Posted on 04/01/2019 10:38:59 AM PDT by billorites
Last weekend, I published a book chapter criticizing the Russiagate narrative, claiming it was a years-long press error on the scale of the WMD affair heading into the Iraq war.
Obviously (and I said this in detail), the WMD fiasco had a far greater real-world impact, with hundreds of thousands of lives lost and trillions in treasure wasted. Still, I thought Russiagate would do more to damage the reputation of the national news media in the end.
A day after publishing that excerpt, a Attorney General William Barr sent his summary of the report to Congress, containing a quote filed by Special Counsel Robert Mueller: [T]he investigation did not establish that members of the Trump Campaign conspired or coordinated with the Russian government in its election interference activities.
Suddenly, news articles appeared arguing people like myself and Glenn Greenwald of the Intercept were rushing to judgment, calling us bullies whose writings were intended to leave reporters cowed and likely to back down from aggressive coverage of Trump.
This was baffling. One of the most common criticisms of people like Greenwald, Michael Tracey, Aaron Mate, Rania Khalek, Max Blumenthal, Jordan Chariton and many others is that Russiagate skeptics I hate that term, because it implies skepticism isnt normal and healthy in this job were really secret Trump partisans, part of a horseshoe pact between far left and far right to focus attention on the minor foibles of the center instead of Trumps more serious misdeeds. Even I received this label, and I once wrote a book about Trump called Insane Clown President.
A typical social media complaint:
@mtaibbi and all his deplorable followers. The truth will come out and your premature celebrations are embarrassing. Its irritating that I even have to address this, because my personal political views shouldnt have anything to do with how I cover anything. But just to get it out of the way: Im no fan of Donald Trump.
I had a well-developed opinion about him long before the 2016 race started. I once interned for Trumps nemesis-biographer, the late, great muckraker Wayne Barrett. The birther campaign of 2011 was all I ever needed to make a voting decision about the man.
I started covering the last presidential race in 2015 just as I was finishing up a book about the death of Eric Garner called I Cant Breathe. Noting that a birther campaign started by peripheral political curiosity and reality TV star Donald Trump led to 41 percent of respondents in one poll believing Barack Obama was not even American, I wrote:
If anyone could communicate the frustration black Americans felt over Stop-and-Frisk and other neo-vagrancy laws that made black people feel like they could be arrested anywhere, it should have been Barack Obama. Hed made it all the way to the White House and was still considered to be literally trespassing by a huge plurality of the population.
So I had no illusions about Trump. The Russia story bothered me for other reasons, mostly having to do with a general sense of the public being misled, and not even about Russia.
The problem lay with the precursor tale to Russiagate, i.e. how Trump even got to be president in the first place.
The 2016 campaign season brought to the surface awesome levels of political discontent. After the election, instead of wondering where that anger came from, most of the press quickly pivoted to a new tale about a Russian plot to attack our Democracy. This conveyed the impression that the election season wed just lived through had been an aberration, thrown off the rails by an extraordinary espionage conspiracy between Trump and a cabal of evil foreigners.
This narrative contradicted everything Id seen traveling across America in my two years of covering the campaign. The overwhelming theme of that race, long before anyone even thought about Russia, was voter rage at the entire political system.
The anger wasnt just on the Republican side, where Trump humiliated the Republicans chosen $150 million contender, Jeb Bush (who got three delegates, or $50 million per delegate). It was also evident on the Democratic side, where a self-proclaimed Democratic Socialist with little money and close to no institutional support became a surprise contender.
Because of a series of press misdiagnoses before the Russiagate stories even began, much of the American public was unprepared for news of a Trump win. A cloak-and-dagger election-fixing conspiracy therefore seemed more likely than it might have otherwise to large parts of the domestic news audience, because they hadnt been prepared for anything else that would make sense.
This was particularly true of upscale, urban, blue-leaning news consumers, who were not told to take the possibility of a Trump White House seriously.
Priority number-one of the political class after a vulgar, out-of-work game-show host conquered the White House should have been a long period of ruthless self-examination. This story delayed that for at least two years.
It wasnt even clear Trump whether or not wanted to win. Watching him on the trail, Trump at times went beyond seeming disinterested. There were periods where it looked like South Parks Did I offend you? thesis was true, and he was actively trying to lose, only the polls just wouldnt let him.
