The biggest assist given to Trump was #Russiagate.
This incredible distraction from actual Trump crimes now begins to unravel in public.
Sorry that so many people naively believed in it, but I can't believe anyone did at R.I. You are suckers.
Professional spooks manufactured a Russophobic, pro-war, Clinton-exculpating conspiracy theory, in the process largely diverting and demobilizing the vital, actual resistance to a genuinely fascist turn in US politics. Disgusting.
In reality, #Russiagate HELPS TRUMP, exactly like I told you from the start:
- Out of all the accusations raised against him, his criminal family business, and criminal milieu, some of which date back decades, he is targeted for pretty much the only crimes he hasn't actually done and can credibly deny.
- In the face of all the reasons for the disaster of 2016 that need to be addressed urgently, including a vast machinery of election fraud and civil rights violations that sustains the GOP despite its demographic decline, #Russiagate manufactures the laughably false distraction of a foreign enemy seizing the minds of the nation by magical means.
- Despite all the barbaric, cruel innovations and new lows of the Trump government as a regressive peak in the long series of imperialist, hyper-capitalist and ecocidal governments, he is targeted for the handful of policy proposals (such as deescalation of tensions with Russia, assuming it was ever meant seriously, which is a very big if) that would have represented progress over the status quo.
And here we are. Regarding the Russia stuff the Mueller investigation is going to be the dud it was always going to be -- in part because it pursues elite targets against whom manufacturing charges is harder than might have been the case with, say, Black Panthers. But at least many real criminal charges are also being pursued through the dozens of other investigations against the Trump Org and GOP campaign complex that also arose, partly thanks to discoveries in the Mueller investigations unrelated to Russia. No objections from me regarding the latter.
https://eu.usatoday.com/story/news/poli ... 347833002/
Reporter who broke Steele dossier story says ex-British agent's claims 'likely false'
William Cummings USA TODAY
Published 5:04 PM EST Dec 18, 2018
A reporter, who was among the first to report on former British intelligence agent Michael Steele’s dossier alleging ties between the Trump campaign and Russian officials, said in an interview some of the dossier’s “more sensational allegations” are “likely false.”
Michael Isikoff, the chief investigative correspondent for Yahoo News, said Saturday during an interview on conservative commentator John Ziegler's "Free Speech Broadcasting" podcast that "Steele was clearly onto something" in his probe into the campaign's Russian connection but evidence has not surfaced to support some of his specific assertions.
Steele was correct to suspect "that there was a major Kremlin effort to interfere in our elections, that they were trying to help Trump's campaign, and that there were multiple contacts between various Russian figures close to the government and various people in the Trump campaign," Isikoff said.
More: Senate reports find millions of social media posts by Russians aimed at helping Trump, GOP
But he said when "you actually get into the details of the Steele dossier, the specific allegations, we have not seen the evidence to support them, and, in fact, there's good grounds to think that some of the more sensational allegations will never be proven and are likely false."
"It's a mixed record at best," he said. "Things could change. Mueller may yet produce evidence that changes this calculation but based on the public record at this point, I'd have to say that most of the specific allegations have not been borne out."
Steele was contracted by the research firm Fusion GPS to conduct opposition research on Trump, first for a conservative website and later for the Democratic National Committee and the Clinton campaign. His work helped spark the investigation into Russian meddling in the 2016 election, which in turn led to the appointment of special counsel Robert Mueller.
Among the dossier's unsubstantiated claims is a salacious one that Russian intelligence had compromising film of Trump with prostitutes.
Ignoring Isikoff's statement that there was evidence of ties between his campaign and Russian officials, President Donald Trump thanked the reporter for his "honesty" in a tweet Tuesday.
Trump asserted incorrectly that Isikoff's opinion means "the FISA WARRANTS and the whole Russian Witch Hunt is a Fraud and a Hoax which should be ended immediately. Also, it was paid for by Crooked Hillary & DNC! "
Republicans on Capitol Hill and conservative commentators have questioned the legitimacy of Mueller's probe and the entire Russia investigation because the FBI relied on the dossier's allegations to obtain a FISA warrant to surveil Trump campaign adviser Carter Page. But four federal judges separately signed off on the warrants and there has been no evidence to show investigators acted improperly in obtaining them.
Redacted versions of the warrant applications show that the FBI did base its request in part on Steele’s information, whom they said had given them reliable information in the past. It also cited Page’s links to Russian intelligence officials. Isikoff's reporting, which used Steele as a source, was also mentioned.
More: FBI releases FISA records on Carter Page surveillance
"But here is what is true, Mr. President," Isikoff replied to Trump in a tweet linking to his 2018 book "Russian Roulette: The Inside Story of Putin's War on America and the Election of Donald Trump," which he co-authored with Mother Jones reporter David Corn.
“During the campaign, Trump had encouraged Russia’s hacking and dumping – of which he was the chief beneficiary,” the book concludes. “Whether or not the investigations would ever turn up hard evidence of direct collusion, Trump’s actions – his adamant and consistent denial of any Russian role – had provided Putin cover. In that sense, he had aided and abetted Moscow’s attack on American democracy.”
Isikoff made his remarks during a discussion with Ziegler about a claim made by Trump’s former personal attorney Michael Cohen. Cohen said Trump was in the room during a discussion with National Enquirer publisher David Pecker about how the newspaper could help kill negative stories about the then-candidate.
Ziegler suggested the National Enquirer story was the "real scandal" out of the Trump campaign because it revealed that a tabloid might possess material that could theoretically be used to blackmail a sitting president.
"The irony here is Steele may be right but it wasn't the Kremlin that had the sexual kompromat on Donald Trump, it was the National Enquirer," Isikoff said. He added that Pecker could be a key witness for House Democrats when they take control of that chamber next month.
Contributing: Brad Heath
Published 5:04 PM EST Dec 18, 2018