Wednesday, April 9, 2025

Project Veritas Video May Close the Deal on Flagging Heitkamp Campaign

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‘If and when she gets re-elected—she’s gonna be super-liberal…’

Sen. Heidi Heitkamp/IMAGE: Project Veritas via Youtube

(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) If James O’Keefe’s headline-grabbing undercover exposés on the radical leftist positions of “battleground” Democrats Phil Bredesen (Tennessee) and Claire McCaskill (Missouri) helped give an edge to the Republican challengers in those states, the latest release on North Dakota’s Heidi Heitkamp will likely seal the deal for the already faltering incumbent.

Heitkamp, in her first re-election race as a senator, has increasingly lagged behind her opponent, Kevin Cramer, in a state that supported President Donald Trump in 2016 by a margin of 36 percent with all but two counties voting red.

A decision to vote against Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh’s confirmation in September increased Cramer’s lead into double digits. Heitkamp defended her decision by saying it was a matter of conscience, questioning Kavanaugh’s temperament after saying she “saw rage” in his demeanor and body language, forcing her to turn off the volume.

A poorly conceived ad in which Heitkamp’s campaign outed abuse victims without first seeking their permission sent her farther into a quagmire last week.

The video released by O’Keefe’s Project Veritas, touched on a familiar format: interviewing campaign staff who, believing they were addressing a sympathetic audience, acknowledged the dissonance between what the candidates told their conservative-leaning voters and the issues they actually supported.

It opens with Heitkamp’s campaign digital director, Jesse Overton, explaining that Heitkamp’s current priority was to exercise caution. “It’s an election year for her. She’s being careful about pissing people off, and what’s funny is she said basically, like, after the election—if and when she gets re-elected—she’s gonna be super-liberal.”

Another campaign staffer in the Fargo office copped to the efforts to conceal Heitkamp’s liberal support and deceive the public, even going so far as to take down a poster of President Barack Obama during a visit from the media.

“We had press here because we had a lot of volunteers, so we take it down,” explained Hallie Skripak-Gordon. “… It’s just better to not have to  deal with,” she said.

The video then shows the Project Veritas journalist being coached in messaging that is designed to purposely obfuscate Heitkamp’s position on building a wall at the Mexican border. Although the campaign did not encourage outright deception, Regional Field Director Lauren Dronen said “she supports effective border security” was a preferred method for circumventing the question.

“Unfortunately, people don’t understand that there’s more nuance,” Dronen said.

To Heitkamp’s credit, staff assistant Prescott Robinson indicated that her votes supporting Trump’s policies and agenda were in deference to the will of her constituents. However, he said that with a blue wave from other parts of the nation, she would likely be emboldened to abandon North Dakotan values to vote with the liberal majority.

“If the country moved further to the left, she would move to the left,” he said. “If we had a Democratic Senate, she would vote for more policies that you see Democrats support.”

Although Heitkamp has an aversion to being perceived as an obstructionist, she would readily back New York Sen. Chuck Schumer’s agenda if he were to become Senate majority leader and control what bills got introduced, Robinson said.

“The thing with politicians is that they’re politicians,” he said.

McCain Institute Runs ‘Mavericks Needed’ Ads in Battleground States

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‘Because it’s not about left or right … it’s about right and wrong…’

(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) Is it possible to manufacture a “maverick”? Can those qualities be taught and cultivated, or does doing so, like Heisenberg’s uncertainty principle, exert an outside influence that removes the very essence of maverickness?

Whatever the philosophical answer, Arizona State University hopes to try following the passing of Sen. John McCain. ASU’s McCain Institute for International Leadership has launched what it claims is a nonpartisan campaign encouraging mavericks to get involved in civic engagement, reports the Arizona Republic website.

Former NATO ambassador Kurt Volker, the institute’s executive director, said the ad blitz is targeting 18-35 year-olds in order to “build a constituency behind civic engagement and activism without it being partisan.”

