The lesson: The 2016 Trump election has been nullified, American voters are slaves who are not allowed to choose the US president. The NY Times won't change until the US gets a second political party. With only one party, the democrats, the US is effectively a dictatorship. "Both" political parties voted nearly unanimously in August that Russia interfered in the election, that Russia must therefore receive severe sanctions, that Trump must lose all authority to deal with Russia and that 63 million voters who wanted detente with Russia will have their votes erased. NY Times has zero reason to change.
9/2/17, "Russia-gate’s Totalitarian Style," Robert Parry, Consortium News
"Special Report: The New York Times is at it again,
reporting unproven allegations about Russia as flat fact, while anyone
who questions the Russia-gate groupthink faces ugly attacks, reports
Robert Parry."
"It is a basic rule from Journalism 101 that when an allegation is in
serious doubt – or hasn’t been established as fact – you should convey
that uncertainty to your reader by using words like “alleged” or
“purportedly.” But The New York Times and pretty much the entire U.S.
news media have abandoned that principle in their avid pursuit of
Russia-gate.
When Russia is the target of an article, the Times typically casts
aside all uncertainty about Russia’s guilt, a pattern that we’ve seen in
the Times in earlier sloppy reporting about other “enemy” countries,
such as Iraq or Syria, as well Russia’s involvement in Ukraine’s civil
war. Again and again, the Times regurgitates highly tendentious claims
by the U.S. government as undeniable truth.
So, despite the lack of publicly provided evidence that the Russian
government did “hack” Democratic emails and slip them to WikiLeaks to
damage Hillary Clinton and help Donald Trump, the Times continues to
treat those allegations as flat fact.
For a while, the Times also repeated the false claim that “all 17
U.S. intelligence agencies” concurred in the Russia-did-it conclusion, a
lie that was used to intimidate and silence skeptics of the thinly
sourced Russia-gate reports issued by President Obama’s intelligence
chiefs.
Only after two of those chiefs – Director of National Intelligence
James Clapper and CIA Director John Brennan – admitted that the key Jan.
6 report was produced by what Clapper called “hand-picked” analysts from just three agencies, the Times was forced to run an embarrassing correction retracting the “17 agencies” canard.
But the Times then switched its phrasing to a claim that Russian
guilt was a “consensus” of the U.S. intelligence community, a misleading
formulation that still suggests that all 17 agencies were onboard
without actually saying so – all the better to fool the Times readers.
The Times seems to have forgotten what one of its own journalists
observed immediately after reading the Jan. 6 report. Scott Shane wrote:
“What is missing from the public report is what many Americans most
eagerly anticipated: hard evidence to back up the agencies’ claims that
the Russian government engineered the election attack. … Instead, the
message from the agencies essentially amounts to ‘trust us.’”
However, if that was the calculation of Obama’s intelligence chiefs –
that proof would not be required – they got that right, since the Times
and pretty much every other major U.S. news outlet has chosen to trust,
not verify, on Russia-gate.
Dropping the Attribution
In story after story, the Times doesn’t even bother to attribute the
claims of Russian guilt. That guilt is just presented as flat fact even
though the Russian government denies it and WikiLeaks founder Julian
Assange says he did not get the emails from Russia or any other
government.
Of course, it is possible the Russian government is lying and that
some cut-outs were used to hide from Assange the real source of the
emails. But the point is that we don’t know the truth and neither does
The New York Times – and likely neither does the U.S. government
(although it talks boldly about its “high confidence” in the
evidence-lite conclusions of those “hand-picked” analysts).
And, the Times continues with this pattern of asserting as certain
what is both in dispute and lacking in verifiable evidence. In a
front-page Russia-gate story
on Saturday, the Times treats Russian guilt as flat fact again. The
online version of the story carried the headline: “Russian Election
Hacking Efforts, Wider Than Previously Known, Draw Little Scrutiny.”
The Times’ article opens with an alarmist lede about voters in
heavily Democratic Durham, North Carolina, encountering problems with
computer rolls:
“Susan Greenhalgh, a troubleshooter at a nonpartisan election
monitoring group, knew that the company that provided Durham’s software,
VR Systems, had been penetrated by Russian hackers months before. ‘It
felt like tampering, or some kind of cyberattack,’ Ms. Greenhalgh said
about the voting troubles in Durham.”
The Times reported that Greenhalgh “knew” this supposed fact because she heard it on “a CNN report.”
If you read deeper into the story, you learn that “local officials
blamed human error and software malfunctions — and no clear-cut evidence
of digital sabotage has emerged, much less a Russian role in it.” But
the Times clearly doesn’t buy that explanation, adding:
“After a presidential campaign scarred by Russian meddling, local,
state and federal agencies have conducted little of the type of digital
forensic investigation required to assess the impact, if any, on voting
in at least 21 states whose election systems were targeted by Russian
hackers, according to interviews with nearly two dozen national security
and state officials and election technology specialists.”
