I did not call you a fascist, though pointing out many who promulgate the disinformation (e.g. Assange) are fascists in that they explicitly identify with the Russian political system and see themselves as righteous enemies of the United States as promoter of liberal ideals. I do believe anti-Americanism is the culprit in our case here based on what you've written on the board about American foreign policy and other topics over the years, to the point where objective evaluation of evidence is hindered by motivated reasoning. So what can I take your position as, if not 'The American government always lies, especially as I choose to disregard things inconvenient to me'?
And we come to the conspiracy of thousands across different US states, across countries, branches of government, conspiracy to falsify the case against Trump and paint him in a bad light - all to contradict a conspiracy of individuals, Trump and Putin, individuals whose lives prior to 2016 we have known quite a lot about. Who have lied every step of the way for 2 years, telling dozens of inconsistent stories and gradually walking them back as more and more inculpatory details have come to light. The ones who lie as a political practice on every matter under the sun to an extent unimaginable to most humans. More consonant to believe everyone opposed to them is lying or "butthurt".
Or if this estimation of your mindset is wrong, then what's your argument?
*channels Rex Tillerson vicariously* So the conspiracy of thousands it is, then. A shame all these privacy-violating bureaucrats couldn't stop hurting Hillary Clinton if they didn't want Trump to win (also despite being overwhelmingly Republican...). Or, maybe they've lost their minds and are chasing shadows despite their training and experience, and are not so brilliant or sound of judgement as you to conclude otherwise.This may as well be a campaign by bureaucrats who violated the privacy of American citizens, who are simply butturt over election results they disagreed with. Those who perpetuate this political narrative are their assets.
The WaPo story jumped the gun but it was not entirely wrong about the existence of the activity, it was wrong about the scope, purpose and technical aspect of what systems were affected (the business system). A bad job all told but not something that supports complacency about Russia or about cybercrime. As the Post's followup article explains, the government had embarked on outreach to the various utilities and power companies throughout the country and gave them a broad set of information and benchmarks with which to assess their systems for potential Russian activity that the government could follow up on. The Washington Post got some insider scoop about Vermont's Burlington utility and misinterpreted that one of the government's criteria had been pinged to mean a full-scale attack. Later reports bear out the Russian interests in American utilities and power generation.Of course anything that provides context is dismissed as ‘whataboutism.’ So here’s some more context for you: https://www.washingtonpost.com/world...=.e69dae10b53f
The story was entirely wrong and was retracted, unlike the stories regarding Russian interference in the French and German elections even after they were discredited. California and Wisconsin election officials denied that the Russians hacked local and state voting systems as well.
In fact, with time the government has come to confirm a fairly wide-ranging effort to target power systems throughout the country, at a minimum for espionage. To be fair, North Korea is reportedly implicated as well here, and Russia surveils utilities throughout the world, not merely America. And to be extra fair, the US has previously gone so far as to conduct a successful attack on industrial controls themselves through Stuxnet. To be extra-extra fair, Russia was recently successful with an attack of similar depth on the Ukrainian power grid.
Perhaps you would also like to bring up the CNN story about Scaramucci's Russian connections published and retracted in 2017? 'Ha!' you would cry, 'journalists were fired over it!' As it so happens, the story turned out to be accurate. The problem here was of journalistic standards: CNN fired the people involved because they did not follow company procedure in sourcing.
Stories of Russian interference in France and Germany were not discredited. Provide strong proof that it could not have been Russia, or that it was someone else; otherwise, that's a lie.
The last quoted sentence is an example of why you make me so frustrated. Why on earth would you type that sentence? Around 20 states so far have reported Russian attempts or successes in penetrating to varying extents their voting framework. Twenty means fewer than 50 FFS. That we know of. To suggest that if 2 states report no evidence of Russian breaches in their own systems, no state was breached, is insultingly dumb.
I think you're mixing together several different people and issues.As for your reference to the meetings which you called “incognito,” after publication of the story, Erik Prince said he was shown evidence by sources from the intelligence community that his name was unmasked and given to the paper. This was the Seychelles meeting. So what are you referring to exactly with the Russian and Arab autocrats meeting GOP secretly?
So far the evidence of GOP connections to foreign influence with Trump's campaign is much thinner than that for the efforts of campaign agents themselves. However, it is noteworthy because it shows at least some political actors were aware of Russian interference (that is, before email dumps became public) and wanted to use it to their advantage or to assist the Trump campaign. Setting aside the NRA and Erickson (Butina's boyfriend) for now, some of these were:
Nevins (G.O.P. OPERATIVE CONFIRMS ALLEGED RUSSIAN HACKER GAVE HIM 2016 VOTER DATA)
Smith (GOP Operative Sought Clinton Emails From Hackers, Implied a Connection to Flynn)
Stone (Roger Stone was involved heavily in both the Trump campaign and the party at-large, so I'm going to make the unoriginal prediction that he will be indicted rather soon; there's a huge amount of reporting on his campaign activities, including within Mueller's Russian indictments)
As for the campaign itself, a few names pertaining to the Middle East and its economic interests vis-a-vis the US and Russia:
Prince
Flynn
Kushner
Papadopoulos
McFarlane
McFarland
Nader
Barrack
All of these really are consequential threats, but I can bring even more to the table: Natural disasters! Climate change! Water scarcity! Mass migration! Pandemics! Cosmic events! How can you be worrying about elections when we're all going to die?There are far more consequential threats to democracy than cyber-interference such as the billionaire interference, loss of voting rights protection, mass incarceration, immigrant scare-mongering, gerrymandering, electoral college, US Senate.