It calls upon potential mavericks to sign a pledge in which they:

Stand up to bullies

Defend the dignity of all people

Champion ideas even when they’re unpopular

Have the courage to challenge the status quo

Work in service of a cause greater than myself

Go to the polls and vote

Because it’s not about left or right … it’s about right and wrong.

In light of McCain’s acrimonious relationship with President Donald Trump, however, it is easy to read certain partisan dog-whistles into the message.

Adding to the intrigue is the institute’s choices on where it intends to run digital ads and billboards prior to the Nov. 6 election: Texas, Missouri, Minnesota, Tennessee and, of course, Arizona.

With the exception of Minnesota, all are “battleground” states that broke for Trump in 2016 and have recently seen Republican candidates either pull ahead or else narrow a formerly large gap against their Democratic opponents.

Another aspect of the McCain Institute that is not entirely free from political influence its donor list, which runs the gamut from George Soros’ Open Society Foundations to the Royal Embassy of Saudi Arabia, along with an array of corporate and lobbying interests.

MGM Resorts—currently involved in a major lawsuit that could have Second Amendment and anti-terrorism implications—also makes the list, as do philanthropies devoted to “women’s health” and a number of globalist initiatives.

But it seems fitting that the complex—almost schizophrenic—legacy of McCain should be thus represented.

Not only did he routinely switch alliances and base political decisions on his personal vendettas, but he found no trouble pivoting from being embroiled in his own personal banking scandal with the Keating Five to becoming the sharpest advocate for campaign finance.

For McCain, bipartisanship meant playing both sides of the field, and being a maverick meant that whatever cause he invested in that was greater than himself, he was first to receive the dividends.

Endangered Sen. McCaskill OUTRAGED by Project Veritas Undercover Sting

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‘Rather than addressing the serious falsehoods exposed … Senator McCaskill has accused her opponent Josh Hawley of compromising his ethics…’

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Sen. Claire McCaskill/IMAGE: Project Veritas

(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) For three months, incumbent Sen. Claire McCaskill, D-Missouri, has been in a statistical dead heat with her challenger, the state’s 38-year-old attorney general, Josh Hawley.

A recent set of video exposés by James O’Keefe’s Project Veritas may finally break the logjam—but not in the way McCaskill had hoped.

With the two candidates scheduled to debate Thursday night, the heated accusations over the videos are sure to raise many questions.

The undercover videos, released earlier this week, feature McCaskill and several campaign staffers speaking candidly to what they consider a ‘friendly audience’ about the ways the two-term senator misleads moderate voters over her liberal policies.

Among the topics raised are McCaskill’s extremist gun-control positions, her opposition to a border wall, support for Trump impeachment, and secretive partnerships with unions and left-wing advocacy groups like Planned Parenthood.

McCaskill responded on Wednesday with outrage, calling on Hawley, in his capacity as state attorney general, to appoint a special prosecutor to launch an investigation under Missouri’s Merchandising Practices Act.

“It is startling that Josh Hawley would embrace fraudulently embedding somebody in my campaign,” she wrote in a statement. “He is the Attorney General of Missouri. He’s supposed to be going after fraud, not applauding it. I have been very upfront about all my positions.”

Although Hawley linked to the videos in a fundraising appeal following the release, O’Keefe denied the accusation of having coordinated his efforts with the GOP campaign.

“Rather than addressing the serious falsehoods exposed by Project Veritas Action, Senator McCaskill has accused her opponent Josh Hawley of compromising his ethics by engaging with our organization,” O’Keefe said.

Hawley also pushed back in a series of tweets, criticizing McCaskill for attempting to politicize the legal process and questioning whether she had any evidence to substantiate the accusations of a crime for using her own words against her.

While the state’s Merchandising act regulates deceptive practices in trade and commerce, Project Veritas identifies itself as a nonprofit on its website, and O’Keefe classifies his undercover operatives as journalists.

