W
WinterBorn
Guest
He lied about his personal life. It has nothing to do with his public life, or his oath to protect and defend the Constitution. You would put a 'fidelity' clause in that oath, which strongly resembles a religious clause, because what he did was not a crime. It could be called a sin.
Where the fuck are all the faux libertarians on this issue. Should the man's private life be his or the states?
Your attempts to connect this to a religious clause is bullshit. We are not calling it a sin. We are saying he was asked a direct question (several times) and he lied.
You want to believe that he would lie about his personal life, yet he is an upstanding, honest politician?? I call bullshit on that too.
No one is saying it is a crime. No one is saying he should be fined or jailed. I am saying if he lies to the public, he loses his job as an elected official. Trust is the most important factor.