Wednesday, September 4, 2019

Deep State Extortion: Mueller Scammed Flynn and They Can Prove It

Flynn Turns Tables on Prosecutors in Major Legal Blitz 


Attorneys for former national security adviser Michael Flynn launched a major legal challenge in his perjury case on Aug. 30, by seeking a contempt citation against the prosecutors for hiding exculpatory evidence.

The attorneys allege Flynn was targeted for selective prosecution based on illegal surveillance and claim that the office of the special counsel extorted the guilty plea from Flynn.

Sidney Powell, Flynn’s attorney, filed the paperwork for the motions two months after taking over as the defense counsel on the case, replacing the team that Flynn fired in June. Powell, a vociferous critic of government prosecutors, confirmed to The Epoch Times that she ultimately seeks for the case to be dismissed and for Flynn to be exonerated.

The 14-page filing represents the most significant development in Flynn’s case since he pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI more than a year ago. Flynn has postponed his sentencing since the guilty plea in order to complete his cooperation with government investigators, including then-special counsel Robert Mueller.

Should the judge side with Flynn on any of the requests, the repercussions would likely expand beyond Flynn’s case, since the defense is demanding for the prosecution to hand over evidence long shielded by the government. These documents—some which have been long withheld, while others are partly redacted—would shed light on the broader special counsel investigation into Russia’s interference in the 2016 elections, as well as the FBI counterintelligence probe from which it evolved.

The former national security adviser is seeking access to the redacted portions of text messages between former FBI officials Peter Strzok and Lisa Page, who exchanged text messages discussing an insurance policy in the “unlikely event” that then-candidate Donald Trump was elected president. Flynn is demanding access to the FBI interview reports for Bruce Ohr, the senior Justice Department official who acted as a conduit between former British spy Christopher Steele and the FBI after the bureau fired Steele for leaking to the media. Flynn also is asking the prosecutors to preserve all evidence—including the communications of the special counsel’s office—in the event they are removed from the case as a result of the contempt citation.

Powell, who authored a book on corruption within the Justice Department, levels several grave accusations against the prosecutors on the case, the special counsel’s office, and the broader criminal justice system. She accuses a pair of special counsel prosecutors, Andrew Weissmann and Zainab Ahmad, of interacting with Ohr—even though they had no business doing so—before their time on the special counsel investigation.

While providing few details, Powell alleges that the office of the special counsel, while suppressing exculpatory evidence, forced Flynn into a guilty plea by “putting excruciating pressure on him” and “controlling the press to their advantage to extort that plea.”

“They continued to hide that exculpatory information for months—in direct contravention of this Court’s Order—and they continue to suppress exculpatory information to this day,” Powell wrote.

Powell also positions Flynn as a victim of a criminal justice system where government prosecutors have a major advantage over defendants. The filing hints that Flynn may be among a sizable group of people who plead guilty, even though they are innocent of the charges against them. She argues that while prosecutors often claim to comply with orders to produce exculpatory information, also known as Brady orders, “in truth, they often scoff at them and continue to play games to win convictions at all costs.”

“The government has a crushing 95% or higher conviction rate,” Powell wrote. “It is virtually impossible to defend successfully when the might and power of the federal government focuses on the destruction of an individual, and the government holds all the cards.”

While it’s too soon to tell what will become of Flynn’s filing, the confluence of Powell and U.S. District Judge Emmet Sullivan suggests at least a possibility that the case has several surprises in store. Sullivan once removed the prosecutors from a high-profile case against a former Republican senator from Alaska, Ted Stevens, for failing to hand over exculpatory evidence. The judge then overturned Stevens’s conviction, noting that the prosecutors’ conduct was “outrageous.”

Powell cited Sullivan’s work in the case as a key example in “Licensed to Lie,” her book about corruption in the Justice Department.

Meanwhile, Flynn’s indictment was the opening salvo in a battery of prosecutions by special counsel Robert Mueller, who turned up empty-handed after a 22-month hunt for evidence of collusion between the Trump 2016 presidential campaign and Russia. The origins of the Russia investigation have been under intense scrutiny by Justice Department (DOJ) Inspector General Michael Horowitz, who is close to completing an inquiry into how the FBI obtained a spy warrant to monitor former Trump campaign associate Carter Page. Meanwhile, Attorney General William Barr assigned U.S. Attorney John Durham to look into the broader Russia investigation that predated the spy warrant on Carter Page and included the use of government informants who targeted Trump campaign officials.

Sullivan scheduled a status hearing for Sept. 10, at which both the defense and the prosecution are likely to face questions about the many issues raised in the filing. The prosecutors have more than just the case on the line, since a potential contempt citation may have an impact on their careers. Powell, in the meantime, will have to reckon with a judge known for his tough questions for attorneys. She told The Epoch Times she doesn’t expect the judge to issue any orders before the status hearing.