Neither O’Keefe nor McCaskill would elaborate on who the journalists were or how they may have infiltrated the campaign, but McCaskill campaign manager David Kirby downplayed the revelations in the videos, saying the staffers interviewed in the sting were “some 25-year-olds who didn’t know what they’re talking about.”

Kirby acknowledged that the campaign had received three donations totaling $5,000 from Planned Parenthood, but said it had done so openly. The abortion group gave McCaskill $10,000 in her last re-election campaign.

O’Keefe’s previous videos have been known to cause a stir—and to have an impact. He came to prominence for exposing the activist group ACORN in 2009, catching a worker on hidden camera advising a couple (O’Keefe and accomplice Hannah Giles) who pretended to be involved in a child smuggling/trafficking/prostitution ring. The organization subsequently lost its government funding and disbanded.

A recent series of video stings exposed socialist activists embedded in the federal “deep state” bureaucracy, resulting in the investigations and firing of officials at several government agencies.

O’Keefe also has faced lawsuits before, including a $100,000 settlement with the ACORN operative he duped. He is currently involved in a $1 million lawsuit with the leftist group Democracy Partners, as well as a suit with the American Federation of Teachers. Some have stated that they hope to use the legal discovery process in order to expose the inner workings of Project Veritas.

O’Keefe, however, maintains that the attacks against him are yet another attempt to thwart transparency and obstruct the truth from being told. In a statement about the Democracy Partners suit, he said, “It was just good reporting, and they’re suing us.”

CONFIRMED: Google News Search Results are BIASED

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‘This system is specifically designed to reveal the average judgement of Americans across the political spectrum…’

Google's Parent Co. Demanded to Explain Donations to Clinton Foundation, Soros Group
Photo by TopRankMarketing (CC)

(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) For years, observers have anecdotally noted the bias that they perceived in Google’s company culture, its news and fact-checking operations, even its search results.

Now, a website called AllSides says it has the research to support some of the charges.

The site took 123 measurements of Google News search results to determine that it leaned 65 percent left, 20 percent center and 16 percent right.

Doing so involved analyzing what media outlet the results at the top of a page came from and cross-referencing those with a proprietary, user-based rating system that compared the relative bias of the outlets.

The study also analyzed the distance in sites of different political philosophies, concluding that, on average, left-leaning sources were included in the top two results and centrist sources in the top five or six. Right-leaning sites typically made their first appearance “below the fold” in the 12th or 13th position, requiring that users scroll down before seeing them.

Despite the objective evidence of bias, however, the report stopped short of saying Google deliberately rigged its search results. Rather, it said it was more likely a byproduct of the company’s philosophy and that of the programmers who designed its algorithms to weigh certain metrics, such as how many people share or interact with a source.

“It is quite possible that any bias is an unintentional outcome of how the news search algorithm currently works or a reflection of the overall state of online news media,” the report said.

Google’s bias, like that within much of the media itself, has been difficult to pinpoint. It is intangible in part because those acting in bad faith blame algorithms and other factors for it, and in part because perceptions of bias tend to operate on a sliding scale with no true middle.

“Someone who considers HuffPo and The New York Times to be centrist will have a very different viewpoint of Google’s bias than someone who considers Fox and The Washington Examiner centrist,” the AllSides report said.

Thus, when other outlets, like PJMedia (whose Aug. 25 analysis President Donald Trump pointed to in a tweet criticizing Google) have previously analyzed Google’s bias, doing so required that they re-calibrate the scale.

AllSides said what makes its analysis unique is the user-driven ratings system. It designed its own, trademarked AllSides Bias Ratings, which purportedly incorporated more than 100,000 user ratings, along with blind surveys, editorial reviews and secondary research.

“Rather than rely on the judgements of journalists or an algorithm based on keywords, both of which are subject to significant bias themselves, this system is specifically designed to reveal the average judgement of Americans across the political spectrum,” the report said.

