finds it inconclusive.


Ahem...

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/na ... 248e9d5237
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Re: US Presidential Candidates
Post by biochem   » Fri Dec 16, 2016 8:47 pm

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gcomeau wrote:
biochem wrote:The cia analysts claim (at least from what is publically available) appears to be based on circumstantial evidence. In the spy world that's often the norm. The fbi looking at the same evidence (they get to see the classified stuff) finds it inconclusive.


Ahem...

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/na ... 248e9d5237


Yep, the fbi has now changed their position from inconclusive to the Russians did it. I see 3 possibilities. 1. Inconclusive is by nature a fluid state and when they decided to take an up/down position they went with the Russians did it. 2. The cia was holding out on the fbi and gave them additional evidence. 3. Political pressure.
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Re: US Presidential Candidates
Post by gcomeau   » Fri Dec 16, 2016 9:39 pm

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biochem wrote:


Yep, the fbi has now changed their position from inconclusive to the Russians did it.


I believe I missed the citation to them calling it inconclusive in the first place.

I have seen them say any claim that there were direct ties between Trump and Putin, in some kind of deliberate collaboration between both of them to influence the election inconclusive. But I have never seen them call the conclusion that Russia influenced the election in Trump's favor inconclusive. Where was this said?
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Re: US Presidential Candidates
Post by biochem   » Fri Dec 16, 2016 10:18 pm

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gcomeau wrote:
I believe I missed the citation to them calling it inconclusive in the first place.

I have seen them say any claim that there were direct ties between Trump and Putin, in some kind of deliberate collaboration between both of them to influence the election inconclusive. But I have never seen them call the conclusion that Russia influenced the election in Trump's favor inconclusive. Where was this said?



https://www.adn.com/nation-world/2016/1 ... on-russia/

Byline Washington post story from 5 days ago.
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Re: US Presidential Candidates
Post by biochem   » Fri Dec 16, 2016 10:39 pm

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And here is one of many stories re congress complaining that the cia refuses to brief them on the evidence behind the accusation

http://www.realclearpolitics.com/video/ ... trump.html
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