The hearing will take place less than two weeks after the DOJ inspector general issued a report finding that former FBI Director James Comey broke department rules regarding the retention, handling, and dissemination of government documents. Comey, whose firing led to the appointment of the special counsel, leaked information to his attorneys that was later determined to be classified. The inspector general’s report disclosed, for the first time, that Comey used his first briefing with then-President-elect Trump on Jan. 6, 2017, to collect evidence for the Russia investigation and relay it to the FBI’s Strzok and Page.

The revelation buttresses Powell’s claim of selective prosecution due to the known anti-Trump biases of Strzok and Page, and Flynn becoming one of Trump’s top advisers at the White House. Strzok would go on to interview Flynn at the White House. Flynn pleaded guilty to lying to the FBI during that meeting.

Meanwhile, Inspector General Horowitz is expected to release his findings about the Carter Page spy warrant in the weeks following Sept. 10. Even before Horowitz’s conclusion, it’s known that senior FBI and DOJ officials approved the spy warrant application, even though it was based, in part, on the unverified “Steele dossier” compiled by the former British spy.

The officials signed off on the application at a time when the FBI was aware that Steele had a bias against Trump. The application also failed to disclose that Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidential campaign and the Democratic National Committee funded Steele’s dossier.

Horowitz’s findings, combined with what’s already known, appears likely to echo Powell’s assertion that Flynn was the subject of illicit government spying. Powell claims that the evidence against Flynn may have been obtained via either illegal surveillance, an intelligence operation to smear him, or a criminal leak. She cites the documented abuses of the National Security Administration (NSA) databases, the release of Flynn’s conversation with the Russian ambassador to the media, and the illegal unmasking of U.S. citizens in 2016.

Powell also suggested that the investigation of Flynn resulted from an FBI and CIA operation that used Stefan Halper, a known intelligence asset, to smear Flynn as an “agent of Russia.”

“Judge Rosemary Collyer, Chief Judge of the FISA court, has already found serious Fourth Amendment violations by the FBI in areas that likely also involve their actions against Mr. Flynn,” Powell wrote. “Much of the NSA’s activity is in direct violation of the Fourth Amendment.”

According to Powell, the “most stunning suppression of evidence” in the case had to do with the prosecution’s withholding, for almost eight months, the text messages between Strzok and Lisa Page, an FBI attorney with whom Strzok was having an extramarital affair. The special counsel learned of the text messages in July 2017, but the prosecutors didn’t produce them until March 2018, after they had been released to the public. The prosecutors didn’t disclose to the court that Strzok had been removed from the special counsel team because of the bias expressed in his text messages. Weissmann and Ahmad also failed to inform the court of their work with Ohr, the defense claims.

The defense told the court in the Aug. 30 filing that the prosecutors on Aug. 16 handed over 330 pages of documents that count as Brady material, but refused to admit that the information is exculpatory. Since the government handed the documents over under a protective order, Powell filed a separate sealed memo explaining why the material counts as Brady evidence.

“Any reasonable attorney familiar with the allegations against Mr. Flynn would recognize that this evidence contradicts and undermines the prosecutors’ ‘theories’ of any wrongdoing,” Powell wrote.

“The production of August 16, 2019, also proves that the government has long had this information in its possession, all while the government has made an exhaustive effort to prosecute Mr. Flynn for three years or more,” she added.

Notably, on Aug. 30, the same day as the Flynn filing, the defense attorney in the special counsel case against Concord Management and Consulting LLC notified the court that the prosecutors handed over evidence that should have been provided over a year ago.

In making the demand for exculpatory evidence, Powell noted that she expects the actual evidence, rather than the summaries provided by prosecutors. In support of her argument, she cited the administrative court case against Adam Lovinger, a Department of Defense whistleblower who complained about the contracting practices of the Office of Net Assessment, including the $1 million in contracts issued to Stefan Halper, one of the intelligence assets who targeted the Trump campaign. The DOD suspended and then fired Lovinger on charges that included the mishandling of sensitive information. His attorney said the act amounts to whistleblower reprisal.

The Flynn filing claims that the government omitted the word “not” in the declassified version of a report by the Navy Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS) which exonerated Lovinger of allegations that he leaked sensitive information. Lovinger’s attorney, Sean Bigley, told The Epoch Times that the omission was a typographical error by the case agent, rather than an intentional act to change the meaning of the report’s findings. While the report exonerated Lovinger in its conclusions, the government nonetheless withheld the report until after Lovinger’s administrative trial.

The judge ruled against Lovinger. Months later, Lovinger forced the release of the NCIS report by filing a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit.

“Unfortunately, a lot of times they can get away with that type of behavior, and it’s not what I would say is the norm,” said Bigley, whose firm deals with security clearance cases.

“Within the realm of what we handle, which is very niche practice, it is difficult to have a level playing field because the government has infinitely more resources at their disposal.” 

The City of San Francisco Declares the NRA a Terrorist Organization

#IAmTheNRA: NRA’s Wayne LaPierre Releases Video Responding to San Francisco’s Declaration of Group as ‘Terrorist Organization’


Breitbart News

by Matthew Boyle


National Rifle Association (NRA) CEO Wayne LaPierre is responding to the declaration by San Francisco’s Board of Supervisors voting to unanimously declare the group a terrorist organization with the release of a new video showing members of the NRA to be many hardworking Americans with a variety of backgrounds.

