when the committee presents findings to the House it will have failed to adequately represent the interests a signficant portion of the House, having essentially ignored their concerns.
Their concern is that the committee not exist and that the events surrounding January 6th not be discovered or revealed. The committee exists to do just that. And I've already explained that the committee does not exist to represent either parties partisan interests. It exists to represent the American people and do its constitutional duty to protect America from all enemies foreign and domestic. It appears that many of those enemies are congressional Republicans, which is also what the committee is tasked to investigate. Nobody who voted against the formation of the committee ought to be on it, just as nobody who bet against a sports team should be playing on it.
The committee and its findings, whatever they may be, were already not credible from the beginning.
The findings you haven't seen and that don't exist yet aren't credible to you?
Then your lack of rebuttal to the notion that the committee is a political attack against Trump is noted.
There is no evidence that it is that. You have provided none. You made a claim, not a sound argument. It doesn't need a rebuttal. All I see is a committee behaving exactly as I would expect were it doing the job tasked to it competently and in good faith. You see something else, but don't say what that is apart from that it doesn't contain Republicans chosen by the Republican leadership, which was their choice. How can that possibly be evidence of improper motives for the committee and its participants?
Why do you support a party that objects to an investigation of an assault on American democracy, an attempted coup? What are your values that let you do that?
You don't know the details... but you know? How do you "know"? Did you know before the committee was formed? Did you draw your conclusions from the biased committee itself? Did you gather it from a favorite news source?
Did I draw my conclusions from the "biased" committee that has offered none to date? No.
You had asked what I believed was the case, what the truth was, and I answered, "
I know that a seditious conspiracy spearheaded by Trump attempted to overthrow the legitimate result of a free and fair election multiple ways, including inciting an insurrection while Congress was certifying the election results. Players included congressional Republicans and top Republican operatives like Stone, Flynn, Bannon, and Giuliani, who were liaisons with the heads of assorted paramilitary organizations and their soldiers. The evidence for this is compelling."
As I explained, I draw my conclusions from the dispassionate application of reason to evidence. As I noted, I believe that the evidence supports all of the above. That you disagree tells me that you process the evidence radically differently, and that I will not be able to make a compelling argument to you using that evidence. When I see such disparate opinions as ours, I assume that I am dealing with a faith-based confirmation bias. I don't know how to get past one of those, and I no longer try. You political stance isn't religious faith, but it is unsupported belief nevertheless, and it is protected by a process that is resistant to reason.
Because Cheney and Kinzinger falsely claim to represent the interests of the Republican party, they were censured by the Republican party. This censure is completely appropriate.
No, Cheney and Kinzinger do not claim to represent the interests of the Republican party.
Again, I ask you what your values are that you consider it appropriate to censure two congresspersons for exercising their judgment, exercising their consciences, representing the nation and their constituencies as they see fit, and answering a public duty? What do you stand for? You say a fair investigation, but you've already decided that to reject any result you don't like, so that's not credible. How about democracy? How about the rule of law? They're both being assaulted by the Republican party, which clearly has an interest in preventing the discovery of the truth. It's why they voted against the committee and why they censured two people for participating on it. Or, if you have another theory as to why the Republicans don't want this process to go forward, please provide it and why you think it correct.
Uh-huh, going after Trump. Am I surprised?
Wanting to review Trump's telephone records is going after him? Shouldn't you want to know what was said that day between Trump and his orbit? If Trump has committed no crime, such records will help exonerate him. The committee is willing to see that if that is the case, and to include those records and their conclusions regarding them in its report. They will help exonerate Trump if he is not guilty. Isn't that what you want? I'd say yes, but also not what you expect, or you wouldn't call looking at them going after Trump.
If you agree to the "dispassionate application of reason to evidence", then please reject a committee formed with obvious passionate bias.
That's your conclusion, not mine. Would you say that your opinion that the committee is biased was arrived at by the open-minded evaluation of the relevant evidence? If so, can you share what that evidence is and why you think that it supports your claim of bias? I don't think you can, because I don't think you used evidence to come to your position.
Are you arguing that because Republicans are politically biased, it follows that Democrats likely have pure motives? are you arguing that because Republicans are politically biased, it follows that Democrats likely have pure motives? Or are you arguing that because Democrats likely have pure motives, it follows that Republicans have impure motives?
I wrote, "
It seems very unlikely to me that their motives aren't pure, and that they will not perform their duties competently and in good faith. The Republicans know that that will be bad for them if that happens, and so, they send out the message to anybody that will imbibe it uncritically that the process is unfair despite their being no evidence that that is the case."
No, none of those. I am arguing that the committee is attempting to determine what happened and the Republican leadership is attempting to stop them. Political bias doesn't enter into this. This is the kind of thing any investigative body acting in god faith does. The bias is against criminality and anti-American activity. If that describes people in the Republican party, it doesn't make the process political any more than any police investigation.
Nor will it be partisan if the committee refers a winnable case to the Attorney General, who will have to convince a jury of guilt if he wants a conviction. If you watch the show Law & Order, then you've heard them say, "In the criminal justice system, the people are represented by two separate yet equally important groups: The police, who investigate crime, and the district attorneys, who prosecute the offenders." That is not a political process, and this one is identical to that, the House being the investigative part, and the Department of Justice the equivalent to the DAs who bring those cases in the shows. Nobody is asked about their political biases except possibly in voir dire, where the purpose is to exclude them during the deliberative process. The Republican party will get all of that - fair investigation, and if warranted, a fair prosecutions.
What argument are you making here and how does it rebutt my argument that the composition of the committee strongly suggests it is biased?
You're argument seems to be that the committee is biased because it doesn't contain people McCarthy and those who share his values want on the committee. You haven't argued why you think that, so all you have is an unsupported claim. If you provide your evidence and why you think it supports your position, then, if I disagree with your reasoning, there will be something to rebut. All I can tell you at this point is that I don't see evidence of bias from the committee, and you have made no effort to adduce any.