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System Fail: Mueller Report unmitigated disaster for American press and ‘expert’ class
The Tablet ^ | March 28, 2019 | Lee Smith

Posted on 03/29/2019 12:07:18 PM PDT by billorites

It will take weeks for the elite pundit class to unravel all the possible implications and subtexts embedded in Robert Mueller’s final report on the charge that Donald Trump and his team colluded with Russia to fix the 2016 election. The right claims that the report exonerates Trump fully, while the left contends there are lots of nuggets in the full text of the final report that may point to obstruction of justice, if not collusion.

But here’s all you need to know about the special counsel probe:

First, after nearly two years, the special counsel found no credible evidence of collusion. It found no credible evidence of a plot to obstruct justice, to hide evidence of collusion. The entire collusion theory, which has formed the center of elite political discourse for over two years now, has been publicly and definitely proclaimed to be a hoax by the very person on whom news organizations and their chosen “experts” and “high-level sources” had so loudly and insistently pinned their daily, even hourly, hopes of redemption.

Mueller should have filed his report on May 18, 2017—the day after the special counsel started and he learned the FBI had opened an investigation on the sitting president of the United States because senior officials at the world’s premier law enforcement agency thought Trump was a Russian spy. Based on what evidence? A dossier compiled by a former British spy, relying on second- and third-hand sources, paid for by the Clinton campaign.

Instead, the special counsel lasted 674 days, during which millions of people who believed Mueller was going to turn up conclusive evidence of Trump’s devious conspiracies with the Kremlin have become wrapped up in a collective hallucination that has destroyed the remaining credibility of the American press and the D.C. expert class whose authority they promote.

Mueller knew that he wasn’t ever going to find “collusion” or anything like it because all the intercepts were right there on his desk. As it turned out, two of his prosecutors, including Mueller’s so-called “pit bull,” Andrew Weissman, had been briefed on the Steele dossier prior to the 2016 election and were told that it came from the Clintons, and was likely a biased political document.

Weissman left, or was pushed out of, his employment with the special counsel a few weeks ago, after the arrival of a new attorney general, William Barr, who had deep experience in government, including stints at the Justice Department and the CIA. Knowing what we know now, here’s what seems most likely to have just happened: Barr looked at the underlying documents on which Mueller’s investigation was based. First, Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein’s May 17, 2017, memo appointing the former FBI director to take supervision of the FBI’s investigation of Trump. And more importantly, the Aug. 2, 2017, memo from Rosenstein outlining the scope of the investigation.

Among the scope memo’s few unredacted lines are allegations regarding Paul Manafort’s “colluding with Russian government officials … to interfere with the 2016 elections.” The only known source for those allegations is the Steele dossier. What that strongly suggests is that under those redactions are other fabricated allegations that were also drawn from the Clinton-funded smear campaign—a dirty-tricks operation that was led by Fusion GPS founder and conspiracy theorist Glenn Simpson.

And now, after all the Saturday Night Live skits, the obscenity-riddled Bill Maher and Stephen Colbert routines, the half a million news stories and tens of millions of tweets all foretelling the end of Trump, the comedians and the adult authority figures are exposed as hoaxsters, or worse, based on evidence that was always transparently phony.

The Mueller report is in. But the abuse of power that the special counsel embodied is a deadly cancer on American democracy. Two years of investigations have left families in ruins, stripping them of their savings, their homes, threatening their liberty, and dragging their names through the mud. The investigation of the century was partly based on the possibility that Michael Flynn, a combat veteran who served his country for more than three decades, might be a Russian spy—because of a dinner he once attended in Moscow, and because as incoming national security adviser he spoke to the Russian ambassador to Washington. What rot.

While the length of Mueller’s investigative process may have protected the FBI from the president’s immediate rage, the release of the report has exposed the deep corruption and personal narcissism of the press and its professional networks of “experts” and “sources.” Instead of providing medicine, the press chose instead to spread the disease through a body that was already badly weakened by the advent of “free” digital media. Only, it wasn’t free.

* * *

The media criticism of the media’s performance covering Russiagate is misleadingly anodyne—OK, sure the press did a bad job, but to be fair there really was a lot of suspicious stuff going on and now let’s all get back to doing our important work. But two years of false and misleading Russiagate coverage was not a mistake, or a symptom of lax fact-checking.

Russiagate was an information operation from the beginning, in which dozens of individual reporters and institutions actively partnered with paid political operatives like Glenn Simpson and corrupt law enforcement and intelligence officials like former FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe and senior DOJ official Bruce Ohr to smear Trump and his circle, and then to topple him. None of what went on the last two years would have been possible without the press, an indispensable partner in the biggest political scandal in a generation.