The video, provided exclusively to Breitbart News ahead of its public release, shows LaPierre speaking at the NRA’s 2019 Annual Meeting in Indianapolis to a crowd of thousands of NRA members who are ordinary hardworking Americans.
The less-than-two-minute video opens with a member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors bashing the NRA as a “domestic terror organization,” which the city officials voted on Tuesday to do.
“I shake my head and I go ‘what the heck is going wrong in our country?’” LaPierre says in the speech shown in the video.
LaPierre continues, “Let’s give them a real clear view on who we all are: How many police officers do we have here today? Please stand up. Anyone who works in health care in any way, anyone who works in education, if you work in manufacturing, construction, if you work in a trade–maybe a plumber–and how about stay-at-home moms? If you own your own business? Firefighters out there, if you’re in the military or a vet, if you obey the law, stand up and be recognized as Americans. I want all the media to look around this room right now and see us for the American people that we truly are. We are law-abiding Americans who believe liberty is a blessing. We love our country. I promise you we’re never going to stop fighting for your right and folks just like you all over America that have the right to defend themselves. So, we’re not going to give up or apologize that in a dangerous world, the Second Amendment is often all we have. Every one of these Americans are what we’re about.”

WATCH: NRA CEO WAYNE LAPIERRE’S VIDEO RESPONSE TO SAN FRANCISCO:


The NRA has fiercely criticized the San Francisco decision, tweeting out videos and statements ripping the leftist California city for its extreme measures:

This stunt is an effort to distract from the problems facing , such as rampant homelessness, drug abuse and petty crime, to name a few. Their wasting taxpayer dollars to declare 5M law-abiding Americans domestic terrorists, and it’s shameful.

As Breitbart News reported earlier on Wednesday, the resolution as passed by the San Francisco Board of Supervisors reads in part:
WHEREAS, Reported hate crimes have increased by double digits since 2015, and
WHEREAS, There are over 393,000,000 guns in the United States, which exceeds the country’s current total population, and
WHEREAS, Our elected representatives, including the President, have taken an oath swearing to “support and defend the Constitution of the United States against all enemies, foreign and domestic.”
WHEREAS, The United States Constitution specifically delineates that the country was founded to establish justice, insure domestic tranquility, and promote the general welfare …
WHEREAS, The National Rifle Association musters its considerable wealth and organizational strength to promote gun ownership and incite gun owners to acts of violence, and …
WHEREAS, The National Rifle Association through its advocacy has armed those individuals who would and have committed acts of terrorism; and
WHEREAS, All countries have violent and hateful people, but only in America do we give them ready access to assault weapons and large-capacity magazines thanks, in large part, to the National Rifle Association’s influence; now, therefore, be it
RESOLVED, That the City and County of San Francisco intends to declare the National Rifle Association a domestic terrorist organization; and, be it
FURTHER RESOLVED, That the City and County of San Francisco should take every reasonable step to assess the financial and contractual relationships our vendors and contractors have with this domestic terrorist organization; and, be it
FURTHER RESOLVED, That the City and County of San Francisco should take every reasonable step to limit those entities who do business with the City and County of San Francisco from doing business with this domestic terrorist organization; and be it
FURTHER RESOLVED, That the City and County of San Francisco should encourage all other jurisdictions, including other cities, states, and the federal government, to adopt similar positions.
The NRA responded with a pair of statements ripping San Francisco for its “ludicrous stunt.”
“This ludicrous stunt by the Board of Supervisors is an effort to distract from the real problems facing San Francisco, such as rampant homelessness, drug abuse and skyrocketing petty crime, to name a few. The NRA will continue working to protect the constitutional rights of all freedom-loving Americans,” the NRA said in one statement.
“This is a reckless assault on a law-abiding organization, its members, and the freedoms they all stand for. We remain undeterred – guided by our values and belief in those who want to find real solutions to violence,” the NRA added in another.


Ending sales of new gas-powered cars...


Ending sales of new gas-powered cars is part of Kamala Harris’ climate change plan





Meet the Candidate: Kamala Harris
Kamala Harris is winning fans as a U.S. senator from California. 
Here's a quick look at the 2020 presidential contender. 
By Patrick Gleason | Adam Wollner
WASHINGTON

Kamala Harris became the latest presidential candidate to roll out an ambitious plan to combat climate change Wednesday, hours before she is set to appear at a “climate crisis” town hall hosted by CNN. 

In Harris’ proposal, the California senator promises to help the country reach an aggressive set of environmental benchmarks. Her plan calls for phasing out sales of gas-powered cars by 2035, mandating carbon-neutral building standards and steering utilities to renewable sources of energy. 

By 2045, the United States will have “a clean, carbon neutral economy” by “using progressive year-on-year benchmarks that target individual sectors, including energy, transportation, infrastructure, industry and agriculture that meet appropriate goals for reducing emissions,” Harris’ plan pledges.