Forget about the gift the end of Russiagate might give Trump by allowing him to spend 2020 peeing from a great height on the national press corps. The more serious issue has to be the failure to face the reality of why he won last time, because we still havent done that.
In the fall of 2015, when I first started covering Trumps campaign, a few themes popped up:
First, like any good hustler, Trump knew how to work a room. At times, he recalled a comedian trying out new material. If he felt a murmur in the crowd in one speech, hed hit it harder the next time out.
This is how a few offhand comments about the bad deal wars in the Middle East turned into what seemed like more planned shots at nation building or overseas wars that left us flat broke and unable to build schools at home.
These themes seemed to come from feeling out audiences and noting these lines were scoring with veterans in his crowds. (Studies have since shown Trump did well in areas with returning vets).
As time went on, he made the traveling press part of his act. The standard campaign setup was perfect for him. We were like zoo animals, standing on risers with ropes around us to keep the un-credentialed masses out.
Even that small symbol of VIP-ism Trump turned to his advantage. Behind the ropes we were what national campaign reporters mostly always are: dorky blue-staters with liberal arts degrees from expensive colleges dressed in gingham and khaki, and looking out of place basically anywhere on earth outside a trendy city block or a Starbucks.
Trump, the billionaire, denounced us as the elitists in the room. Hed call us bloodsuckers, dishonest, and in one line that produced laughs considering who was saying it, highly-paid.
He also did something that I immediately recognized as brilliant (or diabolical, depending on how you look at it). He dared cameramen to turn their cameras to show the size of his crowds.
They usually wouldnt hey, we dont work for the guy which thrilled Trump, who would then say something to the effect of, See! Theyre very dishonest people. Audiences would turn toward us, and boo and hiss, and even throw little bits of paper and other things our way. This was unpleasant, but it was hard not to see its effectiveness: hed re-imagined the lifeless, poll-tested format of the stump speech, turning it into menacing, personal, WWE-style theater.
Trump was gunning for votes in both parties. The core story he told on the stump was one of system-wide corruption, in which there was little difference between Republicans and Democrats.
He destroyed Jeb Bush by caricaturizing him as a captive of corporate interests (noting, for instance, that Pharma bigwig Woody Johnson was Jebs finance chair), then used the exact same tactic on Hillary Clinton. He often mentioned them together.
On the same day he did the Cruz is a pussy routine, he told a story about how Jeb Bush said, (here he put on a Thurston Howell III-artistocrat voice) I dont like Donald Trumps tone. This was right after claiming Hillary Clinton said the exact same thing. In the same mock-aristocrat voice, hed done a Hillary impersonation: I dont like Donald Trumps tone.
The message was clear: Jeb and Hillary were the same political animal, snobs and elite phonies. This dovetailed with his general pitch, which claimed most Americans were struggling because both parties were feeding from the same campaign-finance teat, pimping themselves out to huge job-exporting corporate donors. Which, lets face it, is more than a little true. Less obviously true was his solution, putting a blabbermouth reality star in charge of fixing it all. But the pitch was scoring for a reason.
Like a con man who can lift a wallet in the middle of a melee, Trump thrived amid the chaos. He drank in the condemnation when he denounced McCain for being captured, or when he doubled down on absurd claims hed seen Muslims dancing in New Jersey after 9/11.
Most politicians come crawling to the press begging forgiveness fter they say dumb things. Trump did the opposite and went on the offensive. It took a while to grasp that what he was really selling was the image of an outraged political establishment. He wanted his voters to see how much he was getting to us.
Perhaps just by luck, Trump was tuned in to the fact that the triumvirate of ruling political powers in America the two parties, the big donors and the press were so unpopular with large parts of the population that he could win in the long haul by attracting their ire, even if he was losing battles on the way.
If Trump insulted an innocent person like Times reporter Serge Kovaleski, who is disabled, his goal wasnt to try to win a popularity contest. He was after the thing that always came next: the endless scornful rebukes from press and celebrities. These rituals always went on just a bit too long, to the point where it was clear both Trump and the media were milking the incidents for publicity.
