Trey Gowdy eviscerates the new IRS Commission and takes that arrogant smile from his condescending face. This is the best 5 minutes you, as a Conservative Patriot, will have spent in years. A video you simply must listen to. (5 minutes of pure joy).

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Eviscerate:  to disembowel a human or animal;  to deprive of its essential content.  



Update:  What is incredible is that this arrogant jerk of a commissioner actually said,  "all of the emails have been turned over when two years of emails  (65,000) are missing.  If the reader cannot see the conflict in that,  well,  she must be a Democrat.  

The reader can go to 3:50 and listen to Gowdy set up the commissioner for a critique of Obama's statement, "There isn't a smidgen of corruption."  The commission did not see it coming,  and  BAM !!!  ,  there it was.  Beautiful.  

3 comments:

  1. What 'duty' is he talking about? There is no 'duty', there is no trial.

    An example of a duty would be a US code or law.... like The Presidential Records Act (PRA) of 1978, 44 U.S.C. ß2201-2207 - governs the official records of Presidents and Vice Presidents created or received after January 20, 1981. The PRA changed the legal ownership of the official records of the President from private to public, and established a new statutory structure under which Presidents must manage their records.

    This is the law that Bush broke when he supposedly "lost" 22 million emails during the height of the Dismissal of U.S. attorneys controversy, the Scooter Libby trial, and various other investigations of wrong doing.

    This is a BS manufactured scandal. Great political masturbation for Smithson.... but meaningless in reality.

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  2. I will let Gowdy's comments stand on their own merits. He destroyed this IRS Administrator. Bush lost 22 million ? Try 5 million and what in the hell does that have to do with the current debate?

    Understand that the Bush problem did not involve destroyed hard drives, vacated servers, and the cancellation of federally contracted, backup systems, all within days of the House inquiry.

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    Replies
    1. Nor, did it take three freaking years to tell congress of the "problem."

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