Harris also says that, as president, she will partner with her home state on tailpipe emissions — a leading source of greenhouse gas — reinforcing California’s unique authority under the Clean Air Act of 1970, which allows it to set car emissions standards independent of the federal government. Harris suggests she’d like to go even further than the standards California and the Obama administration agreed to in 2012, which the Trump administration is now trying to undo.

Her plan endorses a bill by Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Oregon, that would phase out sales of gas-powered cars over time. Merkley’s “zero-emissions vehicles act” aims to boost sales of electric and hydrogen fuel cell cars. Harris would shift American consumers away from gas by offering a new “cash for clunkers” program, increasing electric vehicle tax credits and requiring corporations to shift to zero-emission vehicle fleets.

Harris wants “100 percent” of new car sales in 2035 to be zero-emission vehicles, a target that is five years faster than the one Merkley sets in his bill.

And she says that a Harris White House would provide funding to California and other Western states that face a growing risk of wildfire to “implement community wildfire protection plans.” She does not specify a sum. 

Harris’ campaign estimates her proposal will cost $10 trillion “in public and private funding.”

The Harris campaign unveiled her climate plan a day after fellow 2020 Democratic contenders Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey and former Housing and Urban Development Secretary Julian Castro rolled out their own proposals to combat the growing threats of a warming planet. Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders announced his own $16 trillion plan in late August, while visiting Northern California and touring the destruction of the 2018 Camp Fire.

Like Booker, Harris’ proposal emphasizes environmental justice, promising that rural communities and communities of color will have “ a seat at the table in decision making.” 

Her plan incorporates the Climate Equity Act that the senator introduced with Rep. Alexandria Ocasio Cortez in late July, requiring additional scrutiny of environmental regulations that have significant impacts on communities that often suffer most heavily from pollution and economic disruption. 

Despite Harris’ support for Ocasio Cortez’s Green New Deal resolution and other policies to slow climate change, she has struggled to win over environmental activists in the Democratic primary race for president. Before she introduced her climate plan, Greenpeace USA gave her a C grade on the environment, ranking her 11th among the field of 18 candidates. 

Harris also faced blowback from green groups after it was reported she planned to skip the CNN climate forum to attend fundraisers in California. Her campaign later confirmed that she would participate in the live forum, where candidates will take questions from voters in the audience.

A new Morning Consult poll conducted for the Sierra Club released Wednesday morning saw Harris’ support sinking among like Democratic primary voters who said a candidate’s climate plan is very important to their vote. Her support dropped to 7 percent from 13 in the last Sierra Club poll, conducted in July. 

Former Vice President Joe Biden led the pack, with the support of 30 percent of so-called “climate voters.” 

The poll indicated, however, that Democratic voters will be pleased by many of the planks in Harris’ climate plan. Among those surveyed, 90 percent said they support transitioning the country to 100 percent clean, renewable energy sources like wind and solar by the year 2030, including 61 percent who support it “strongly.” 

And 88 percent back “a comprehensive national plan to tackle the twin crises of climate change and inequality by investing in the clean energy economy.”

Michael Wilner contributed to this story.

Storming Back to the Impeachment Charade



Storming Back to the Impeachment Charade

House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerry Nadler holds a news conference to discuss the Committee’s oversight agenda following the Mueller hearing on Capitol Hill, July 26, 2019. (Erin Scott/Reuters)


Jerry Nadler claims to be conducting an impeachment inquiry, but his committee has never actually voted to have one. Here’s why.


Elections have consequences. This was a point we tried to make many times in the run-up to the 2018 midterm elections. The Democrats won control of the House fair and square. That means they get to drive the agenda.

Their agenda, kinda sorta, is the impeachment of President Trump — which is to say, the quixotic quest to build political support for it. According to the Washington Post, that effort is about to sink deeper into farce: Hearings on Stormy Daniels and the hush-money payments to conceal trysts that Donald Trump had — allegedly, of course — a decade before he ran for president.

Such a quest is a two-edged sword, though. If this is how the Democrats choose to spend the public’s time and money, they must be accountable for it. They must be pressured to demonstrate the courage of their anti-Trump convictions. So far, for all the bluster, they’ve gotten away with cowardice.

Most of the impeachment quasi-action is in the Judiciary Committee, chaired by Representative Jerrold Nadler (D., N.Y.). We have to qualify the word “action” because, while Nadler claims to be conducting an impeachment inquiry, his committee has never actually voted to have one.

This reflects the political needle Democrats cannot thread.

Their control of the House hinges on 41 seats that, after the 2018 victory, they hold in Trump-friendly districts. Constituents in those districts do not want Trump impeached. Even most of those opposed to Trump take the sensible position that he should be opposed at the ballot box, and the country spared a rabidly partisan, substantively scant, and inevitably futile removal effort. And because, unlike in 2018, the president will be on the ballot in 2020, the pro-Trump voters will be out in force. An unpopular impeachment push could spell electoral doom.

