Club Dynasty

The Ukrainian offensive starts

Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
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Obsessive would mean that I go look for Frank's posts to pick an argument with him and try to disparage him. I don't. I could be commenting on almost anything and Frank will voila instantly appear to try to contradict. I will say his responses come from a more genuine place than anger.

Now, calling someone a "flaming gay" is an attempt to disparage. That might have been a good time for some members to stop being tribal. On the other hand, being called a "a shade of Marxist" can quickly and easily be countered with a few sound bites like "No, I believe in free enterprise and free markets. There should be limits to government's role in the economy."

As I said many, many times..........several members will not engage with Frank and have openly said so. And I am the bad guy.
Wyatt:

Frank, are you seriously that lost on our forum relationship? Backhanded?

I directly counter you "mano a mano" whenever I come across your disinformation and have the time.
 

WyattEarp

Well-known member
May 17, 2017
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Ahhh, Frank you're doing it again.

If I come across anyone's disinformation here, I will routinely respond. It's not just you. You just happen to be a prolific poster.

On the other hand, you shouldn't feel compelled to respond every time I post something. In case you haven't noticed, there's a half dozen or more guys saying similar things.
 

Dutch Oven

Well-known member
Feb 12, 2019
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You obsessively harass Frankie and disparage him whenever you can. People read those posts and think less of you. And then they read your pompous self-justifications..... How do you think it makes you look?
The idea that anyone could harass Frank seems pretty absurd to several of us who finally had to put him on ignore. A stalker can hardly complain that his target is everywhere he goes! Obviously, I made a different decision about dealing with the Frank problem on this board than Wyatt has made, but I respect Wyatt's decision to continue to engage with him. You should respect it as well.

Normally, I don't get involved in such meta discussions, but you should know that more than Wyatt (I would suggest MANY more) see the situation differently than you do.
 

Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
92,733
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Ahhh, Frank you're doing it again.

If I come across anyone's disinformation here, I will routinely respond. It's not just you. You just happen to be a prolific poster.

On the other hand, you shouldn't feel compelled to respond every time I post something. In case you haven't noticed, there's a half dozen or more guys saying similar things.
Wyatt, you have repeatedly referred to me in posts and are now using backhanded accusations of posting disinformation.
If you use my name in a post don't act shocked when I call you out for not responding directly.

Its just clear that you know you've lost the argument.
 

mandrill

Well-known member
Aug 23, 2001
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The thing is it's not a 1-off article. You can do an internet search on "charge stacking" and several articles from reliable legal publications will appear.

You can deem all 37 counts to be fair and necessary. And that would be an opinion. However, you can't emphatically say charge stacking does not exist as you did.
Obsessive would mean that I go look for Frank's posts to pick an argument with him and try to disparage him. I don't. I could be commenting on almost anything and Frank will voila instantly appear to try to contradict. I will say his responses come from a more genuine place than anger.

Now, calling someone a "flaming gay" is an attempt to disparage. That might have been a good time for some members to stop being tribal. On the other hand, being called a "a shade of Marxist" can quickly and easily be countered with a few sound bites like "No, I believe in free enterprise and free markets. There should be limits to government's role in the economy."

As I said many, many times..........several members will not engage with Frank and have openly said so. And I am the bad guy.
Whatever, Wyatt.

You have had a response from me to both your comments and I have limited time. If you want to cite law review articles to real life lawyers to prove some point you want to make, you're in for a pretty choppy ride.
 

WyattEarp

Well-known member
May 17, 2017
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Wyatt, you have repeatedly referred to me in posts and are now using backhanded accusations of posting disinformation.
If you use my name in a post don't act shocked when I call you out for not responding directly.

Its just clear that you know you've lost the argument.
There is no argument. I just don't agree with you almost 100% of the time. What would you call monolithic, ideological posting?

You're not exactly a conversational poster. You're not trying to understand how things are or how they work. You're here to preach. And that's okay, but not everyone is a believer.

mandrill's political empathy might make him feel compelled to get involved but that is a bit much. I called you a "shade of Marxist" and the drama began. Would you understand the sarcasm if I said my Marxist friends don't have a problem with me calling you a Marxist?