The campaign was waged not in hidden corners of the internet, but rather by the country’s most prestigious news organizations—including, but not only, The New York Times, the Washington Post, CNN, and MSNBC. The farce that has passed for public discourse the last two years was fueled by a concerted effort of the media and the pundit class to obscure gaping holes in logic as well as law. And yet, they all appeared to be credible because the institutions sustaining them are credible.

Michael McFaul was U.S. ambassador to Moscow—he knows everything about Russia. He wouldn’t invent stuff about national security matters out of thin air. Jane Mayer is a national treasure, one of America’s greatest living journalists who penned a long profile of Christopher Steele in the pages of the New Yorker. Susan Hennessy is a former intelligence community lawyer, who appears as an expert on TV. And how about her colleague at the Lawfare blog, Benjamin Wittes, a Brookings Institution fellow and a personal friend of James Comey? You think he didn’t have the inside dope, every time he posted a “Boom” GIF on Twitter predicting the final nail just about to be hammered in Trump’s coffin?

Many more jumped on the dog pile along with them, validating each other’s tweets and breathless insider sourcing. The point was to thicken the echo chamber, with voices from the right as well as the left in order to make it seem real. Hey, if this many experts are saying so, there must be something to it.

Except, there wasn’t—ever.

American democracy is premised on a free press that does its best to provide the public with information. Misinforming the public is like dumping toxic waste in the rivers. It poisoned our democracy—and it continues to do so. In fact, the most important thing for the public to understand is that Russiagate is not unique. It’s the way that the expert class opines on everything now, from immigration to foreign policy.

Take for instance last week’s big news that President Trump had decided to recognize Israel’s sovereignty over the Golan Heights. The decision was universally praised in Israel, by both Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and by opponents like Yair Lapid. Yet Obama’s former ambassador to Israel, Dan Shapiro, insisted that the decision was politically motivated, telling the Washington Post that “the timing seems pretty transparent.” Surely, like his ambassadorial colleague, McFaul, Shapiro knew exactly what he’s talking about when he tweeted that the decision was made without “any policy planning process to consider potential reactions by Russia, Assad regime, Hezbollah, Arab states, Europe, etc., some of which may not be immediate. A decision like this should factor in such questions. No evidence it has.”

Shapiro was dead wrong. As the Atlantic noted in a detailed reported piece posted hours after Shapiro’s tweet, “the push for Trump to make such a move has been going on for more than a year, due to parallel efforts by Israeli officials and members of Congress.”

But whatever. Experts can say anything they like—the Saudis hacked Jeff Bezos’ emails and photos of him and his girlfriend; Jamal Khashoggi was an American journalist; Jussie Smollett was nearly lynched by Trump supporters; Brett Kavanaugh was part of a rape gang, etc., etc. And reporters will print it, and editors will shrug, because that’s what the press is now—a pass-through mechanism mostly used for manipulative, ill-informed and often nonsensical propaganda.

Americans still want and need accurate information on which to base their decisions about their own lives and the path that the country should take. But neither the legacy media nor the expert class it sustains is likely to survive the post-dossier era in any recognizable form. For them, Russiagate is an extinction level event.


TOPICS: News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: dnctalkingpoint; dnctalkingpoints; jamescomey; lisapage; mediawingofthednc; partisanmediashills; peterstrzok; presstitutes; robertmueller; smearmachine

1 posted on 03/29/2019 12:07:18 PM PDT by billorites
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To: billorites

Well except the demolibs are sure that ‘just-us’ was subverted by the “hand picked” AG who was not a fan of the muledeer inquiries. So, if he’d simply just release the unredacted report(regardless of any damage to innocent parties) the proof would be right there for all to see. Or not.


2 posted on 03/29/2019 12:14:50 PM PDT by rktman ( #My2ndAmend! ----- Enlisted in the Navy in '67 to protect folks rights to strip my rights. WTH?)
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To: billorites

that’s what the press is now—a pass-through mechanism mostly used for manipulative, ill-informed and often nonsensical propaganda

Isn’t that CNN’s Official Code of Conduct?


3 posted on 03/29/2019 12:16:33 PM PDT by eyeamok
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To: billorites

The investigation of the century was partly based on the possibility that Michael Flynn, a combat veteran who served his country for more than three decades, might be a Russian spy—because of a dinner he once attended in Moscow, and because as incoming national security adviser he spoke to the Russian ambassador to Washington.

The left will accept this, but they’ll prattle on for the next thousand years about evil McCarthy was.

This was way worse than anything McCarthy ever did.


