They Didn't Even Have each Other's Phone Numbers!

Edgetho

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Mar 27, 2012
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This is from Rolling Stone. If there is a further-left leaning publication, I can't think of what it is. Socialism Today, maybe.

But this is an easy to read article. A lost art in today's world of News fakery. It gets to the point and it doesn'tget all stupid and cryptic and vague.

It is the unvarnished truth.

Something else the current state of our fake-news establishment is unaware of....

Well worth the read

Ace of Spades HQ

Matt Taibbi at Rolling Stone:

__________________________________________________________________________________________________

You know what was fake news? Most of the Russiagate story. There was no Trump-Russia conspiracy, that thing we just spent three years chasing. The Mueller Report is crystal clear on this.

He didn't just "fail to establish" evidence of crime. His report is full of incredibly damning passages, like one about Russian officialdom’s efforts to reach the Trump campaign after the election: "They appeared not to have preexisting contacts and struggled to connect with senior officials around the President-Elect."

Not only was there no "collusion," the two camps didn’t even have each others' phone numbers!

In March of 2017, in one of the first of what would become a mountain of mafia-hierarchy-style "Trump-Russia contacts" graphics in major newspapers, the Washington Post described an email Trump lawyer Michael Cohen sent to Kremlin press secretary Dmitry Peskov. They called it "the most direct interaction yet of a top Trump aide and a senior member of Putin’s government."

The report shows the whole episode was a joke. In order to further the Trump Tower project-that-never-was, Cohen literally cold-emailed the Kremlin. More than that, he entered the email incorrectly, so the letter initially didn’t even arrive. When he finally fixed the mistake, Peskov didn't answer back.

That was "the most direct interaction yet of a top Trump aide and a senior member of Putin’s government"!

As outlined in his initial mandate, Mueller explored "any links" between the Russian government and the campaign of Donald Trump. His conclusion spoke directly to the question of whether there was any kind of quid pro quo between the two sides:



"The investigation examined whether these contacts involved or resulted in coordination or a conspiracy with the Trump Campaign and Russia, including with respect to Russia providing assistance to the Campaign in exchange for any sort of favorable treatment in the future."


In other words, all those fancy org charts were meaningless. Because there was no conspiracy, all those "walls are closing in" reports -- and there were a ton of them -- were wrong. We were told we'd hit "turning point" after "turning point" leading to the "the beginning of the end," with Trump certain, soon, to either resign in shame, Nixon-style, or be impeached.

The "RNC platform" change story was a canard, according to Mueller. The exchanges Trump figures had with ambassador Sergei Kislyak were "brief, public, and non-substantive." The conversations Jeff Sessions had with Kislyak at the convention didn't "include any more than a passing mention of the presidential campaign." Mueller added "investigators did not establish that [Carter] Page conspired with the Russian government."

There was no blackmail, no secret bribe from Rosneft, no five-year cultivation plan, no evidence of any kind of any relationship that ever existed between the Trump campaign and Russian officials. Michael Cohen "never traveled to Prague."

The whole Steele dossier appears to have been bunk, with even Bob Woodward now saying the "highly questionable" document "needs to be investigated." The Times similarly is reporting, two-plus years late, that "people familiar" with Steele's work began to have "misgivings about [the report’s] reliability arose not long after the document became public."


Reporters are going to insist all they did was accurately report the developments of a real investigation. They didn't imply vast criminality that wasn't there, or hoodwink audiences into thinking a Watergate-style ending was just around the corner, or routinely blow meaningless episodes like the Sessions-Kislyak meeting out of proportion, or regularly smear people who not only weren’t part of a conspiracy but had no connection to anything (see here for an example).

They'll also claim they didn’t spend years openly rooting for indictment and impeachment via wish-casted predictions disguised as reporting and commentary, or denouncing people who doubted the conspiracy as spies and Putin apologists, or clearing their broadcast panels and op-ed pages of skeptics while giving big stages to craven conspiracy-spinners like Malcolm Nance and Luke Harding.

...

But as conservatives found out in 2016, news audiences over time lose trust in news organizations that tell them what they want to hear politically, but get the substance of things wrong.

The Mueller report makes clear reporters were sold wolf whistles [sic] over and over, led by reams of unnamed official sources who urged them to see meaning in meaningless things and assume connections that weren't there.



Read the whole thing. At the end, he begins pointing out that the press should be the most interested in how they were deceived, not the least interested -- unless they were "willfully blind," or, I'd say, part of the information operation from the start.

I think Taibbi has that "wolf" metaphor wrong at the end, there, or his editor didn't understand his correctly-worded reference and erroneously changed it to something that he had heard of, but was wrong in context.

The current slang is "sold them wolf tickets."

The reference is to the boy who cried wolf -- if you're selling wolf tickets, you're selling tickets to see a wolf that just doesn't exist, something that you exaggerated or are straight-up making up.

That's one of the few bits of current internet lingo I know (and I actually like it).
 
They Didn't Even Have each Other's Phone Numbers!

They "didn't" huh.

Kind of makes this hard to essplain, donut?

>> >> In July, a cybersecurity researcher who goes by the pseudonym "Tea Leaves" noticed a strange pattern of communication between Donald Trump's servers and the Alfa Bank in Moscow. He became curious about it and collected some traces on this connection. He tried pinging the Trump server and his pings were rejected, meaning the server was configured in a way to communicate only with a specific set of other servers, including those of the Alfa Bank.

He and his colleagues contacted Paul Vixie, who wrote much of the DNS code that makes the Internet work. Their conclusion: There was a secret digital hotline between Trump's servers and those in Russia. What they also discovered is that this hotline was active only during business hours in New York or business hours in Moscow, strongly suggesting it was being used for human communication, not for serving webpages or something automated like that. Also odd was that very large and powerful servers were set up to handle a tiny bit of traffic. Technical experts who have seen the logs have sworn that they are genuine because there are items in them that would be very hard to falsify in a way to fool experts, such as interpacket timing.

What is also interesting is that traffic on the digital hotline between Trump and Russia seemed to correlate with political news. When there was a lot of political news, there was more traffic than when there was little news.

On Sept. 21, the New York Times began investigating this matter, and the Trump server was suddenly shut down. Four days later a new DNS entry was created that pointed to the now-restarted Trump server. << --- analysis from Electoral-vote.com
Original source article here. <<​

That's from 2016 btw.

Oh and good luck proving your negative. Here's a quick exercise to get you started.
I have Angele Merkel on speed dial on my phone right now. Prove I don't.
 
So, the FBI, the CIA, the US House of Representatives, the US Senate and a Special Counsel with unlimited resources, unlimited money and unlimited manpower couldn't find the link but some unknown, unnamed super-spooks at some unknown, unnamed location could??

You'll believe anything, won't you??

You really are stupid little bitch, aren't you??
 

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