Everyone here has to get over themselves. It ain't the first time and last time someone used a label here. I literally have members telling me how I feel about an issue despite posts to the contrary. I think I have been accused of being a right wing Christian in one way or another. Which doesn't really make sense, but if it fits a narrative people have in their head they do what they think they gotta do.
 

WyattEarp

Well-known member
May 17, 2017
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Whatever, Wyatt.

You have had a response from me to both your comments and I have limited time. If you want to cite law review articles to real life lawyers to prove some point you want to make, you're in for a pretty choppy ride.
You're going to take this personally, but I have literally said this to several attorneys on social media. Some are friends.

Avoid holding your law degree over people when expressing what is purely an opinion.

Attorneys as a group tend to declare their profession on social media more than other groups. They also tend to make comments with the caveat they have more credibility because of their legal expertise. I can't be the only one to notice that.
 
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Frankfooter

dangling member
Apr 10, 2015
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There is no argument. I just don't agree with you almost 100% of the time. What would you call monolithic, ideological posting?

You're not exactly a conversational poster. You're not trying to understand how things are or how they work. You're here to preach. And that's okay, but not everyone is a believer.

mandrill's political empathy might make him feel compelled to get involved but that is a bit much. I called you a "shade of Marxist" and the drama began. Would you understand the sarcasm if I said my Marxist friends don't have a problem with me calling you a Marxist?

Everyone here has to get over themselves. It ain't the first time and last time someone used a label here. I literally have members telling me how I feel about an issue despite posts to the contrary. I think I have been accused of being a right wing Christian in one way or another. Which doesn't really make sense, but if it fits a narrative people have in their head they do what they think they gotta do.
I have no idea what this story you're telling yourself about refers to, honestly. I'm sure you called me some kind of name, it happens pretty regularly here and doesn't bother me in the least. Even less so when right wingers, who tend to be 'a shade fascist' like jc or others lob insults. I really don't know what this drama you think is happening about, nor do I care.

I call out right wingers here because I don't see them in my world or work area. They don't exist there and this is the only place where I interact with them.

This is supposed to be a Ukraine thread and it seems you've derailed it, as right wingers do, into attacks on Hunter Biden as if he represents anything about the dems.

So in an attempt to defuse your Hunter obsession can we discuss China now overtly selling shells and ammunition to Putin?
Putin is back to attacking Prigozhin, which means that story is ongoing, but its also worth discussing China ending a more neutral stance and actively supporting Russia through ammunition sales.

 

Dutch Oven

Well-known member
Feb 12, 2019
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You're going to take this personally, but I have literally said this to several attorneys on social media. Some are friends.

Avoid holding your law degree over people when expressing what is purely an opinion.

Attorneys as a group tend to declare their profession on social media more than other groups. They also tend to make comments with the caveat they have more credibility because of their legal expertise. I can't be the only one to notice that.
There are several crazy aspects of the phenomenon you are accurately describing:

1. A PRUDENT lawyer would not self identify as a lawyer here on a pooner board. No lawyer can be sure who reads these posts. It could be clients, other counsel, law enforcement, even LSO investigators (not to mention spouses, or just other persons with an interest in doing a lawyer some professional harm). Of course, merely claiming to be a lawyer amongst thousands of practising lawyers never gets you very far, so usually the lawyer will add personal details like the area and location of their practice, the length of their time at the bar, the names of public figures they have had contact with, or even details associated with a particular case they were involved with. It is not hard to imagine how that information could be identifying, depending on who was reading the post. It's a dangerous road to travel on - especially in service of the trivial objective of trying to win arguments with strangers on the internet.

2. Even identifying as a lawyer doesn't ensure you will win the argument. You might even be arguing with another lawyer (who hasn't self identified) who is making a better argument.

3. Legal points aren't all that important to political discussions, since most of those discusssions are fundamentally about what the law SHOULD be (as is also often the subject of law review articles).

4. Law is just one institution of our society which has a primary purpose of keeping the peace through providing a conflict resolution mechanism. It is not a social institution for determining the truth, nor is it an institution for creating social policy.

5. Legal opinions are just that - opinions, even when they are constrained to opining about what the law currently is. It's not hard to obtain diametrically opposed opinions from experienced lawyers on MANY questions of law.