Yet, also because Trump will be on the ballot, the hard-left progressives are making their influence felt. They are the Democratic party’s energetic base, and they punch way above their weight in presidential-primary season. And they want Trump impeached, yesterday, irrespective of whether he can be removed (a prospect made impossible by the constitutional requirement of a two-thirds majority favoring removal in the Senate, now controlled by the GOP). The base knows Democrats have the numbers to get impeachment done in the House, and its members are ballistic that it hasn’t been done yet.

So ballistic that the 72-year-old Nadler, an Upper West Side fixture who got to be a powerful committee chairman because he has been in Congress for 27 years, is facing a real primary challenge. So are a number of the old-line lefties. They are finding that years of governing, which requires compromise, have left them out of step with the AOC avant-garde — such that Speaker Nancy Pelosi, the very model of a 20th-century left-wing Democrat, is now a “moderate.”

Nadler needs to push for impeachment, but Pelosi can’t let him put the Trump-district Democrats on the spot. Hard votes could cost control of the House. Nadler is trying to thread the needle by pretending his committee has already established a formal impeachment inquiry, and is now simply following through with consideration of potential high crimes and misdemeanors. He hopes you won’t notice that he left out a step: He has not actually called for an impeachment inquiry. Sure, he probably has the votes. But Pelosi does not want vulnerable Democrats put in the position of casting votes that Republicans and the president will hammer them over next year.

Amid all this gamesmanship, an important point is easy to miss: This is only a problem because there is no objectively viable impeachment case against Trump.

If Trump had committed some offense that a goodly portion of the country believed was impeachable, then the mere commencement of an impeachment inquiry would not pose a difficult vote for anyone. Virtually all Democrats (and probably more than a smattering of Republicans) would be for it. No person of good will would hold it against any lawmaker who voted in favor of calling for an examination of the relevant facts.

But because there is no impeachment case, Democrats have to make one up.

The hush-money payments are a perfect example. Omitted from the Post’s coverage is a fundamental flaw: Even if it were clear-cut that Trump had committed a campaign-finance violation — and it’s not — it would almost certainly not be an impeachable offense. Election-law violations are sufficiently trivial, relatively speaking, that the Justice Department often declines prosecution and allows them to be disposed of by administrative fine. As we have pointed out, this is what the Obama Justice Department did with 2008 Obama-campaign violations, which, in dollar terms, dwarf the money involved in the Trump situation.

Then there is the fictional framing of the Michael Cohen case. It is claimed that Cohen, Trump’s former lawyer and self-described “fixer,” has gone to jail based on crimes in which he has implicated Trump. That’s ridiculous.

As his plea agreement with federal prosecutors in the Southern District of New York (SDNY) shows, Cohen’s prison sentence was driven by his guilty pleas to tax- and bank-fraud charges. Trump had nothing to do with those felonies. They involved over $1 million in fraud, and bank fraud carries a possible incarceration sentence of 30 years. If it were not for these serious crimes, Cohen would not have been prosecuted, much less imprisoned.

The plea to two campaign-finance violations was an add-on. The charges were inconsequential as far as Cohen’s criminal liability and prison exposure were concerned; they were valuable only to prosecutors, who appear to have been trying to make a case, regardless of how weak, on Trump. Usually, defendants want to avoid additional criminal convictions; here, Cohen readily agreed to plead guilty because being a potential accomplice witness against Trump increased the likelihood that prosecutors would argue for a lenient sentence.

It was for naught, however. The SDNY closed the case without additional charges because treating the hush-money payments as campaign-finance crimes was, at best, overkill, and probably wrong as a matter of law.

In a nutshell, there is nothing per se illegal about non-disclosure agreements, which are a staple of civil litigation. And as I’ve explained, there is profound legal debate over what constitutes an “in-kind” campaign contribution — to the point that even the Federal Election Commission and the Justice Department have been at loggerheads. Even if we assume arguendo that the payments to Stormy Daniels and Karen McDougal were unlawful as to Cohen and American Media Inc. (which paid McDougal), they were not necessarily illegal as to Trump. As the candidate, different campaign-finance rules applied to him; and he had reasons unrelated to the campaign (e.g., avoiding both damage to his marriage and family relationships and encouragement of similar lawsuits) to keep the matter quiet.

Critics are quite right to observe, as our Jim Geraghty does, that everything relevant about the Stormy episode has already been, er, laid bare. Trump is Trump, and people have already made up their minds about this aspect of his character. That said, though, Democrats have the power, and the privilege that goes with it, to make an issue of the president’s fitness for office. They have the right to call for an impeachment inquiry, and to spend their legislative time pursuing it.

But they should have to do it in the light of day.

Republicans should be using every means available to them, from procedural motions, floor and hearing speeches, and media outlets, to force Democrats to vote on convening an impeachment inquiry. Nadler, Pelosi, and House Democrats want to avoid the vote because they know impeachment is not what the country wants. They want to put an impeachment show on for their base without being accountable for an actual impeachment effort.

Time to call out this sham for what it is.