The fact that there are challenges in the world you could enumerate does not obviate the existence or importance of other, additional challenges. They have to be placed against each other and synthesized, not dismissed, to be effectively addressed. Geez, talk about Oppression Olympics.
For that matter, how could one possibly think that the influence of billionaires and elite lobbyists is a threat to free and democratic elections, but oligarchs and autocrats actually concretely capturing a US Presidential campaign IS NOT a problem???? It's a clear bloody manifestation of the underlying sickness!
Most of our "intelligence agencies" don't participate in international espionage. Their role in the report could not be significant. On confidence, this is what the report said:Hand-picked analysts, the claims of the latter (NSA) made with only 'moderate confidence.' This is creating a misleading impression of unanimity, since only three of the sixteen intelligence agencies contributed to the report.
We assess Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered an influence campaign in 2016 aimed at the US
presidential election. Russia’s goals were to undermine public faith in the US democratic process,
denigrate Secretary Clinton, and harm her electability and potential presidency. We further assess
Putin and the Russian Government developed a clear preference for President-elect Trump. We
have high confidence in these judgments.
We also assess Putin and the Russian Government aspired to help President-elect Trump’s
election chances when possible by discrediting Secretary Clinton and publicly contrasting her
unfavorably to him. All three agencies agree with this judgment. CIA and FBI have high confidence
in this judgment; NSA has moderate confidence.You seem to put trust and significance in the NSA's "moderate" confidence on one item, yet are willing to reject the NSA's high confidence in its supervenient conclusion on which the other relies. This is logically incoherent, a sign of the motivated reasoning I referred to.We assess with high confidence that Russian military intelligence (General Staff Main Intelligence Directorate or GRU) used the Guccifer 2.0 persona and DCLeaks.com to release US victim data obtained in cyber operations publicly and in exclusives to media outlets and relayed material to WikiLeaks.
This, by the way, was all in January 2017. It is the middle of 2018 now. It's been more than a year and a half. You should have a little more humility.
What? I just told you about Trump being briefed on the 2016 election interference, and you change the subject? Anyway, it does not happen routinely in the campaign stage. Nor in the transition stage. The content and context of communications and actions also matter, as we have gone over.The sort of backchannel diplomacy that routinely happens between one administration and the next. Not a sign of collusion.
By the way, one more thing I recalled: the public hacker persona Guccifer 2.0 was discovered to operate from Moscow, and to be lying about their identity as a native Romanian.
Please stop uncritically repeating Russian and alt-right talking points. I have explained to you before how Russia is a geopolitical sideshow, but situationally its made more serious by Trump and the Russian success in penetrating our system (and the West more generally). If we cannot even begin to resolve the challenges posed by Russia we are certainly not well-placed to deal with anything else. It's OK to prioritize one issue over another in concept, and to lead a vigorous debate over issues and solutions, but just as you wouldn't accept someone becoming a climate denialist because they think global capitalism is the 'real' problem - they can both be problems! - don't think you need to completely reject the existence of facts because you feel like they distract from something else.
I would understand some of the vehemence of your reactions if I presented myself as one of those centrist liberals who believes that Russia is the only problem facing the US, and that if Trump were out of the picture everything could "go back to normal", but you know that I'm not - so why? I'm asking here for some honesty and good faith. If the central position, the one thing that comes before everything else, in your worldview is that America is the root of all evil, and all knowledge must follow from this axiom, it won't be possible.
I've only heard some pretty radical socialists argue that the criminal process should be done away with for its 'vindictiveness'.
I would say that the pardoning of Nixon, and the refusal to hold serious crimes to account in general, is what breeds apathy and disaffection. It's dangerous to blithely promote the legal invincibility of the POTUS, as though the most powerful person in the world needs special allowances and comforts.
I don't give a crap about "punishment". The public needs to know the facts of the matter, and see the actors responsible held liable. This history must not be brushed under the rug for future generations to rediscover, or to fester in the form of a revanchist mythology.
It is important that Trump partisans feel shame(d), because it is a necessary step in the process of de-Trumpifying them, which is a necessary step in bringing them away from a worldview tham demands the exclusion, marginalization, or destruction of their perceived opponents. Otherwise our politics will surely continue to get worse, and blatant, committed demagogues who outright promise the end of our system of government as we know it will be the next development. These won't be socialists.
The severity of offenses matters too. Do you really see NO circumstances in which the sitting OR former POTUS should be subjected to the criminal process for acts during tenure of office?
In all, to the extent that Trump has committed serious offenses, a recommendation to refrain from hashing it out publicly promises to be devastating to our nation. Of course pulling out the barbed arrow is painful. But you can't let it sit and live well that way.
Trump's approach to government, and his affinity to his base, is essentially fascist. Trumpism is fascistic. Don't make the mistake of running Zeno's treadmill when assessing the presence of fascism in contemporary times.NOTE: Fascism is correctly labeled as an authoritarian political structure that emphasizes nationalism and in which the government guides and influences economic decisions while ownership and capital is retained on a private basis. Today, we use it as a pejorative for authoritarian attitudes, particularly those of a racist or hyper-nationalist stripe. USA Aryan Nation and White Power groups really are not fascists in the classic sense, just racist idiots scared to be evaluated on the content of their character because they know deep down they would then have to admit they don't rank as worth much of anything.
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