The AllSides website—which evaluates not only media outlets but also various nonprofit advocacy groups, individual journalists and political figures—allows users to weigh in on whether they agree or disagree with the ratings.

In theory, the more users who weigh in on a source, the more accurate its listing gets—but just in case, AllSides also offers an extra layer of transparency by noting how many people generally agree or disagree with the rating.

While the democratic rating system may retain its own set of flaws and dubious results, giving users greater stake and control in the process is certainly a step in the right direction.

Former Google CEO Eric Schmidt/Photo by LeWeb14

As for Google, despite the report’s conclusions, questions linger over whether some within the company may seek to influence the searches and introduce additional bias under the banner of social activism.

In September, the Wall Street Journal reported on internal emails from employees that suggested countering the inherent bias in results for terms such as “Islam” and “Mexico.” Google denied that any of the suggestions were implemented.

Google also has been criticized, along with other Silicon Valley heavyweights like Facebook and Twitter, for a company culture that is hostile to conservatives and their ideas, raising the possibility that they may tacitly condone or turn a blind eye to bad actors within their ranks.

AllSides said the decision ultimately rests with Google as to how much bias it chooses to tolerate—once it is finally ready to acknowledge that it has a problem.

“It goes to the core philosophy of Google,” the report said. “Should Google simply reflect the overall Internet even if that means that search results are biased, promote tribalism or institutionalize a mob mentality? Or should Google work to refine its system to provide more breadth and balance of perspective that would enable and empower people to be better informed, think more independently, and appreciate a greater diversity of viewpoints and people?”

Endangered Dem Sen. McCaskill Shows True Colors on Guns, Obama in Secret Video

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‘She has a bunch of Republican voters … They’re not going to look into it. They’re just not…’

(Ben Sellers) On the heels of its major investigative series into the corrupt “resistance” forces of socialists embedded within the federal bureaucracy, James O’Keefe and Project Veritas have gone beyond the beltway to examine what campaign staffers are saying about their candidates in key battleground races.

After looking at corruption in the surprisingly tight Oregon gubernatorial race and exposing the liberal leanings of Tennessee Senate candidate Phil Bredesen, the third in the series takes on the false campaign promises of Missouri Sen. Claire McCaskill.

McCaskill, a Democrat who was once a shoe-in for re-election, was overtaken in the polls by Republican Josh Hawley in August, but through all the drama of the September Brett Kavanaugh confirmation—with McCaskill declaring early that she would vote against Trump’s second the Supreme Court appointment—the race has remained neck-and-neck.

Both candidates have hovered within a percentage of each other, according to the RealClearPolitics average. But momentum favors the GOP in a state that voted for Trump over Hillary Clinton by a nearly 20 percent margin, or half a million voters.

McCaskill was able to coast to victory on the coattails of Obama’s re-election in 2012—with her opponent, Todd Akin, running a flawed campaign marred by a misstatement about “legitimate rape” that hung in the national headlines.

This time, however, McCaskill has been forced to run on the issues. And like other Democrats hanging on in traditionally red, Southern territory, that can mean a delicate balance of lies and political theater.

“Sen. McCaskill hides her true views from voters because she knows they won’t like them,” O’Keefe says in the video.

One of the issues the video highlights is McCaskill’s opposition to Second Amendment rights. While the senator is candid in conversations with a ‘friendly’ audience about her support of Draconian gun-control measures—including bans on semiautomatic rifles and, possibly, handguns also—O’Keefe says there is no mention of gun control on the campaign trail or her website.

Rob Mills, a deputy regional field director for McCaskill’s campaign, confesses to the undercover Project Veritas journalist that the reason is “because she has a bunch of Republican voters … They’re not going to look into it. They’re just not.”

Mills says that McCaskill has worked out arrangements with gun-control advocacy groups like Moms Demand Action “so that she can support their goals without supporting them openly.”

The video also catches staffers saying that McCaskill panders to conservative voters by distancing herself from Obama, despite sharing many of the same political values as the former president.

