Anyone who’s ever seen a CSI episode, read an Agatha Christie novel, or white-knuckled their way through a thriller in a movie theater understands that the key element of such stories is suspense. At the most basic level, there’s a crime, no one knows whodunnit, and someone has to crack the case. It’s the suspense that keeps readers and watchers engaged, searching for the clinching evidence.This time-honored formula also underscores the perverse challenge that House Democrats now face: Their investigation is going so seamlessly that there’s hardly any suspense at all.It started, as all good mysteries do, with a tantalizing …read more
Source:: The Atlantic