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POTUS 45.65: I'm Just Here For The Lincoln Project Ads

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Yeah the thing to remember (and i am sure uno has said around here) is that the feds will always take their time because they don't go to court and risk losing. If you look at federal trial records conviction rates are high which is why defendents plead out a lot. According to THIS:

The Pew Research Center funded a study into federal conviction rates last year. Its researchers discovered that only 2% of federal cases ever make it to trial. They also determined that at least 90% of federal defendants end up pleading guilty. Only 8% of those cases that are filed by the U.S. Attorney’s office end up being dismissed.

All but .04% of the cases that the federal government files end up in a conviction. This means only 320 of the 79,704 defendants that were charged in 2018 ended up being acquitted of their charges.

The Feds don't make the big moves until it is a slam dunk or they have enough to bully a plea. They have all their ducks in a row, have back ups for the ducks and could argue the case blindfolded.

note: that doesn't mean anything will come of any of this...but if the Feds have people cooperating AND they got a warrant to go after Rudy they have more than just conjecture and hearsay. He is a very public figure and former political big wig (not to mention well known attorney in his own right) the blow back on such a thing would be huge. They obviously felt pretty confident they had enough to not look foolish.
 
Does a retraction matter this late in the game? Legally, I mean. Clearly the ship has sailed on forming public opinion.

Well Newsmax named someone and had to apologize for it. They already retracted the earlier stories worried about being sued now it is all but a lock they end up in court...

In other news: https://twitter.com/Newsweek/status/1388310221496504320

Ex-state Rep. Anthony Kern, who was at Capitol riot, seen counting ballots in Arizona audit

Sounds legit and not shady at all...
 
Fcc regulates the airwaves, not cable. So unless they're actually broadcasting where you can get their signal using an antenna, no.

So even if something like the fairness doctrine was implemented, cable "news" networks would still ignore it. Interesting.
 
So even if something like the fairness doctrine was implemented, cable "news" networks would still ignore it. Interesting.

There's an old Supreme Court case where they basically said airwaves come into your house whether you want it or not, so the Feds can regulate them. But you have to invite cable into your home, so if you don't like what's on cable, you can simply choose to not have it.
 
There's an old Supreme Court case where they basically said airwaves come into your house whether you want it or not, so the Feds can regulate them. But you have to invite cable into your home, so if you don't like what's on cable, you can simply choose to not have it.

Was that the Carlin case?
 
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