Your two options here:
A) I am correct, and the snip from your post above is correct, that my disagreement isn't with your position at all, and we don't have to argue any further.
B) I am incorrect, and you do agree with all those people, and you want to defend against my complaints even if they aren't specifically what you personally said.
You. Are. Not. Corrrect.
How many times do I have to say that?
I have told you
repeatedly and unambiguously that your characterization of my position as "the method the settlement took justifies scrutiny, the end result infinitely less so, but now it's rescinded so there's nothing to scrutinize,"
DOES NOT REFLECT MY POSITION.
Especially not when you make it clear in surrounding posts that you mean "scrutiny" in the weakest possible terms, diminished to nothing more than "an interesting legal hiccup, but not terribly pertinent to the question of corruption",
WHICH DOES NOT REFLECT MY POSITION.
I have told you
repeatedly and unambiguously that you STRAWMANNED my position in describing it as "the issue is not [the end result], the issue is [the particular method that got there]" and that your characterization
DOES NOT REFLECT MY POSITION.
I have told you repeatedly and unambiguously that when you characterized my position as ""focused specifically on the "how", but most people upset were upset at the "what""
THAT DOES NOT REFLECT MY POSITION!
But rather than even letting that sit as an agree to disagree thing, you keep on acting like you can give me the goddamn runaround and convince me that I actually hold those positions you're falsely attributing to me!
The irony here is that you've spent much of this discussion arguing that people reach conclusions about Trump because their worldview predisposes them to see corruption in him, regardless of the evidence.
But after repeatedly laying out the evidence I find persuasive, your response is still
not primarily about the evidence. It's about why you think people like me
must have reached the conclusion illegitimately.
At some point it becomes fair to ask whether you've constructed the same sort of worldview in reverse.
Now, to be clear, I'm not suggesting that you hold a worldview in which Trump can do no wrong, but that your rhetoric reflects one in which allegations of wrongdoing are presumed to originate from anti-Trump prejudice and are therefore can be dismissed by explaining them away psychologically, and that consequentially any evidence they invoke in support of their position simply doesn't matter.
Because I've spent multiple posts discussing litigation conduct, adverseness concerns, conflicts of interest, judicial concern, withdrawal timing, executive action, and the structure of the fund itself. All of which was invoked as evidence that provided rational basis for the allegation of corruption in both the litigation and the fund itself.
Your response was pointedly not to engage with those points at all.
It was to tell me that if the parties were reversed I would think differently.
That is an explanation for why you think I hold my position. It is not an explanation for why my position is wrong.