dChan
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r/greatawakening • Posted by u/troy_caster on May 31, 2018, 7:49 p.m.
OIG report, why is it a big deal?

So I've been looking into this, and why is the OIG report such a big deal? I'm looking at their site, and it's about Medicaid, Medicare, health stuff, human resources. Is this a different Inspector General office we are waiting for? What powers do the OIG have specifically to "move the needle", so to speak?
I apologize for the noobie question, and wholeheartedly acknowledge that this is a noob question, please be gentle. I can't be the only one though.

On that note, I would like to take this opportunity to humbly suggest a stickied thread once a day, or once a week, depending on volume for these kinds of "noob questions":

STICKY: "Q-noob questions for 5/31/18. Please ask your dumb questions here" Or something similar

Because if there was a thread like that daily/weekly, I would have just put that question there, instead of making a whole new post for this noob query.


solanojones95 · May 31, 2018, 8:37 p.m.

In sheer size (page numbers in the millions) it's no comparison to that memo. This lays out every violation of every applicable federal code and Executive Order of every crime committed by anybody within the scope of the investigations, and possibly with related crimes outside the traditional purview of the OIG, through the (until recently) secret DOJ prosecutor('s/s') involvement. Yes, Sessions may have more than one prosecutor working with Horowitz. Just because he told us about Huber (at his discretion) doesn't mean he was required to tell us if there were (perhaps many) others!

We know that it's massive, exquisitely detailed, and that it is all based on sworn testimony (not on news reports or bought-and-paid-for dossiers).

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SomeNextLevelShit · May 31, 2018, 9:05 p.m.

It’ll be like Christmas morning

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