I have my moments.
I didn't mean to imply that you are okay with violating a public trust. Only that you are indignant at the capricious enforcement of violations of public trusts when the target is somebody you like, railing against the injustice of inconsistent enforcement while, on the other hand, applauding capricious enforcement of virtually identical prosecutorial tools when the "victims" are corporate fatcats with whom you, understandably don't sympathize at all.
Even that may have been a stretch because, looking back on the thread I see you are right. You didn't comment on Blago at all. I apologize. In my mond I was conflating your position with Jaskalas's. If you aren't actually all that sympathetic to Blago in the first place then my contention is completely misplaced.
Even if you are sympathetic to targets of inconsistent enforcement I wouldn't say that's quite the same as condoning crime. For example I kind of (begrudgingly) agree with Jaskalas that the politicization of incidents like this, coupled with the tacit acceptance of the political establishment that this is the way it's done as long as you don't leave any evidence, makes the execution of such sentences a sign of structural injustice even though the crime itself does deserve punishment.
It's a subtle distinction, and certainly not one that I communicated effectively with my misguided attack. My apologies.
Thanks for the response. The remaining issue with it is that it still seems to contain some claim that I am inconsistent based on whether I 'like' the person who violated the public trust, that's completely baseless and offensive. Certainly if Grover Norquist and Al Gore are both convicted of the same violations of public trust tomorrow I think they have very different records in affecting the public, and I'll be glad one is gone and not the other, but that has nothing to do with the issue of the crime and punishment which is the same.
With that, I appreciate the rest of your post, and basically, I haven't followed Blago all that closely but my basic position has been that it appears he's been corrupt in his handling of the seat and should go to jail - and lied about it. I don't like him; turns out he's the 4th Illinois governor to go to federal jail lately apparently.
Again, I appreciate the post.