From Director to Defendant:
Comey's Courtroom Capers - by Skip
You know, it's wild to think the ancient Athenians had this figured out over 2,000 years ago. They understood something crucial: a society only works if people actually trust their institutions. So, they created this mandatory audit system called euthyna. Every single public official—whether they were a big-shot general or just some market inspector—had to go through it when leaving office. They'd have just 30 days to hand over all their financial records. And get this: even small accounting errors could land them in court.
This wasn't just for show. Take Pericles—Athens' most respected leader—who got fined for messing up the Parthenon's budget. And it wasn't just about money. Officials got judged on their actual job performance too. The Athenians knew people make mistakes, but they drew a hard line between honest errors and betraying public trust. After this naval battle at Arginusae in 406 BC, they executed six generals. Not because they lost, but because they failed to rescue drowning sailors. That's how serious accountability was.
This system pushed officials to be competent, honest, and diligent. Sure, it wasn't perfect, but it helped keep Athens strong for centuries.
Now look at modern America. We've got nothing like this. Our main check on power—voters—often don't know the facts and get manipulated easily. The Founding Fathers thought the free press would act as the watchdog. Madison literally wrote that the press must exposed government wrongdoing.
But today's media? They've completely dropped the ball. Instead of holding power accountable, they've become partisan cheerleaders—burying inconvenient stories and pushing narratives. Remember when they dismissed Hunter Biden's laptop as "Russian disinformation" right before the 2020 election? Or when social media platforms silenced people exposing Nancy Pelosi's stock trades? More recently, outlets tried to bury coverage of Iryna Zarutska's murder because it made cashless bail policies look bad.
This institutional rot is why James Comey's trial matters. As FBI director, he controlled 13,000 agents and oversaw tens of thousands of arrests yearly. Now he's indicted for lying to Congress about authorizing leaks against Trump. When the head of our top law enforcement agency operates like this, public trust evaporates.
Same goes for Federal Reserve Governor Lisa Cook—when mortgage fraud allegations surfaced, she should've been suspended immediately. Financial deceit from a banking regulator? That's like poisoning the well.
Yeah, Comey's prosecution looks political—because everything becomes political when the media won't do its job. But that doesn't make it untrue. His actions fueled a fake scandal that wasted taxpayer money, hurt national security, and weakened America globally. If he's innocent, the trial will clear him.
This trial is our modern euthyna—and we're way overdue for more of them, applied equally to both parties. In an age of media failure, legal scrutiny might be our last resort. Punishing corruption and negligence isn't partisan—it's basic maintenance for a functioning republic.
Frankly, the fact we even need these trials condemns the press as much as the defendants. When journalists choose complicity over truth-telling, courtrooms become our final truth arena.
Let's peel this onion. The real issue isn't just process—it's civilizational. Athenians knew nations survive on trust, mutual responsibility, and shared purpose. Euthyna wasn't just paperwork—it was a sacred ritual reinforcing that power belongs to the people. They understood power corrupts, and only brutal transparency stops it.
Our system? We've swapped duty for career climbing. Public office is now a resume line for lobbying jobs and cable news gigs. There's zero reckoning. The whole setup rewards short-term grift over actually serving the public.
The media's failure turbocharges this. They were supposed to be our accountability priests. Instead, they're grave-diggers. It's not just bias—it's a total mission failure. They're not journalists; they're narrative engineers protecting the ruling class.
The Hunter Biden laptop wasn't an oversight—it was press-led election interference. They actively buried corruption evidence to sway an election. That's not journalism—it's palace guard duty for the elite.
This corruption shows in their selective outrage. Right-wing figures get hunted over fake scandals (remember Russia collusion?), while left-wingers get shielded from actual evidence (like the Bidens' influence-peddling). This isn't accidental—it's built into the system.
Which brings us to Comey. He's not an exception—he's the system incarnate. As FBI director, he ran America's security priesthood. Lying to Congress wasn't a slip—it showed he thinks rules are for little people. Notice how he kisses up to power but crushes opponents?
His prosecution is political—but when media accountability vanishes, courts become our only lever. It's messy and imperfect, but the alternative is no accountability at all.
The deeper crisis? We've lost shared truth. A society collapses when its information organs sell fiction as fact. We can't even agree on basic reality anymore. Trying Comey is necessary, but it screams how sick we are—using courtrooms to do the job press and political culture abandoned.
The Athenian solution was elegant because accountability was baked into government. Routine, expected, impersonal. Our messy, politicized prosecutions? They're a desperate hack-job—like applying bandages to a corpse.
Real fix requires more than punishing a few bad apples. We need a cultural revolution: reviving civic duty, rediscovering national purpose, and dismantling the media-political machine shielding the powerful. Until then, we're just rearranging deck chairs on the Titanic.
