No wonder the Congressional obsession with the IRS "scandal" over conservative 501(c)(4) organizations. The House is getting out in front of the IRS by making them look like the bad guy so that Crossroads et al can never be held to account.
I understand your dislike of some of the conservative organizations targeted. But consider this: what if the Ferguson Missouri police department conveniently "lost" evidence that had the same relevance to the Mike Brown case as Lois Lerner's e-mails and Blackberry contents do to this one. Would you use scare-quotes when describing that as a scandal? What about this? https://hubski.com/pub?id=173866 I'm not saying that a bullet used in a shooting is the same as electronic records that may document a harassment campaign, but the difference is a matter of degree not kind. Both are cases of being at best careless to the point of gross negligence, and at worst deliberately obstructive, with handling evidence of one's own possible crimes.
Not sure I see the connection between political theater and violent crime. If your implicit point is that I'm against big political money, because it comes from conservatives, then you're wrong. I think advertising of any sort for political campaigns should be outlawed. I hate it, and while, yes, I'm a pretty liberal thinker, my disdain for political ads transcends ideology. Deliberately lying on tax forms in a very public way, while the 'scandal' (and yes, it deserves quotes) in Congress is that the IRS is somehow the bad guy, only shows how corrupt the system is. If the IRS made a mistake it was in checking up on the little guys too much, and not enforcing laws on the big fish. Who gives a shit about some bumfuck tea party group in Arkansas? Organizations like GPS are stealing from all of us by being allowed to not pay taxes, whether their donors are secret or not. I don't really care about that.
So, misconduct by law enforcement officials doesn't matter if it doesn't involve physical violence? Your dislike of money and moneyed organizations in politics do not justify the people in those organizations having their rights violated by selective enforcement of the law. If that's not what happened here, why all the stonewalling and disappearing of evidence? Would you accept such a lack of cooperation with an oversight investigation from a local police department even if it didn't involve someone being shot? How about an organization like the NSA or the FBI? If so, I guess I can commend you for being consistent, even though I disagree with the weight you give to law and order - or natiional security - over civil liberties. If not, why don't you hold the IRS to the same standard as other law enforcement agencies? If there was "deliberately lying on tax forms", rather than misinterpretations, or merely differing interpretations of vague and complex laws, then yes those need to be investigated. It does not, however, give IRS agents a license to act with impunity any more than a robbery committed by Michael Brown gave Darren Wilson a license to kill. Again, if there was no wrongdoing the IRS should let the investigation show it and stop the cover-up.