Sessions has always been a tough read for me. He was one of the only Senators, perhaps the only one, who was through his entire career, completely true to his principles. He never waivered in the face of MSM attacks or RINO machinations. Then, in the campaign, he was the first Washington type to sign on with Trump. He traveled with him. He stayed strong in the face of efforts to get him to drop out. He has shown no signs in his entire career of being wobbly or a derp. Those who knew of his career in Alabama say the same thing.
So, as a result, it is hard to reconcile what we know of Sessions prior to his AG stint, and what his actions as AG seem to say about him. As AG, Sessions seems to have given in completely to the deep state, recusing himself unnecessarily, acted like Trump was going to be gone and he didn’t want to be tarred with the stain, let his DAG run amok, destroying people’s lives, nominating a SC based on a hoax, failing to take any actions in connection with a deep state effort to effect a coup. None of that is consistent with anything we know about Jeff Sessions.
So, we are left to ponder what explains the discrepancy. Was Jeff Sessions always a derp, but hid it all those years? Was he a good guy who became a derp? Was he threatened and got scared? Or was he playing a role in an operation designed to take down the deep state. We don’t know at this state. You can be a Q follower, and still make a case for Sessions good/Sessions bad. We will find out, hopefully sooner rather than later.
> “Sessions has always been a tough read for me. He was one of the only Senators, perhaps the only one, who was through his entire career, completely true to his principles. He never waivered in the face of MSM attacks or RINO machinations. Then, in the campaign, he was the first Washington type to sign on with Trump. He traveled with him. He stayed strong in the face of efforts to get him to drop out. He has shown no signs in his entire career of being wobbly or a derp. Those who knew of his career in Alabama say the same thing.”
Yes, that’s accurate but not exact, not precisely perfect.
Jeff voted for the Iran Nuclear Deal.
Jeff held out on that vote but in the end, under pressure from party leaders, he went along. That’s the way they roll in the US Senate. If he did not go along with party leadership, he could find himself deprived of campaign funds and a competing candidate backed by the NSRF. That’s the way party leaders control.
When Trump was 2 months into his presidency, there were many NeverTrumper Senators on the Republican side. Jeff knew that and wanted to stay out of the fight. At that time, there were actually many Republicans who thought there might be something to the Russian-Collusion story. Jeff did not want to be accused of obstructing justice if he prosecuted Clinton. The Clinton mafia threatens innocents to get their way with people in their way. Jeff knew that so the easy solution was to recuse.
Sessions recused himself, according to one twatter I read recently, because he was also targeted by the coup plotters. So he can’t prosecute when he was also a target of the plotters.
I have 100% faith in Sessions. Or more.
What’s he up to now, we wonders?
DITTO.
Sessions, at different times, has convincingly represented himself as a Patriot, a dupe, a derp.
As AG, Which one was a proven certainty?
A Best Bet would be one thing. Betting your arm and leg is another.