For all of these reasons, I think it is an exercise in bad judgement for lawyers to self identify on this board.
 

WyattEarp

Well-known member
May 17, 2017
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There are several crazy aspects of the phenomenon you are accurately describing:

1. A PRUDENT lawyer would not self identify as a lawyer here on a pooner board. No lawyer can be sure who reads these posts. It could be clients, other counsel, law enforcement, even LSO investigators (not to mention spouses, or just other persons with an interest in doing a lawyer some professional harm). Of course, merely claiming to be a lawyer amongst thousands of practising lawyers never gets you very far, so usually the lawyer will add personal details like the area and location of their practice, the length of their time at the bar, the names of public figures they have had contact with, or even details associated with a particular case they were involved with. It is not hard to imagine how that information could be identifying, depending on who was reading the post. It's a dangerous road to travel on - especially in service of the trivial objective of trying to win arguments with strangers on the internet.

2. Even identifying as a lawyer doesn't ensure you will win the argument. You might even be arguing with another lawyer (who hasn't self identified) who is making a better argument.

3. Legal points aren't all that important to political discussions, since most of those discusssions are fundamentally about what the law SHOULD be (as is also often the subject of law review articles).

4. Law is just one institution of our society which has a primary purpose of keeping the peace through providing a conflict resolution mechanism. It is not a social institution for determining the truth, nor is it an institution for creating social policy.

5. Legal opinions are just that - opinions, even when they are constrained to opining about what the law currently is. It's not hard to obtain diametrically opposed opinions from experienced lawyers on MANY questions of law.

For all of these reasons, I think it is an exercise in bad judgement for lawyers to self identify on this board.
I doubt this will be appreciated by everyone, but it is an interesting and well articulated take on things. You might have also mentioned that there can be subtle differences between the Canadian legal system and the American legal system. There are likely good observable reasons for why the American legal system appears to be more political.

I will say the attorney/social media participant thing is more tempered here than other sites. Many self-identified attorneys on social media seem to become experts on U.S. Constitutional law.
 

NotADcotor

His most imperial galactic atheistic majesty.
Mar 8, 2017
7,338
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The way things are going for Putin the nukes won't even detonate.
If you read some books on nuclear war [yes I'm old] which talk about the subject, it's completely amazballs how many nukes are not expected to reach their targets and of those who do how many are expected not to explode.

Russian and American although ours are a bit more reliable. Those numbers are assumptions based on a soviet union that waas competent, not one whose maintaince procedues were no doubt suspect back in the day and probably got much worse since the fall of the USSR, never mind what we know about how bad the stealing is. Those nukes have a lot of copper et al that could buy private consciptski a lot of vodka. Even during the soviet era it was known to be a bit of an issue [in general]
 

SchlongConery

License to Shill
Jan 28, 2013
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Who are the guys who keep whining about American's losing interest and support for providing Ukraine with BILLIONS of dollars of weapons, non- military assistance, loans, training etc etc?

Because I want to rub your noses in your own dog shit bullshit. NOBODY but mutts and gullible, selfish stooges believes the Russkie propaganda. I guess the same suckers who worshipped Trump and Tucker are mayyyyyybeeeee coming around to seeing how they had been conned and lied to.

In May, 455 of Americans affirmatively supported it. Now, in June... 65% of American's affirmatively support assisting Ukraine fight Russia.


Most Americans support US arming Ukraine, Reuters/Ipsos poll shows


WASHINGTON, June 28 (Reuters) - Solid majorities of Americans support providing weaponry to Ukraine to defend itself against Russia and believe that such aid demonstrates to China and other U.S. rivals a will to protect U.S. interests and allies, according to a Reuters/Ipsos survey.

The two-day poll that was concluded on Tuesday charted a sharp rise in backing for arming Ukraine, with 65% of the respondents approving of the shipments compared with 46% in a May poll.

Eighty-one percent of Democrats, 56% of Republicans and 57% of independents favor supplying U.S. weapons to Ukraine, according to the latest poll.
 

Valcazar

Just a bundle of fucking sunshine
Mar 27, 2014
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That's possible, but it doesn't seem likely that the documents were handled all that differently.
Not likely, but there is probably a mix of "you want to show the breadth of stuff he took" to show seriousness and a little bit of protection, not just from how they might be handled differently, but from different arguments about his actual ability to have them.