4 posted on 03/29/2019 12:18:01 PM PDT by samtheman (Like a Japanese soldier still fighting WWII in '71, the Collusion Crusade continues.)
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To: samtheman

IIRC Bobby Kennedy’s kids used to play with Andrei Gromyko’s kids. Wouldn’t this make him a Russian spy according to the so-called logic of the left?


5 posted on 03/29/2019 12:25:45 PM PDT by Jean2
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To: Jean2

Don’t you remember how the left used to laugh at Reagan for exaggerated fear of the Russians?

They’ve morphed into a caricature of the fantasy creation they used to laugh at, the right-winger “seeing a Russian under every bed”.

I think I can even dig up some old Paul Conrad cartoons from the LA Times that specifically poked fun of Reagan’s supposed “irrational fear” of the Soviet Union.


6 posted on 03/29/2019 12:31:57 PM PDT by samtheman (Like a Japanese soldier still fighting WWII in '71, the Collusion Crusade continues.)
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To: billorites

Vos is dis veb site? Ist dis herr goode veb site to read? Dunka.


7 posted on 03/29/2019 12:34:48 PM PDT by RetiredArmy (Russia and Putin didn't make me vote for Trump, HILLARY DID!!!)
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To: billorites
Good Lord was that awesome. I am a believer in "J"ustice in that scales seek to balance. My hope is that the awakening in communities of all types across this nation continues in that "We, the people" embrace our individual uniqueness and unite under a common banner to continue making this nation great again to restore some balance to the spheres of news/entertainment/academia.

My fear is that restoring the balance would necessitate a violent and more destructive method.

And for goodness sake, we are a REPUBLIC.

8 posted on 03/29/2019 12:36:47 PM PDT by DrymChaser
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To: All

American democracy is premised on a free press that does its best to provide the public with information.


This is a dubious contention. The notion of a dispassionate ‘straight down the middle’ press is a fairly recent notion. The problem is not so much that the MSM is partisan but that they successfully pretend that they are not.


9 posted on 03/29/2019 12:41:07 PM PDT by pluvmantelo (Life is weighed on the scales of a triple beam)
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To: billorites
"The Mueller report is in. But the abuse of power that the special counsel embodied is a deadly cancer on American democracy."

And like other cancers, unless carefully administered, the treatment can be every bit as lethal as the cancer.

". . . in the biggest political scandal in a generation."

More than a single generation, the biggest political scandal since the Warren Report BS.

As always, JMHo

10 posted on 03/29/2019 1:00:05 PM PDT by Rashputin (Jesus Christ doesn't evacuate His troops, He leads them to victory !!)
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To: billorites
yet, they all appeared to be credible because the institutions sustaining them are credible.

Both the major and minor premises are false here. No media institution is credible, and no, the credibility of an institution, such as it is, does not pass individual reports. Look at Fox for goodness sake. They have no more credibility than any of our other least favorite spews outlets. But not all of their people are bad. Not ALL, just most.

11 posted on 03/29/2019 1:13:15 PM PDT by AndyJackson
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To: billorites; pluvmantelo
Although Thomas Jefferson was the great advocate for freedom of the press, he, too, recognized impostors and betrayers of freedom among that elite and privileged group of Americans:
"At a very early period of my life, I determined never to put a sentence into any newspaper. I have religiously adhered to the resolution through my life, and have great reason to be contented with it. Were I to undertake to answer the calumnies of the newspapers, it would be more than all my own time and that of twenty aids could effect. For while I should be answering one, twenty new ones would be invented. I have thought it better to trust to the justice of my countrymen, that they would judge me by what they see of my conduct on the stage where they have placed me, and what they knew of me before the epoch since which a particular party has supposed it might answer some view of theirs to vilify me in the public eye. Some, I know, will not reflect how apocryphal is the testimony of enemies so palpably betraying the views with which they give it. But this is an injury to which duty requires every one to submit whom the public think proper to call into its councils." --Thomas Jefferson to Samuel Smith, 1798. ME 10:58

"[I have seen] repeated instances of the publication of what has not been intended for the public eye, and the malignity with which political enemies torture every sentence from me into meanings imagined by their own wickedness only... Not fearing these political bull-dogs, I yet avoid putting myself in the way of being baited by them, and do not wish to volunteer away that portion of tranquillity, which a firm execution of my duties will permit me to enjoy." --Thomas Jefferson to John Norvell, 1807. ME 11:226