But was the 2016 campaign really “scarred by Russian meddling”? For
instance, the “fake news” hysteria of last fall was actually traced to
young entrepreneurs who were exploiting the gullibility of Donald
Trump’s supporters to get lots of “clicks” and thus make more ad
revenue. The stories didn’t trace back to the Russian government. (Even
the Times discovered that reality although it apparently has since been forgotten.)
‘Undermining’ American Democracy
The Jan. 6 report
by those “hand-picked” analysts from CIA, FBI and the National Security
Agency did tack on a seven-page appendix from 2012 that accused
Russia’s RT network of seeking to undermine U.S. democracy. But the
complaints were bizarre if not laughable, including the charge that RT
covered the Occupy Wall Street protests, reported on the dangers of
“fracking,” and allowed third-party presidential candidates to state
their views after they were excluded from the two-party debate between
Republican Mitt Romney and Democrat Barack Obama.
That such silly examples of “undermining” American democracy were
even cited in the Jan. 6 report should have been an alarm bell to any
professional journalist that the report was a classic case of biased
analysis if not outright propaganda.
But the report was issued amid the
frenzy over the incoming Trump presidency when Democrats – and much of
the mainstream media – were enlisting in the #Resistance. The Jan. 6
report was viewed as a crucial weapon to take out Trump, so skepticism
was suppressed.
Because of that – and with Trump continuing to alarm many Americans
with his erratic temperament and his coy encouragement of white
nationalism [?] – the flimsy Russian “hacking” case has firmed up into a
not-to-be-questioned groupthink, as the Times story on Saturday makes
clear:
“The assaults on the vast back-end election apparatus [i.e. voting
rolls]… have received far less attention than other aspects of the
Russian interference, such as the hacking of Democratic emails and
spreading of false or damaging information about Mrs. Clinton. Yet the
hacking of electoral systems was more extensive than previously
disclosed, The New York Times found.”
In other words, even though there has been no solid proof of this
“Russian interference” – either the “hacking of Democratic emails” or
the “spreading of false or damaging information about Mrs. Clinton” –
the Times reports those allegations as flat fact before extending the
suspicions into the supposed “hacking of electoral systems” despite the
lack of supporting evidence and in the face of counter-explanations from
local officials. As far as the Times is concerned, the problem couldn’t
be that some volunteer poll worker screwed up the software. No, it must
be the dirty work of Russia! Russia! Russia!
The Times asserts that “Russian efforts to compromise American
election systems…include combing through voter databases, scanning for
vulnerabilities or seeking to alter data, which have been identified in
multiple states.” Again, the Times does not apply words like “alleged”;
it is just flat fact.
Uncertainty Acknowledged
Yet, oddly, the quote used to back up this key accusation
acknowledges how little is actually known. The Times cites Michael
Daniel, the cybersecurity coordinator in the Obama White House, as
saying:
“We don’t know if any of the [computer] problems were an accident, or
the random problems you get with computer systems, or whether it was a
local hacker, or actual malfeasance by a sovereign nation-state. … If
you really want to know what happened, you’d have to do a lot of
forensics, a lot of research and investigation, and you may not find out
even then.’”
Which is exactly the point: as far as we know from the public record,
no U.S. government forensics have been done on the Russian “hacking”
allegations, period. Regarding the “hack” of the Democratic National
Committee’s emails, the FBI did not secure the computers for examination
but instead relied on the checkered reputation of a private outfit called Crowdstrike,
which based much of its conclusion on the fact that Russian lettering
and a reference to a famous Russian spy were inserted into the metadata.
Why the supposedly crack Russian government hackers would be so sloppy
has never been explained. It also could not be excluded that these
insertions were done deliberately to incriminate the Russians.
Without skepticism, the Times accepts that there is some secret U.S.
government information that should bolster the public’s confidence about
Russian guilt, but none of that evidence is spelled out, other than
ironically to say what the Russians weren’t doing.
The Times cited the Jan. 6 report’s determination that “The Russians
shied away from measures that might alter the ‘tallying’ of votes, … a
conclusion drawn from American spying and intercepts of Russian
officials’ communications and an analysis by the Department of Homeland
Security, according to the current and former government officials.”
But this seems to be the one U.S. government conclusion that the
Times doubts, i.e., a finding of Russian innocence on the question of
altering the vote count.
Again accepting as flat fact all the other U.S. government claims
about Russia, the Times writes: “Apart from the Russian influence
campaign intended to undermine Mrs. Clinton and other Democratic
officials, the impact of the quieter Russian hacking efforts at the
state and county level has not been widely studied.”
There’s, of course, another rule from Journalism 101: that when there
is a serious accusation, the accused is afforded a meaningful chance to
dispute the allegation, but the Times lengthy article ignores that
principle, too. The Russian government and WikiLeaks do not get a shot
at knocking down the various allegations and suspicions.
Deep-seated Bias
The reality is that the Times has engaged in a long pattern of
anti-Russia prejudice going back a number of years but escalating
dramatically since 2013 when prominent neoconservatives began to target
Russia as an obstacle to their agendas of “regime change” in Syria and
“bomb-bomb-bombing” Iran....