Thanks Skip
The media was supposed to be our watchdog. Turns out they’re more like lapdogs being fed special treats by their political masters. The only thing they’re hunting is conservative voters
ReplyDeleteIt’s ironic how the media claims to protect democracy while happily fetching favors from the very people they’re supposed to hold accountable
ReplyDeleteThe media’s new journalistic standard: if a story hurts Democrats, it’s ‘misinformation.’ If it hurts America, it’s ‘breaking news
ReplyDeleteThe modern press isn’t the Fourth Estate—it’s a protection racket for the political class. Their motto: ‘All the news that’s fit to bury
ReplyDeleteReviving civic duty sounds great! Should we start by asking our politicians to lead by example, or is that too revolutionary of an idea
ReplyDeletePublic trust hasn’t just evaporated—it’s been systematically boiled off by the very people who took an oath to protect it. Now we get to watch them try to lie under oath about it.
ReplyDeleteRemember the timing? He held that press conference in July 2016 to absolve Hillary Clinton of mishandling classified information while simultaneously declaring her “extremely careless.” That wasn’t justice—it was a political hit job disguised as integrity. Then he reopened the investigation days before the election, not because new evidence emerged, but because he was terrified of being accused of covering for Clinton if they won
ReplyDeleteWe’re not watching a trial—we’re watching the last gasp of a system trying to save itself from complete corruption. If Comey walks, it proves the elite are untouchable. If he’s convicted, it proves justice only works when applied to the opposition.
ReplyDeleteEither way, the American people lose faith. And without faith, the Republic is just a piece of paper with some old writing on it
The real question isn’t whether Comey is guilty—it’s whether any institution remains capable of holding power accountable. When the FBI breaks the law, the DOJ covers for it. When the DOJ breaks the law, the media cheers it on. When the media lies, Congress holds hearings that go nowhere.
ReplyDeleteJames Comey going from FBI Director to defendant really sums up the state of our institutions. The only thing he’s directing now is traffic to his court appearances
ReplyDeleteTurns out the only thing the media is hunting these days is a good headline that makes the political masters smile… and a few unsuspecting voters to chase after
ReplyDeleteLying to Congress about targeting a political opponent? That’s not a rogue employee—that’s a feature of the system when no one fears consequences.
ReplyDeleteOur politicians don’t serve the public—they serve their future employers. Government service is just the internship before their real career in lobbying
ReplyDeleteThen there is the court system. From early accounts, the judge in the case has a history with Comey. The attorney for Comey, is a witness that now cannot be called to testify. When Comey stated "I'm not scared" he has good reason. He expects to be protected. Until our judicial system steps in and recuses the judge instead of We The People waiting on him to do the right thing, nothing really changes...
ReplyDeleteGB
Excellent commentary, until the press reports the truth, we can be manipulated and coerced by their surrogates.
ReplyDeleteI strill say Committees of Vigilance.
ReplyDeleteunfortunately, the "solution" - courts - are every bit (or more) corrupt as the media.
ReplyDeleteWhat about unbiased judges?
ReplyDeleteThe media is not just partisan. The media has been captured by those who would corrupt and rule over us all. Operation Mockingbird(CIA using the media to sow untruths) was supposed to be shut down but is alive and well. The repeal of the Smith-Mundt Act allows the government to use the media as a propaganda arm against the American people. Even the judiciary has been captured. This will be a show trial. The judge has a long history with Comey. It is a start, but we need one of the big dogs that gets indicted to roll over and testify against more people to actually get the dominos to start falling. Perhaps, if this happens, we shall have accountability. Until then...
ReplyDeleteThe Tree of Liberty thirsts.
Hard to find something upbeat for this subject.
ReplyDeleteI have a patch of poison oak I've been trying to eradicate for years.
Plucking the leaves just gives me blisters as the plants grow more overnight. Ripping off some branches about the same result, maybe a week longer or both my healing up and the plants recovery.
Burning the stuff makes the nasty toxin airborne a danger to downwind folks (like political lawsuits).
Until I choose to suit up to protect myself from the plants attacks and plan to dig out, black bag and bury the roots and all do I get some results.
And I have to do that every freaking year as it tries to recover from bird poop reseeding and little roots left behind.
Arresting Comey is just a branch of that poisonous 3 letter situation. Until the media is arrested and punished ALONG with the what 3-5 families that OWN the Media for crimes against the Republic, the roots and leaves recover and grow.
Makes sense to me make them accountable Joe
ReplyDeleteUltimately it stems from how much power we have ALLOWED GOVERNMENT to have over our lives, families, money, property, freedom, etc. Just imagine how little we would have to worry about a government with 95% LESS POWER, no ability to pick winners and losers, no ability to steal 60% of the national wealth through taxation, etc. We generally don't worry about businesses not just because they have no direct power over us (unless they get government to do it for them), but also because we can withdraw our financial support and put them out of business. They can also be held liable...assuming the government has not used its power to grant them immunity for their harm (think bigPharma and childhood vaccines). For some reason we have granted untold monopoly power to unaccountable government, while denying the free market its ability to self-regulate and hold all accountable.
ReplyDeleteTrying Comey is like using a Band-Aid on a broken leg. The real fracture is our shared sense of reality
ReplyDeleteThe crisis isn’t just that we’ve lost shared truth; it’s that we never had a shared truth to begin with. The entire 20th-century “objective” media model was a carefully constructed illusion. For decades, a small, insular class of Ivy League graduates in New York and D.C. decided what “the truth” was for 300 million people. They weren’t selling fiction instead of fact; they were selling their own partisan, class-based fiction as fact and called it objectivity
ReplyDelete