Some staffers even say that McCaskill would support impeaching Trump if Democrats were to take Congress. Though it could mean political suicide in her 2024 re-election, staffer Glen Winfrey says the senator would tell moderate voters to “get over it.”

But, he says, in his mind McCaskill would have good reason for concealing her position from voters.

“It was a national security question. That information was confidential, and she did her duty by not revealing the information until afterward.”

Thus far, the effort to impeach Trump has hinged on the outcome of special prosecutor Robert Mueller’s investigation, now in its 17th month and unlikely to conclude before the midterms.

While Mueller has secured the cooperation of several former Trump associates indicted on unrelated tax-evasion charges, he has not presented any charges to date linking the Trump campaign to conspiracy or collusion with Russia to hack or otherwise undermine the 2016 election.

Despite the many holes in the case, Winfrey suggests impeachment would be inevitable if the political circumstances were favorable—and that Democrats would be entirely justified by virtue of the fact that “that president sucked; let’s move on.”

The video also calls into question McCaskill’s position on border security, with her staffers saying that a campaign ad released by the border patrol union was deceptive in implying that she would support a physical wall.

“She’s very pro-DACA, pro-Dream Act,” says Carson Pope, a campaign field organizer. “…She’s endorsed by the union that works with the border patrol—and that’s really only because she’s good with unions.”

O’Keefe promises more videos to come, both from Missouri and from other states, as Project Veritas continues its push for transparency.

“We just want the politicians to come clean—we want them to come out and say it,” he says.

NBC Distorts Trump’s Praise of Gen. Robert E. Lee

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‘As usual, dishonest reporting. Even mainstream media embarrassed!’

Charlottesville, Virginia’s former Lee Park/PHOTO: Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines

(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) Some see Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee as a man of exemplary valor and honor who has been the unfortunate victim of activists’ efforts to prosecute the past.

Others see Lee as a brilliant military tactician whose personal ethics were tarnished by his tolerance of the defining issue of the era: slavery.

For President Donald Trump, ultimately he may be only one thing—a loser—but that didn’t stop NBC News from deceptively editing a video to claim Trump was celebrating Lee during a recent rally in Ohio, despite fact he was actually toasting Lee’s opponent, Union Gen. Ulysses S. Grant.

Although Trump did call Lee a “great general,” it was in context of a story about how the unlikely Ohio native Grant overcame the odds to win the Civil War.

Trump savaged the peacock network’s post, saying “NBC News has totally and purposely changed the point and meaning of my story … Was actually a shoutout to warrior Grant and the great state in which he was born. As usual, dishonest reporting. Even mainstream media embarrassed!

A few hours later, NBC corrected it, with the full clip in context:

But by time the correction rolled around, many other leftist outlets had picked up the story and used it to spin coverage in order to criticize the president and paint him as racist.

Not all followed NBC in clarifying the earlier reports.

Pocahontas Says DNA Test Confirms Her Indian Heritage – Many Moons Ago

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‘The inherent imprecision of the six-page DNA analysis could provide fodder for Warren’s critics…’

Conservative Host, Republican Candidate Fight Each Other Instead of Radical Elizabeth Warren
Elizabeth Warren Photo by mdfriendofhillary (CC)

(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) A self-released DNA test from Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren has revealed that she is anywhere from 0.09 to 1.56 percent Native American.

According to a 2014 New York Times article on the largest genetic profile study, European-Americans on average have 0.18 percent Native American genomes.

Nonetheless, a correction on their math notwithstanding, The Boston Globe has spun it as “strong evidence” of Warren’s claims, with one opinion columnist decreeing that her ‘Pocahontas’ nickname is now “gone.”

Warren, in turn, is demanding that Trump honor a verbal commitment to pay her a million dollars for taking a DNA test if it proved she had Indian heritage.

Trump’s July statement was a hypothetical one, in which he said he might make such an offer if he were in a debate with Warren.