You misinterpreted my blacklist as a blacklist



The most fascinating part of watching Hollywood Leftists back-peddle is marveling over how stupid they think we are.  Over the weekend, “Will & Grace” stars Eric McCormack and Debra Messing called for the public release of any Hollywood colleagues who would dare attend a Trump fundraiser.  McCormack was not subtle in his desire to out them in order to blacklist them.

After the Hollywood Reporter broke the news that President Trump would be appearing at a Beverly Hills fundraiser, McCormack quote tweeted this reply:

“Hey, @THR, kindly report on everyone attending this event, so the rest of us can be clear about who we don’t wanna work with. Thx.”

The message couldn’t be clearer.  McCormack wants to know who supports Trump so that he and his likeminded Hollywood drones (AKA “the rest of us”) don’t have to work with them.

But how dare you misinterpret this as a blacklist!


Now, here’s the hilarious part.

McCormack released a statement “clarifying” that when he was calling for a blacklist, he didn’t mean, you know, a blacklist.

“I want to be clear about my social media post from last week, which has been misinterpreted in a very upsetting way. I absolutely do not support blacklists or discrimination of any kind, as anyone who knows me would attest. I’d simply like to understand where Trump’s major donations are coming from, which is a matter of public record. I am holding myself responsible for making educated and informed decisions that I can morally and ethically stand by and to do that, transparency is essential.”

Yeah. “Misinterpreted.” See what I mean? They really do assume we’re stupid.

Is it just me or does that word salad give off the faintest whiff of a seasoned PR flunky?

Let me sum up this for you.

Eric doesn’t support blacklists.  But he wants to know who these Trump supporters are so he can make informed decisions – no doubt on deciding who not to work with. But it’s not a blacklist of people he doesn’t want to work with.  It’s just making sure he doesn’t ever work with these people. And that isn’t discrimination to not want to work with those dirty

Trump supporters. It’s just transparency!

Or something.

Let me put it even more succinctly: Eric thinks working with Trump supporters is immoral.

So don’t you stinking, rotten Trump supporting rubes in flyover country accuse Eric of wanting to blacklist Trump supporters.  Sure, he said he wants to know their names so “the rest of us can be clear about who we don’t wanna work with.”

But that doesn’t mean he wants to blacklist them in the “blacklisting” sense of the word. He just wants to be informed so that he doesn’t personally ever have to, God forbid, be around these people he deems immoral.

Oddly enough, Eric thinks this makes him look better.

And so too does Debra Messing who happily burped out
“I couldn’t have said it better. @EricMcCormack.” 

Yeah. I’m sure you couldn’t have said it better, Debra.
But that’s nothing to crow about, really.

When Messing tweeted out a link that would allow people to look up Trump donors in their area, she wasn’t doing it “for transparency or morality.”

You’d have to be a complete idiot to believe that.

These two want to marginalize and shun fellow citizens who support a different political candidate than they do.  Worse, if you read the replies to Debra’s “Find Trump Donors in your area” tweet, like-minded Trump haters were vowing to drive people out of business if their names were on the list.

In other words, Debra’s like-minded fans definitely interpreted it as a blacklist.

These two knew exactly what they were doing.

What they didn’t expect was the holy hell they unleashed on themselves.

But they can’t un-ring that bell.

No matter how many word-salad statements about 
“transparency” and “morality” they burp out.

Rand Paul Says

https://reason.com/2019/09/04/rand-paul-says-feds-blew-millions-supporting-tunisian-political-parties-subsidizing-pakistani-films-and-more/

Rand Paul Says Feds Blew Millions Supporting Tunisian Political Parties, Subsidizing Pakistani Films, and More

No single spending item is going to solve America's $22 trillion national debt, but every little bit of wasteful spending makes the tough problems more difficult to solve.


sfphotosthree461515
(Alex Edelman/CNP/AdMEdia/SIPA/Newscom) 


American taxpayer money helped boost political parties in Tunisia and subsidize films made in Pakistan—because "nation building" might have fallen off the front pages, but it remains part of the federal budget.

Both are highlighted in a report published last week by Sen. Rand Paul's (R–Ky.) office. The summer 2019 edition of Paul's ongoing "Waste Book" project includes more than $50 billion in wasteful government spending, including not only nation-building exercises in the Middle East, but also studies of frog mating calls, building "green" infrastructure in Peru, and improper payments made by federal entitlement programs.

In Tunisia, the State Department spent $2 million to "strengthen democratic institutions and processes," apparently as part of an effort to increase trust between the Tunisian people and their nascent democratic system. Paul's office points out that the State Department has spent more than $1.4 billion trying to shore up Tunisian democracy since the 2011 uprising that deposed Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, who had ruled as a dictator since 1987.

"What makes State believe $2 million more will succeed where 1.4 billion has failed?" Paul's report asks.

Indeed, American attempts at nation building in Tunisia have been less disastrous (and far less expensive) than elsewhere, but that hardly justifies well-intentioned but likely futile attempts to impose political stability from the outside. If anything, the American government's involvement in Tunisian domestic politics will only make locals less trusting of the political process.

