A Series Of Unfortunate Events For The IRS

Yeah, right:

That these events represent an unconnected string of unfortunate events — all of which just so happen to benefit the Left and its IRS allies while hurting conservatives and IRS critics — beggars belief. Add to that mix the willful dishonesty, the staged press rollout, complete with planted questions, intended to preempt questions about the internal investigation and its results, the naked lie that the wrongdoing was limited to a few nobodies in Cincinnati — the only way to believe that story is to desire very deeply to believe it.

The alternative and much more likely — undeniable, to my mind — explanation is that the Internal Revenue Service is engaged in an active and ongoing criminal conspiracy to misappropriate federal resources for political purposes, to use its investigatory powers, including the threat of criminal prosecution, for purposes of political repression, and to actively mislead Congress and the public about the issue; that the Justice Department is turning a blind eye to these very serious crimes for political purposes and is therefore complicit in the cover-up; that these crimes were encouraged if not outright suborned by Senate Democrats; and that the White House is at the very least passively complicit, refusing to lift so much as a presidential pinkie as the IRS runs amok.

It will continue until Congress grows a pair.

11 thoughts on “A Series Of Unfortunate Events For The IRS”

  1. I think Jim has a point about how common hd crashes are. Why even the EPA has problems with hard drive crashes of people under investigation. We know this because the Obama administration is the most transparent in history and they told us so.

      1. Surely it’s believable that hard drives spontaneously self-destruct when threatened with a subpoena?

        And for those that agree that it’s believable, I’ll generously sell you a wonderful classic and historic transportation structure over the East River.

        🙂

  2. Now the unfortunate events include the EPA. Apparently the federal agencies decided to relax there backup requirements just as they received a bad batch of hard drives.

    1. I suppose I could see that happening since cheap drives and poor backup policies could be symptoms of a common incompetence. Funny though how this problem manifests when the Obama administration needed it to.

  3. This shows how much better administrated the State of Alaska was during the governorship of Sarah Palin, whose team WAS able to produce emails from both private and public computers. As they say, imagine how the press would have reacted if the State House IT department of the 49th state had offered up this “the dog ate it” story, back when.

    Makes me wonder if Palin is a super-hacker, capable of not only maintaining her own computers but destroying the PCs of her political opponents. Either her, or Chris Christie. SOMEBODY famed as a Re”thug”lican must be blamed for the loss, before the mainstream media will even admit there was a loss.

  4. Given that the IRS has now admitted to a felony, one would think that Holder would have to charge someone.

    If he does, we have a court case.

    If he does not, do we have solid grounds to impeach Holder?

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