It's not a matter of expecting things to happen quickly. It's a matter of repeated fake hype with "soon" attached to it. Like the Arizona audit, Jack Maxey, and Greggggg.
Yes, and my argument was that the people with the hype and saying "soon" may not actually familiar with how slow the wheels of justice turn for things like this; perhaps not even the lawyers involved who might have little direct experience with this type of thing. Telling the system that it is wrong is a major effort, and it will resist and delay change and criticism at every opportunity.
There is a possibility that the people expecting things to happen fast were inexperienced with the slow pace of justice.
Here is a senator who was pulled from office due to heinous democrat fraud which was finally litigated two years after he was sworn in - https://web.archive.org/web/20201114182126/https://www.baltimoresun.com/news/bs-xpm-1994-02-20-1994051024-story.html
I do prefer if law takes its time and gets things right... I'm just losing faith that is the case.
It's not a matter of expecting things to happen quickly. It's a matter of repeated fake hype with "soon" attached to it. Like the Arizona audit, Jack Maxey, and Greggggg.
Yes, and my argument was that the people with the hype and saying "soon" may not actually familiar with how slow the wheels of justice turn for things like this; perhaps not even the lawyers involved who might have little direct experience with this type of thing. Telling the system that it is wrong is a major effort, and it will resist and delay change and criticism at every opportunity.