Yes, but just as asking for a yes or no answer is inappropriate if I asked you if you'd stopped beating your wife, so, too, is it here.If there was actual corruption, IT DOESN'T MATTER WHOM WAS THE SUBJECT. That is, Biden is not off-limits if there was corruption (and to be paid $50,000/month...yeah, something ain't right). He doesn't get a pass.Nor does he get a pass just because it was a foreign country. There is no rule that all corruption evidence must be locally-sourced or American made. NO! If someone did wrong, then it's wrong no matter who gives us the evidence.Don't you find it odd, David, that the Democrats have no problem trying to get the British or the Russians to testify against THEIR chief political rival (all in the interest, of course, of getting to the bottom of the matter!), but if Trump does it, it's suddenly off-limits? NO WAY.If we found out from another nation that a political player acted corruptly, I'm not going to automatically discount it, nor automatically believe it. However, I would WEIGH IT. And you have to admit that the optics on the whole Biden thing are terrible--a making $50,000/month--without, apparently, any particular skill in the subject area; a foreign prosecutor that is pulled off the case, etc. Things that make you go hmmmm.....Now, is it advantageous that Biden happens to be a political rival? SURE! But, again, that's not a free pass on this. For that matter, Trump has been trying to get people like Hillary investigated, even though she is not a political rival any longer. So, YES, it's acceptable to try to get to the bottom of the matter. Should we put it off until after, say, Biden is elected? Is it off-limits? Should Trump continue with his policy of just making unjustified statements about rivals...or should he have evidence to back up his statements?The optics on BOTH--Biden and Trump--are not good. But while one can be seen as self-seeking, the other can be seen as criminally corrupt.