Politics and Religion

Ironic situation
bulldogs 29 Reviews 2889 reads
posted
1 / 6

Does anyone find it ironic that members of Congress are in a position to punish Rafael Palmeiro for lying?  While I know that politicians of all parties do not have the franchise on being untruthful, they sure seem to have a big corner in that market.

Rudy50 15 Reviews 2067 reads
posted
2 / 6

Lying to the press or the public or to your spouse are not good things, but they are not crimes.   In an official hearing, under oath, such as a court of law, a deposition, or a congressional hearing, where the lie is material to the proceedings, it is a crime.  Oh, and as Martha Stewart found out, lying to FBI guys in an investigation is also a crime.  Knowing the statement is false is a necessary showing, so the question in Raffy's case would be was he aware of the positive test result when he testified?

+Alias 2549 reads
posted
3 / 6

Rudy50;
    Do you get a pass if you say "I don't recall..." instead?  Just asking out of curiousity...

bulldogs 29 Reviews 2253 reads
posted
4 / 6

I understand the perjury side of this.  I just find it ironic that politicians are the one's doing the judgement in this case.  The system is so corrupt, that they would not be sitting in those taxpayer-owned seats, unless they lied their way there.

+Alias 2417 reads
posted
5 / 6

Exactly.  One BIG GLASS HOUSE.

Rudy50 15 Reviews 1959 reads
posted
6 / 6

Well, you don't get prosecuted or impeached for perjury, but you might lose your public image, or in a court case lose your effort to persuade a judge or jury.

I expect a certain amount of lying, or shading of the truth more often, in politicians, so I don't disqualify them from asking questions.  But if they or anyone else lies under oath, they should pay a penalty.  (By the way I voted for the lying bastard WJC twice.)

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