| | | I agree that it was an important moment. Over time, there will be some realization, first, that Biden was a disaster. And eventually, it is important that people understand how the theft occurred.
It has been interesting to watch Barr transition on this subject. I respect Barr, but he -- like the courts -- could not grapple with the idea that an election can be stolen (or "rigged"), corruptly, without fraud occurring or having been proved. The Hunter laptop affair is just yet another way in which that happened.
When he started his book tour he was asked on CNN, "Do you believe the election was stolen?" and he answered, "No." I was disappointed that he still wasn't getting it.
This interview says a ton:
(91) Bill Barr reacts to Hunter Biden news, cartel violence - YouTube
Barr is no longer refusing to call the election "rigged" or to suggest the rigging didn't impact the election. That's a step. (He also didn't rule out a reconnection with Trump in a future Trump presidency lol).
Barr had not previously been willing to give a second to the thought of the rigging of the election, or of the corruption of the Zuckerberg money -- which in a different interview he did.
I think it is difficult for inside-the-beltway types to get that there is a difference between right and wrong as seen in the states versus in DC. DC is not like us. We don't live our lives by the same rules they do, where money and politics moves mountains.
Over time I do believe the public will come to see why you cannot have the kind of bullshit that occurred in the last election and expect to run a government democratically. |
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