Winstonm, on 2017-May-30, 11:45, said:
A) "Official version": Two old friends met on a runway and visited for 30 minutes about family and old times.
B) "Coonspiracy version": Two old friends, one beholding to the other, planned a clandestine meeting by arranging to land two large aircraft at the same airport in order to hide from view, when any number of truly secret methods of communicating were available, and in 30 minutes concocted a plan to protect Hillary from prosecution regardless of what the FBI investigation found, knowing that the head of the FBI was rigorously straightforward and unafraid to back down powerful people who tried power plays, and these two people who were so smart to be able to compromise the FBI and Justice Department were too stupid to keep their meeting a secret, knowing that if came to light that it would probably cost Hillary dearly.
Yet B is the simple answer? Also, the use of the typical conspiracy website close: how can we trust the government? doesn't help the argument
Now, with that said, I agree that the was a monumentally stupid thing to do - and it looks quite suspicious on its face. And it was the one act that probably did cost Clinton the election. None of that rises to the level of conspiracy.
If you have listened to John Dean, you would know that he time and again talks about Watergate being a series of blunders by the White House - not the well-orchestrated cover-up it is sometimes presented as. Smart people do stupid things all the time - there is no reason to believe that Clinton/Lynch were any less susceptible to random stupid acts than anyone else.
I think the operative word that describes why all these "smart" people do stupid things is "hubris". To some extent, it applies to President Trump. It certainly applied to the Nixon White House, and definitely to the "entitled" Clintons.
I would ask you to compare the approach of the Lynch DOJ to the Sessions DOJ in these investigations. And in doing so, I think you have to consider that the DOJ under Jeff Holder, and, subsequently, under Loretta Lynch had clearly become politicized.
When Jeff Sessions was linked with some meetings with Russians, he promptly recused himself from the Russian investigation. Subsequently, Deputy Attorney General Rosenstein, who has a pretty squeaky clean reputation of being apolitical, took over the oversight of the investigation. After only 2 weeks in his job as Deputy Attorney General (due to the Dems slow walking all Trump appointments), Rosenstein decided a Special Counsel was appropriate to remove all doubts as to the integrity of the investigation and whatever resulted from it. His choice was former FBI Director Mueller who also has a strong reputation of being apolitical. Whatever transpires going forward, it will be hard to attach any political motive/influence to what happens.
When her dubious meeting with Bill Clinton became public, Loretta Lynch did not officially recuse herself from the Clinton investigation. Instead, she said she would leave the decision on what to do with any findings to the DOJ's "career prosecutors". That might be OK, but with no way to make it apparent that whatever followed was without any political influence, it made whatever followed very problematic.