Originally posted by robbie carrobie but I was not talking about criminal gross negligence I was simply talking about gross negligence as in being extremely careless.
negligence
failure to take proper care over something.
synonyms: carelessness, lack of care, lack of proper care and attention.
One would hope that Mr Comey does know more about the law than me, he was after all a lawyer. Its a pity he is not as articulate though. 😵
You continue to be wrong; "careless" or even "extremely careless" does not equal "gross negligence".
Originally posted by whodey The only thing he did was draw attention to the Fact that Hillary's #1 aide committed perjury, lied to the FBI, withheld a device on which she used to store 650,000 confidential/classified e-mails - a device and e-mails she shared with her estranged pedophile husband who has no security clearance.
If nothing else, as Comey pointed out, Hillary was careles ...[text shortened]... or judgment that endangered National Security.
The not so United States is a Banana Republic.
Not a single one of those things has been shown at all.
Originally posted by no1marauder You continue to be wrong; "careless" or even "extremely careless" does not equal "gross negligence".
yes it does, I have just provided a definition, you merely assumed that I was talking about being grossly negligent in a legal sense when I was not. Grossly negligent is the same as being extremely careless. If its not you will tell us why its not in a purely lexical sense.
Originally posted by no1marauder [b]Nor is "carelessness" even "extreme carelessness" equal to "gross negligence". Criminal gross negligence has the requirement that the disregard be "willful"
So Hillary knowing she should not use her private server and then inquiring whether she could get away with it by discussing it with Colin Powell and then deleting her e-mails with bleach bit and destroying her servers was not willful?
Originally posted by whodey So Hillary knowing she should not use her private server and then inquiring whether she could get away with it by discussing it with Colin Powell and then deleting her e-mails with bleach bit and destroying her servers was not willful?
All righty then! 🙄
No, she didn't "know it".
No, discussing what type of e-mail system she should use with Colin Powell doesn't show "willfulness".
No, deleting personal e-mails by using a freeware doesn't show "willfulness".
This has been explained to you over and over and over again.
Originally posted by robbie carrobie yes it does, I have just provided a definition, you merely assumed that I was talking about being grossly negligent in a legal sense when I was not. Grossly negligent is the same as being extremely careless. If its not you will tell us why its not in a purely lexical sense.
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From wiki:
Prosser and Keeton describe gross negligence as being "the want of even slight or scant care", and note it as having been described as a lack of care that even a careless person would use.
So gross negligence goes beyond carelessness, even "extreme carelessness".
Prosser and Keeton describe gross negligence as being "the want of even slight or scant care", and note it as having been described as a lack of care that even a careless person would use.
So gross negligence goes beyond carelessness, even "extreme carelessness".
Yes of course the mere use of the term gross implies a substantial degree and cannot in any shape or from be considered slight. thats why we are using the term, its extreme or large scale negligence/carelessness on the part of Mrs Clinton.
Gross
General or large-scale
https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/gross
Originally posted by robbie carrobie Yes of course the mere use of the term gross implies a substantial degree and cannot in any shape or from be considered slight. thats why we are using the term, its extreme or large scale negligence/carelessness on the part of Mrs Clinton.
Gross
General or large-scale
https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/gross
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Negligence does not equal carelessness.
I'm not going to keep going around in circles here; I have demonstrated that "gross negligence" goes beyond "extreme carelessness".