Two Birds, One Stone
In the case of the Russian “hacking” stories, the anti-Russia bias is
compounded by an anti-Trump bias, a two-fer that has overwhelmed all
notions of journalistic principles not only at the Times but at other
mainstream news outlets and many liberal/progressive ones which want
desperately to see Trump impeached and view Russia-gate as the pathway
to that outcome.
So, while there was almost no skepticism about the Jan. 6 report by
those “hand-picked” analysts – even though the report amounts only to a
series of “we assess” this and “we assess” that, i.e,, their opinions,
not facts – there has been a bubbling media campaign to discredit a July 24 memo by the Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity.
The memo, signed by 17 members of the group including former NSA
technical director for world geopolitical and military analysis William
Binney, challenged the technological possibility of Russian hackers
extracting data over the Internet at the speed reflected in one of the
posted documents.
After The Nation published an article by Patrick Lawrence about the VIPS memo (a story that we re-posted
at Consortiumnews.com), editor Katrina vanden Heuvel came under intense
pressure inside the liberal magazine to somehow repudiate its findings
and restore the Russia-gate groupthink.
Outside pressure also came from a number of mainstream sources, including Washington Post blogger Eric Wemple, who interviewed Nation columnist Katha Pollitt about
the inside anger over Lawrence’s story and its citation by Trump
defenders, a development which upset Pollitt: “These are our friends
now? The Washington Times, Breitbart, Seth Rich truthers and Donald
Trump Jr.? Give me a break. It’s very upsetting to me. It’s
embarrassing.”
However, in old-fashioned journalism, our reporting was intended to
inform the American people and indeed the world as fully and fairly as
possible. We had no control over how the information would play out in
the public domain. If our information was seized upon by one group or
another, so be it. It was the truthfulness of the information that was
important, not who cited it.
A Strange Attack
But clearly inside The Nation, Pollitt and others were upset that the
VIPS memo had undercut the Russia-gate groupthink. So, in response to
this pressure, vanden Heuvel solicited an attack on the VIPS memo by
several dissident members of VIPS and she topped Lawrence’s article with
a lengthy editor’s note.
Strangely, this solicited attack
on the VIPS memo cites as its “first” point that the Jan. 6
intelligence report did not explicitly use the word “hack,” but rather
“cyber operation,” adding: “This could mean via the network, the cloud,
computers, remote hacking, or direct data removal.”
That uncertainty about how the emails were extracted supposedly
undercut the VIPS argument that the download speeds prohibited the
possibility of a “hack,” but this pretense that the phrase “cyber
operation” isn’t referring to a “hack” amounts to a disingenuous word
game. After all, senior U.S. intelligence officials, including former
FBI Director James Comey, have stated under oath and in interviews with
major news outlets that they were referring to a “hack.”
These officials also have cited the Crowdstrike analysis of the DNC
“hack” as support for their analysis, and Clinton campaign chairman John
Podesta has described how he was the victim of a “spear-phishing” scam
that allowed his emails to be hacked.
After all these months of articles about the Russian “hack,” it seems
a bit late to suddenly pretend no one was referring to a “hack” – only
after some seasoned experts concluded that a “hack” was not feasible.
Despite the latest attacks, the authors of the VIPS memo, including
former NSA technology official Binney, stand by their findings.
However, when the cause is to demonize Russia and/or to unseat Trump,
apparently any sleight of hand or McCarthyistic smear is permissible.
In Post blogger Wemple’s article
about The Nation’s decision to undercut the VIPS memo, he includes some
nasty asides against Russia scholar Stephen Cohen, who happens to be
Katrina vanden Heuvel’s husband.
In a snide tone, Wemple describes Cohen as providing “The soft-glove
treatment of Russian President Vladimir Putin,” calling it Cohen’s
“specialty.”
Wemple also repeats the canard about “a consensus finding of the U.S.
intelligence community” when we have known for some time that the Jan. 6
report was the work of those “hand-picked” analysts from three
agencies, not a National Intelligence Estimate that would reflect the
consensus view of all 17 agencies and include dissents.
What is playing out here – both at The New York Times and across the
American media landscape – is a totalitarian-style approach toward any
challenge to the groupthink on Russia-gate. Even though the Obama administration’s intelligence chiefs presented
no public evidence to support their “assessments,” anyone who questions
their certainty can expect to be smeared and ridiculed. We must all
treat unverified opinions as flat fact."
...............
George Soros gave Ivanka's husband's business a $250 million credit line in 2015 per WSJ. Soros is also an investor in Jared's business.
Sunday, September 3, 2017
NY Times in Sept. 2017 still treats alleged Russian hacking of 2016 election as fact though no evidence for it has been provided-Robert Parry, Consortium News...(NY Times is supported by nearly unanimous vote of US House and Senate that Russia interfered in election, must be severely punished, as must US Pres. Trump. All Russia decisions transferred to Congress)
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- I'm the daughter of a World War II Air Force pilot and outdoorsman who settled in New Jersey.
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