Trump would push right up until he caught the press having too much fun with something outrageous hed done (the Washington Post running Donald Trumps Schlonged: A linguistic investigation was an infamous example), at which point hed declare victory and move on to the next outrage.
The subtext was always: I may be crude, but these people are phonies, pretending to be upset when theyre making money off my bullshit.
I thought this was all nuts and couldnt believe it was happening in a real presidential campaign. But, a job is a job. My first feature on candidate Trump was called How America Made Donald Trump Unstoppable. The key section read:
In person, you cant miss it: The same way Sarah Palin can see Russia from her house, Donald on the stump can see his future. The pundits dont want to admit it, but its sitting there in plain view, 12 moves ahead, like a chess game already won:
President Donald Trump
It turns out we let our electoral process devolve into something so fake and dysfunctional that any half-bright con man with the stones to try it could walk right through the front door and tear it to shreds on the first go.
And Trump is no half-bright con man, either. Hes way better than average.
Traditional Democratic audiences appeared thrilled by the piece and shared it widely. I was invited on scads of cable shows to discuss ad nauseum the con man line.
This made me nervous, because it probably meant these people hadnt read the piece, which among other things posited the failures of Americas current ruling class meant Trumps insane tactics could actually work.
Trump was selling himself as a traitor to a corrupt class, someone who knew how soulless and greedy the ruling elite was because he was one of them.
His story of essentially buying the attendance of the Clintons at his wedding no matter what you think of it resonated powerfully with voters. He sneered at Hillary as the worst kind of aristocrat, a member of a family with title and no money. She and Bill were second-tier gentry, the kind who had to work, and what work! Hillary was giving speeches to firms like Goldman Sachs for amounts of money Trump would probably say he spent on airplane snacks (even if it were a lie).
He claimed Goldman owned her. Having watched Trump wipe out Jeb using similar arguments, I thought a race against Hillary Clinton, who was running on her decades of experience residing in hated Washington, would be a pitch right in Trumps wheelhouse.
Trumps chances increased when pundits ignored polls and insisted he had no shot at the nomination. The universality of this take reeked of the same kind of single-track, orthodox official-think that later plagued the Russia story.
Nate Silver, the ex-baseball stats guru and renowned National Oracle (as Gizmodo cheekily called him), laughed at Trumps chances[1].
His site, FiveThirtyEight, ran a story called Why Donald Trump Isnt a Real Candidate, In One Chart. The piece said Trump was more likely to play in the NBA finals or cameo in another Home Alone movie than win the nomination.
Dana Milbank in the Washington Post: Im so certain Trump wont win the nomination that Ill eat my words if he does. Literally. Milbank ended up actually doing this, for which he deserves a lot of credit.
Donald Trump is going to lose because he is crazy, was the take of Jonathan Chait, who would soon be writing Trump might have been recruited by the KGB in 1987.
It isnt just that wizards of prognostication were wrong. The bigger issue was why they were so confident. A common take was the political establishment just wouldnt allow it.
Former The Note writer Mark Halperin used to talk about having his finger on the pulse of the Gang of 500, which he described as campaign consultants, strategists, pollsters, pundits and journalists who make up the modern-day political establishment. The subtext of Halperins pieces was that the Gang of 500 decided elections.
Its hard to understand how it never occurred to Halperin or anyone else that people might be grossed out by the concept of 500 self-appointed guardians of democracy deciding the presidency for 300 million people.
In this case, just by saying out loud the idea that the people who mattered would never let Trump win, probably helped Trump win. It validated his talk about elites.
Nate Cohn of The New York Times wrote Trump had just about no shot of winning the nomination no matter how well he is doing in the early polls. He prefaced this by saying it is the party elites who traditionally decide nomination contests.
When Trump defied these predictions and sealed up the Republican nomination, he immediately became subject to a new legend, about how he was destined to be the biggest landslide loser in history of general elections: bigger than Alf Landon or even George McGovern, whose very name in America is synonymous with loser.
Here are some takes on Trumps campaign after he sealed up the nomination:
David Brooks: Trump will be the biggest loser in American politics.
The Week: Trump is poised to lose the biggest landslide in modern American history.
George Will: Donald Trump may find a place in history by losing just that badly.
