Ew, Lordy, she's good. It's enough to make me buy her book. But then I'd be reading about terrible things that terrible people do that would alter my naivety permanently and there would go my boyish innocent charm forever. I've yet to develop mature unflappable equanimity such as Sidney Powell shows.
She talks about Andrew Weissman's role in the prosecution of Enron and the destruction of Arthur Anderson in which just being indicted destroys the auditing business. Thousands of jobs lost just by being accused, then prosecuted for crimes that do not exist by combining two accusations that were later overturned, but after the business was already destroyed. What happens to Weissman for doing such evil?
Promoted, of course. Duh. It's government, not private business.
Here's Louie Gohmert discussing what he discovered about Weissman. It's terrible. Don't read it. It will certainly ruin your pure precious attitude. The page leads to this PDF file where Gohmert lays it all out, until he stops for it becoming too long to enumerate all the evil he's found, and that you must also avoid lest you become tainted with cynicism.
I'd say read the comments instead, to spare your beautiful smile that comes from your bliss, but comments at gohmer.house.gov are useless.
1 comment:
GRrrrrr. This really really irritates. There are bad actors in every profession but these guys are so well protected! Bad cops, bad prosecutors, even bad judges - they ones who dole out the punishment are hard to punish. People are intimidated to go against them and they protect each other. On top of that they've got immunities and privileges that are not afforded to those of us in the private sector. This guy (like Mueller) has failed upward to where he can do broad-scale damage.
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