I believe the 31 charges are parts of one crime. I think U.S. prosecutors and especially special counsels are a bit prone to theatrics. I think if Trump is found guilty the punishment will likely be for one action of willfully retaining national defense information, but more importantly it will combined with the actions cited in the other six charges,
Yes, but remember the federal sentencing guidelines. These WILL be "grouped" as two or three crimes tops for sentencing purposes.
You list all the various elements, and then for sentencing the ones that are interrelated get bundled.
That's built into the system to prevent people from trying to send someone away for 500 years based on 50 copies of things that were all stolen at once.

Willfully retaining national defense information in itself doesn't seem like a big deal. It's the other actions after he was asked to return such documents that make the case compelling.
Actually, the willfully retaining thing is a big deal. Yes, the obstruction part is what really kicked it into high gear, mostly because it is hard to prove intent about willfully retaining something.
The assumption is that it was retained unwillfully, as a consequence of just so much shit floating about.
Why do you think they spent so much time trying to let him off the hook?
If he just gave it back and said it was an accident, he never would have been charged, even if they had good reason to think he had taken it willfully.
 

Valcazar

Just a bundle of fucking sunshine
Mar 27, 2014
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Wyatt, you can quote an academic writing a 1-off article in a law review as much as you want. I'm telling you what real attorneys actually do. 😼
Fair enough, but it isn't like the Harvard Law Review is just nonsense people spouting off.
 

mandrill

Well-known member
Aug 23, 2001
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Fair enough, but it isn't like the Harvard Law Review is just nonsense people spouting off.
But this seems to be different.

What I had in mind was what took place in a recent trial where my client struck the victim with a golf club. He was charged with 3 ascending tiers of assault - just in case the jury felt that the assault didn't quite reach the top tier of severity, or even the middle tier. Plus possession of a weapon.

This was just the Crown covering his ass that one of the charges would fit the facts as they emerged at trial.

What the article you post discusses is something quite different - stacking several identical charges for different acts during the same criminal incident in order to overwhelm the accused with consecutive minimum sentences. Try that shit in Canada and you invite a Charter challenge striking out the minimums and / or the consecutive mandates.

I should check the Trump indictment, but I assume that it charges different incidents during the several month period that Trump illicitly retained the documents. And I am unaware that those counts have minimum sentences or that they are mandated to be served consecutively.

@WyattEarp
 
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mandrill

Well-known member
Aug 23, 2001
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Fair enough, but it isn't like the Harvard Law Review is just nonsense people spouting off.
Ok, so here we are - the Trump / Nauta indictment. No mandatory minimums. He's appropriately charged with 34 counts, presumably one count for each of the documents or groups of documents retained, plus 3 general charges.

This has nothing whatsoever to do with the example in the Harvard Law Review.


@WyattEarp
 
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Valcazar

Just a bundle of fucking sunshine
Mar 27, 2014
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But this seems to be different.

What I had in mind was what took place in a recent trial where my client struck the victim with a golf club. He was charged with 3 ascending tiers of assault - just in case the jury felt that the assault didn't quite reach the top tier of severity, or even the middle tier. Plus possession of a weapon.

This was just the Crown covering his ass that one of the charges would fit the facts as they emerged at trial.

What the article you post discusses is something quite different - stacking several identical charges for different acts during the same criminal incident in order to overwhelm the accused with consecutive minimum sentences. Try that shit in Canada and you invite a Charter challenge striking out the minimums and / or the consecutive mandates.

I should check the Trump indictment, but I assume that it charges different incidents during the several month period that Trump illicitly retained the documents. And I am unaware that those counts have minimum sentences or that they are mandated to be served consecutively.

@WyattEarp
You should look at the indictment.

It falls far more under the idea of "charge stacking" as described in the Review article.
But the federal mandating guidelines don't let you stack up time served for each incident, that's just not how they work. (A judge can decide to ignore the guidelines, but then they have to explain what they are doing and why. )

The documents basically all fall under "stuff we found in the search that you didn't give back".
I would say the obstruction charges are closer to what you are talking about where the government proposes multiple charges because depending on how the jury views the facts it could fit one model better than another.
 
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