Spending $100,000 to help underwrite film productions in Pakistan seems like an equally impotent way to sow the seeds of democracy. The grant is supposed to help facilitate the making of up to 50 short films by Pakistani filmmakers—the movies are supposed to have themes of "strength in diversity" and "women's empowerment" according to the grant application documents. As nice as that might be, it seems pretty far outside the American government's essential functions, particularly since the State Department also says the Pakistani film industry is already "growing dramatically."

Wasteful exercises in nation building are, sadly, not anything new. Last year, Reason's Brian Doherty reported on the shocking levels of waste found by the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction. Among other things, American taxpayers paid $43 million for a natural gas filling station in a country where there are few natural gas-powered vehicles, $60 million for an uninhabitable hotel in Kabul, and $28 million for new camouflage military uniforms designed to mimic a forest environment—despite the fact that Afghanistan isn't really known for its forests.

No single spending item is going to solve America's $22 trillion national debt, but every little bit of wasteful spending makes the tough problems more difficult to solve. Paul's report includes more than $50 billion in waste, though the vast majority of that total ($48 billion of it) is due to improper payments made by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid (CMS). That's been a recurring problem for the federal agency responsible for the two major medical entitlement programs—the Government Accountability Office (GAO) has listed CMS as a "high-risk program" for wasteful spending every year since 1990.

The Department of Homeland Security's ongoing efforts to renovate an abandoned Washington, D.C., mental hospital to be used as a new headquarters was a distant second in Paul's accounting. His report claims DHS has spent more than $2.1 billion on the project so far, and there is still more work to be done at the site.

Set against the nation-building projects and other weird examples of waste, those two projects provide a helpful illustration of the federal government's real spending problem. As nonsensical (or even counterproductive) as some foreign aid projects can be, it is entitlement programs and basic operational costs (like the overhead expenses that come from employing more than 2 million people) that must be targeted if federal spending is to be reduced in a meaningful way.

A Shameless Lying MSNBC Hack is the Face of the Media


Lies, smears and the new media normal.


In July, MSNBC’s biggest and dullest conspiracy theorist got some very bad news.

After over a year of booming ratings, The Rachel Maddow Show’s viewership had crashed. It had been a long road for Maddow, the former blonde Catholic high school girl who had decided she wanted to be a media personality and ended up with an MSNBC show through the efforts of Keith Olbermann.

After he was gone, MSNBC had to settle for a slightly less effeminate version of Olbermann.

Maddow had retained the key elements of Olbermann’s personality, the unhinged conspiracy theories, histrionic delivery, the dark hair and even the fashionably ugly boxy black glasses. The former blonde not only looked and sounded like Olbermann, but she had learned to hit the same buttons in her audience.

One man had made her career possible and another moved her show into the top cable spot.

That man was Robert Mueller. There was no Russian conspiracy theory too bizarre or insane to earn a rant from Rachel. Going where few dared go, Maddow began insisting that Russia was conducting a “continuing operation” and might even be in control of the White House and the entire country now.

Then the Mueller Report and later, his testimony, destroyed all of Maddow’s conspiracies.

At the height of her Russian conspiracy theories in which she connected everyone and their uncle to Moscow, Maddow had could boast 4 million viewers while claiming to be the top cable news show. In July, she had fallen to fifth place without even 2.5 million viewers to scrape together for her rants.

If the viewers kept abandoning her, Apple, BoA, Mercedes and other advertisers would too.

Desperate and nasty had always been Maddow’s stock in trade. Olbermann’s hateful screeds had been insecurity diluted into egomania and backwashed as furious tantrums. Maddow’s insecurity bypassed egomania. She didn’t have the chops to be on the air and she knew it. The only way she could stay on MSNBC was by spewing crazy lies and trying to destroy everyone to the right of Bernie Sanders.

In the middle of August, Maddow, her producers and the voices in their heads, decided to smear the grandson of Iraqi Jewish refugee grandparents as a white nationalist. In an MSNBC broadcast, she accused Steven Menashi, a Trump judicial nominee, of writing a "blood-curdling article" offering "a highbrow argument for racial purity" by misreading, distorting and misrepresenting his writing.

Maddow repeatedly lied about the article, and failed to even mention that it was about Israel. She falsely claimed that Menashi had written “how definitely democracy can’t work unless the country is defined by a unifying race.” That was the opposite of the point that the former Alito clerk had made.

Menashi’s father was a Jewish immigrant from Iran. His father’s parents had fled Iraq because of the anti-Semitic Farhud pogrom. His mother’s family had fled Ukraine and Lithuania. All of this made Maddow’s accusations that he was a racial nationalist especially implausible. But it didn’t matter.

Rachel Maddow had not bothered to find out anything about Menashi before trying to destroy him.

All that mattered were two things. First, that Menashi was a Trump nominee, making him fair game for any lie, smear and slander. And second, that Maddow was sinking in the ratings and needed help. Going after Menashi might not turn things around, but the smear campaign might stop the bleeding.