I belong on this infamous list myself. In one of the worst mistakes of my career, I ended up changing my mind about free-falling Trumps chances, spending the stretch run predicting doom for Republicans. I read too many polls and ignored what I was seeing, i.e. that even the post-Access Hollywood Trump was still packing stadiums.
Trump would already be president-elect before he was taken seriously as an electoral phenomenon. Right up until the networks called Florida for him on election night, few major American media figures outside of Michael Moore who incidentally was also right about WMDs and ridiculed for it believed a Trump win possible.
The only reason most blue-state media audiences had been given for Trumps poll numbers all along was racism, which was surely part of the story but not the whole picture. A lack of any other explanation meant Democratic audiences, after the shock of election night, were ready to reach for any other data point that might better explain what just happened.
Russiagate became a convenient replacement explanation absolving an incompetent political establishment for its complicity in what happened in 2016, and not just the failure to see it coming. Because of the immediate arrival of the collusion theory, neither Wolf Blitzer nor any politician ever had to look into the camera and say, I guess people hated us so much they were even willing to vote for Donald Trump.
Post-election, Russiagate made it all worse. People could turn on their TVs at any hour of the day and see anyone from Rachel Maddow to Chris Cuomo openly reveling in Trumps troubles. This is what Fox looks like to liberal audiences.
Worse, the walls are closing in theme two years old now was just a continuation of the campaign mistake, reporters confusing what they wanted to happen with what was happening. The story was always more complicated than was being represented.
It still is, which is important to note as we wait for the final release of the Mueller report, which incidentally also wont be the last word on what happened in the last few years.
There are a lot of mysteries left with this affair, and none of them will be cleared up anytime soon. We still dont even understand the beginning of this story.
Waaaaa
Shades of 1971. Democrats wanted Nixon impeached long before Watergate.
Trump won because enough Americans are sick of little would-be despots laying heavier and heavier yokes upon their necks.
Wrong. This was absolutely true as Dan Rather was caught on camera talking about this and eye witnesses in New Jersey testified seeing this and told the police.
I think he's correct in one observation, which has been seen on FR hundreds of times: Trump plugged into a widespread discontent with the political establishment that crossed party lines and continues to do so. If Taibbi really wanted to do an introspective piece he might explore why that trend mushroomed so suddenly after eight years of 0bama, and it had nothing to do with Trump "working a room". I suspect he'd be printing an apologia such as this one shortly after that one hit the presses, however. The political establishment now encompasses journalists too and Taibbi is one of them.
Well, as we can see from the House Dims, they can't let it go. It will be two more years of what did not work the first two years.
This guy wrote some of the best articles during the financial crisis. Other than that he has always been a liberal to the absolute highest degree.
He’s got a number of one liners in there that shows even he doen’t get it.
That’s not an excerpt. It’s a book chapter.
Sarah Palin said “I can see Russia from my house”?
More fake news
led to 41 percent of respondents in one poll believing Barack Obama was not even American,
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Obama probably still has the Indonesian passport he used in college.
He told us on his “Fight the smears” website that he was born a British subject and a Kenyan national because of his Kenyan father.
He is not a natural born citizen.
__________
Some of us pretty much understand the beginning of this corrupt drama.
*********
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-bloggers/3739045/posts
John Brennan The Origin of Collusion Hoax
Flopping Aces ^ | 04-01-19 | Daniel John Sobieski
Forget about the gift the end of Russiagate might give Trump by allowing him to spend 2020 peeing from a great height on the national press corps.
LMAO.
70% of Americans want the borders and laws enforced.
It’s been like that for years.
Neither party had any interest in helping the citizens keep their country.
That’s what got Trump elected.
Unfortunately he and his close advisors don't seem to believe that.
Unfortunately, many of his close advisors are Bush League Republicans that don’t really want the flow of illegal aliens to stop.
Not to mention the GOP Senators who keep talking about amnesty instead of enforcement.
“First, like any good hustler, Trump knew how to work a room.”
biased hate-trump bullshit; an unbiased statement would be:
“First, like any good POLITICIAN, Trump knew how to work a room.”
Yep...that’s because he prosecuted Alger “The Snake” Hiss!
Yes...the butt hurt just won’t go away, will it? LOL!
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