"Conscious that there was not a truth on earth which I feared should be known, I have lent myself willingly as the subject of a great experiment, which was to prove that an administration, conducting itself with integrity and common understanding, cannot be battered down even by the falsehoods of a licentious press, and consequently still less by the press as restrained within the legal and wholesome limits of truth. This experiment was wanting for the world to demonstrate the falsehood of the pretext that freedom of the press is incompatible with orderly government. I have never, therefore, even contradicted the thousands of calumnies so industriously propagated against myself. But the fact being once established, that the press is impotent when it abandons itself to falsehood, I leave to others to restore it to its strength by recalling it within the pale of truth. Within that, it is a noble institution, equally the friend of science and of civil liberty." --Thomas Jefferson to Thomas Seymour, 1807. ME 11:155

"My opinion of the manner in which a newspaper should be conducted so as to be most useful [is]... 'by restraining it to true facts and sound principle only.' Yet I fear such a paper would find few subscribers. It is a melancholy truth, that a suppression of the press could not more completely deprive the nation of its benefits than is done by its abandoned prostitution to falsehood." --Thomas Jefferson to John Norvell, 1807. ME 11:224

"Perhaps an editor might begin a reformation in some such way as this. Divide his paper into four chapters, heading the 1st, Truths. 2nd, Probabilities. 3rd, Possibilities. 4th, Lies. The first chapter would be very short, as it would contain little more than authentic papers and information from such sources as the editor would be willing to risk his own reputation for their truth. The second would contain what, from a mature consideration of all circumstances, his judgment should conclude to be probably true. This, however, should rather contain too little than too much. The third and fourth should be professedly for those readers who would rather have lies for their money than the blank paper they would occupy." --Thomas Jefferson to John Norvell, 1807. ME 11:225

"An editor [should] set his face against the demoralizing practice of feeding the public mind habitually on slander and the depravity of taste which this nauseous aliment induces. Defamation is becoming a necessary of life, insomuch that a dish of tea in the morning or evening cannot be digested without this stimulant. Even those who do not believe these abominations, still read them with complaisance to their auditors, and instead of the abhorrence and indignation which should fill a virtuous mind, betray a secret pleasure in the possibility that some may believe them, though they do not themselves. It seems to escape them, that it is not he who prints, but he who pays for printing a slander, who is its real author." --Thomas Jefferson to John Norvell, 1807. ME 11:225


12 posted on 03/29/2019 1:33:00 PM PDT by loveliberty2 (`)
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To: billorites

The Press thought they had Watergate II.


13 posted on 03/29/2019 1:33:32 PM PDT by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: loveliberty2

Bttt.

5.56mm


14 posted on 03/29/2019 1:34:45 PM PDT by M Kehoe (DRAIN THE SWAMP! BUILD THE WALL!)
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To: billorites
Americans still want and need accurate information on which to base their decisions about their own lives and the path that the country should take. But neither the legacy media nor the expert class it sustains is likely to survive the post-dossier era in any recognizable form. For them, Russiagate is an extinction level event.

I am inspired by the acknowledgement that this should be an extinction level event for the dinosaur press and their sycophant elitist trash.

15 posted on 03/29/2019 2:00:02 PM PDT by Louis Foxwell (The denial of the authority of God is the central plank of the Progressive movement.)
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To: samtheman

I remember that. Now they seem to have an exaggerated fear of the Russians.


16 posted on 03/29/2019 2:18:24 PM PDT by Jean2
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To: billorites

Mueller didn’t do what he was hired to do.


17 posted on 03/29/2019 4:19:36 PM PDT by TBP (Progressives lack compassion and tolerance. Their self-aggrandizement is all that matters.)
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To: billorites

Experts frequently aren’t.


18 posted on 03/29/2019 4:24:28 PM PDT by YogicCowboy ("I am not entirely on anyone's side, because no one is entirely on mine." - J. R. R. Tolkien)
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To: TBP

He did in large part: He created process crimes for Trump associates, and ignored actual crimes by himself and his associates. Maintaining an ongoing investigation to nowhere was vital to those efforts: persecution of the enemy, protection of the ally.

Michael Caputo has said he will never serve on another Republican campaign. The controlled-opposition RINOpublicans provided a matador defense while the DemoKKKrats damaged or ruined lives with lawless lawfare.

The message was sent and received: Support a non-Uniparty candidate, and the full force of the Federal Deep State will be unleashed upon you. Trump either could not or would not protect those who helped him attain his presidency.


19 posted on 03/29/2019 4:34:01 PM PDT by YogicCowboy ("I am not entirely on anyone's side, because no one is entirely on mine." - J. R. R. Tolkien)
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To: billorites

Bump


20 posted on 03/29/2019 4:37:23 PM PDT by WashingtonSource
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