Maddow was trying to destroy a good man to keep Bank of America advertising on her show.

Despite the backlash from legal thinkers, Maddow took her tirade to Twitter, offering screenshots with snippets of lines from a 122 page law review article, about the challenges of diversity, while ignoring the conclusion, that, "Sometimes, then, differences must be openly acknowledged in the political sphere so that equality can be established on the basis of our differences rather than in denial of them."

Maddow isn’t incapable of reading a law article. Before her career as MSNBC’s conspiracy theorist, she was a Rhodes Scholar. Rhodes Scholars are not necessarily geniuses. No one would mistake Bill Clinton, Cory Booker or Peter Buttigieg for great minds. But Maddow could have read Menashi’s article.

Instead she didn’t care. And neither did her corporate employers at MSNBC and Comcast.
Maddow has a quota of conspiracy theories to get through in every show. And Steven Menashi was just one of the people she had decided to smear on one episode of her disinformation program.

Some Jewish groups have accused Maddow of anti-Semitism. While Maddow occasionally likes people to think she’s Jewish, aside from one grandfather, the rest is Dutch, English and Irish. And though she certainly opposes Israel, it’s doubtful that she even knew Menashi was Jewish. Others, like Molly Jong-Fast of left-wing site The Bulwark, who mocked Menashi’s ethnic features, did not have that excuse.

Maddow’s drive-by smearing of Menashi was part of a pattern.

In 2016, Maddow had accused Jeff Sessions of being a racist. Next year, she was accusing him of being in bed with the Russians. That trajectory neatly captured not only leftist smear campaigns, which have gone back and forth between accusing President Trump and his associates of either being Russians or racists, but also Maddow’s erratic shifts from one smear tactic to another whenever it was convenient.

But you didn’t need to be a senator or an attorney general to be on the receiving end of a Maddow smear. Kerri Kupec, a DOJ spokeswoman, was smeared by Maddow for graduating from Liberty U.

“We've got a new Justice Department spokesperson who's from Liberty University, and Liberty University was founded by a televangelist so that your Christian child wouldn't be corrupted by actual higher education. And now that's the spokesperson for the Justice Department,” she sneered.

Considering the outcome that Maddow’s parents ended up with, can you blame Kupec’s parents?

It’s not just that Maddow is a radical or a hack. Nobody else would be allowed on at MSNBC. But she’s also pathetically bad at what she does. And her awfulness feeds her insecurities which makes her behave even worse. Take the time she aired a misleadingly edited clip of Senator McCain.

Maddow casually mentioned that there was an unfair edit and then breezed on into another rant.

Airing misleadingly edited clips is just something that Maddow does from time to time.

Things like actually knowing that the man you’re smearing as a racist is the grandson of Iraqi Jewish refugees, that the woman you’re dismissing as a DOJ spokeswoman was a law clerk, and that the clip you’re airing was edited to smear McCain, don’t actually matter to Maddow. They’re not the point.

And that’s why Maddow jumped the furthest and the deepest into the Russian conspiracy mudhole.

Maddow had never seen words as anything except a puzzle that could be combined in interesting shapes to hurt some people, mislead others, and keep her from having to work at Starbucks. The factual content of those words meant as little to her as the calorie content label means to a monkey.

Russia had given Maddow a world of conspiracy theories to spin into a paranoid universe of lies. And Apple, Bank of America, and Mercedes had been happy to pay for ads in between her crazed rants.

Maddow has never cared about her credibility. She shot to the top of the pile through shameless stunts like claiming, “We’ve got Trump’s tax returns.” After ranting and rambling for twenty minutes, she unveiled, what they call in New York City, bupkes. But it didn’t matter because the dupes tuned in.

There are always people with no shame willing to do anything to be on television. That’s what makes Survivor, The Bachelor, and CNN panels possible. But the media likes to pretend it’s better than that.

But MSNBC didn’t just put Maddow on the air night after night, no matter what she did, how many lies she told, how many people she tried to destroy, and which conspiracy she peddled between ad breaks.

MSNBC and NBC brought her in to moderate the 2020 Democrat debates.

Maddow isn’t fundamentally different than the media. The Olbermanette is just further down the slippery slope. The media puts narratives ahead of facts. Maddow is all narrative. And narratives without facts are conspiracy theories. The media believes that its goal is destroying Republicans while maintaining its credibility. Maddow only cares about the first part and isn’t worried about credibility.

A.M. Or After Mueller, Maddow’s viewership has taken a hit, not because they don’t believe, but because they know that there won’t be any more exciting Mueller and Russian conspiracies.

Rachel Maddow succeeded because she understood that what her audience wanted wasn’t factual reporting, but the drama of journalism without the substance. Maddow, like the media, implicitly promises to get Trump, but is happy to take out anyone more vulnerable along the way.  

This is the business that the rest of the media is in. Maddow is just more open about it.
Maddow’s attack on Menashi was picked up by other media outlets. Once again, a shameless lying hack’s conspiracy theories were driving the media narrative. Maddow is the face of the media.