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137

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[–] 0 pt (edited )

The linked transcript, page 31 of the 45 page pdf that's linked....shows this QUESTION that contains the "desire by the WH" that the author focuses on.

Its contained in a question, not in the witnesses statement.

The question (partial) is from a page 126 of a witness deposition transcript. The next page on the pdf is page 132 of that deposition. 127 is not there.

So the article does not show the full question nor the response of the witness.

I've read full transcripts on hundreds of depositions ... its common for a question by a lawyer to contain a statement of a fact that is indeed not a fact. And it says "guess", hardly the "smoking gun" that the author of the article states.

Looks like the author needs to go back to journalism school.

[–] 0 pt

Good eye. Why do you read so many transcripts?

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I read many legislative histories, which are transcripts, to see why a bill failed or passed. In them, if one failed of a bill I liked, then I can make a new proposed bill (accounting for the reasons why a bill failed) for a sympathetic assemblyman to re-introduce next session.

I read transcripts of many judicial bodies to learn just how stupid our judiciary members are (when I note a case did not swing the way I thought it would)...for those I can affect their continuation as a judge, I try to get them to lose their position. I also read many transcripts from courts of their viewpoint of the law that seems wrong and then contact assemblymen to see if I can find one willing to propose a bill to change the law (some courts see not action by the legislature to be an agreement with their decisions on the meaning of a law).

I have gotten many proposed bills submitted to committees in my state. One got all the way to the floor of one house and passed without a nay vote at all...but it died before being able to get to the next house. And I have gotten many past the committee stages, just to die awaiting a floor vote.

I average about 5 proposed bills a year actually being taken up by my state's assembly. None of my bills ever became law but some are "duplicate" ideas contained in other bills that have become law.

I read about 10 transcripts a week. About 7/10 are quasi judicial and court hearing transcripts, 2/10 are legislative histories, and 1/10 deposition transcripts.

[–] 0 pt

Wow. You don't mess around!