These are also the same conflicts that made Russiagate possible and trying a Russiagate case in D.C. entirely hopeless.
Take Judge Christopher Cooper, who knew Sussmann, worked for the Clinton DOJ, and whose wife represents FBI's own Russiagate figure, Lisa Page.
That's how Russiagate worked all along with Nellie Ohr, employed by Fusion GPS, the Clinton firm pushing Russiagate, while Associate Deputy Attorney General Bruce Ohr, her husband, was receiving smears from Fusion GPS proxy Christopher Steele.
Russiagate was a crime of the system and even when the system doesn't protect its own, it protects its way of doing things.
D.C. is Russiagate and vice versa.
Russiagate was a D.C. crime and yet that's the one place where you won't find an honest judge, a fair jury or any kind of trustworthy investigative machinery.
Russiagate will not lead to the hundreds of officials who enabled it going to prison, but the best way to prevent another repetition is with the breakup and decentralization of Washington D.C. What happened with Russiagate was not just a conspiracy, but a culture.
It's becoming increasingly difficult to discern fact from fiction, and unfortunately the media has a strong bias. They spin stories to make conservatives look bad and will go to great lengths to avoid reporting on the good that comes from conservative policies. There are a few shining lights in the media landscape-brave conservative outlets that report the truth and offer a different perspective. We must support conservative outlets like this one and ensure that our voices are heard.
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