I’ll raise a quiet glass to Robert Mueller here. In the public mind, he was first the messianic savior of democracy and then an emblem of inadequacy and institutional failure — and both those visions did him a disservice.

He tried to do the right thing in a principled way. His effort failed, and we’ve paid dearly for that failure. The failure was his, but also all of ours to share: for every one of his choices that I can second-guess, I can name half a dozen places where others failed to hold up their/our end of the bargain, took the work he handed off and dropped it flat.

He failed, but he tried his damndest — and that’s more than I can say for a lot of folks in the USA over the last 10 years.

@[email protected] He earned the ire of America's most corrupt fascist by trying to bring justice, and for that he earned my respect.

@kratzen @inthehands

comparing to Comey is probably instructive: the latter didn't fail by mistakenly believing in the institutions the way Mueller did, he and his letter failed on purpose

@inthehands yeah we remember seeing a lot of people say he's always "ten steps ahead" and things like that

and that's just nonsense, like, the playbook for that role is pretty clear, it's not like it's never been done before, it's not like it comes as a surprise to anyone

@inthehands it was a difficult job. it turned out not to be possible. the consequences are horrifying.

we shouldn't succumb to the Hollywood fallacy of blaming everything on a single person. these problems are bigger than that.