“Let’s say I’m debating Pocahontas . . .we will say, ‘I will give you $1 million to your favorite charity, paid for by Trump, if you take the test and it shows you’re an Indian.'”

Trump responded to Warren’s demand with what The Globe called a false denial by telling her, “I didn’t say that. You better read it again.”

The Globe has demonstrated a long history of dubious anti-Trump attacks—including a literal fake edition in April 2016—while also making no pretenses about its support for Warren.

However, even The Globe article begrudgingly acknowledged that the inconclusiveness of the test was likely to raise questions for those who say it helps legitimize Warren’s claim.

“The inherent imprecision of the six-page DNA analysis could provide fodder for Warren’s critics,” it asserted, while underscoring that the DNA test offers conclusive evidence of just how seriously the 2020 presidential contender is taking Trump’s attacks against her adopted ‘heritage.’

As Breitbart notes, Warren remains ineligible for membership in the Cherokee Nation and most Native American tribes, which require at minimum a fourth-generation relative (great grandparent). Warren’s claim would at best be a sixth-generation relative (1/64) but may be closer to a 10th-generation relative (1/1024).

Some Native American tribes have spoken out, calling Warren’s claims of heritage “an insult.”

Warren not only brought her Native American descent into political campaigns but also may have used it to advance her early career at the law schools of Harvard University and the University of Pennsylvania. She even listed herself as a minority with the Association of American Law Schools directory, though she claims it was “to connect” and not to receive any minority benefits.

Warren is not the only person who has sought to capitalize on a tenuous connection to an ethnic identity. A Washington state man, Ralph Taylor, filed suit in September for his insurance business to be considered “minority owned” and receive the competitive advantages of a government-designated “disadvantaged business enterprise” after a home DNA test revealed he is 6 percent Native American and 4 percent black.

If Taylor’s case–or others like it–were to reach the Supreme Court, it ironically would signify a full circle from the courts’ previous attempts to quantify racial identity. Previous cases in 1922 and 1923 dealt with Asian and Indian plaintiffs who had filed suit to be designated as Caucasian in order to be eligible for naturalization.

More famous is the 1896 Plessy v. Ferguson decision, now largely considered archaic and racist, which established the “separate but equal” standard for public accommodations, including schools, that permitted segregation. Among the points debated in that decision was whether a person with seven-eighths Caucasian heritage could be considered “white.”

“It is true that the question of the proportion of colored blood necessary to constitute a colored person, as distinguished from a white person, is one upon which there is a difference of opinion… But these are question to be determined under the laws of each State and are not properly put in issue in this case.”

Many of the Southern states under Jim Crow laws embraced the longstanding “one-drop rule” to form their legal basis for ethnic identity.

Unfortunately for Warren, one-drop standard may no longer cut it—the Plessy decision and many of its racial precedents were overturned by the courts during the Civil Rights movement of the 1960s.

Why Did Fauxcahontas Exempt Self from Massachusetts’ Voluntary ‘Fair Share’ Tax?

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‘The fake Indian wants to raise your taxes, but she doesn’t want to pay anything extra herself, except in election years…’

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Photo by mdfriendofhillary (CC)

(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) For most people—even in the taxation mecca of Massachusetts—a 5.1 percent income tax is more than plenty.

But just in case an members of the Kennedy clan decide to open up their trust funds for the public good, the commonwealth makes it possible to pay at a higher 5.85 percent rate.

After years of paying the lower rate on her annual household income—which has been exceeded a million dollars in most years since she became a U.S. senator in 2012, Warren, it seems, has finally found a heart.

Boston Herald columnist Howie Carr reports that on her 2017 returns, Warren finally checked box 22, authorizing the payment of the higher rate. In doing so, she joins roughly 900 Massachusetts taxpayers (out of a total exceeding 2 million) who voluntarily give  their ‘surplus’ earnings to the government.

Carr reached out to Warren’s re-election campaign to ask, why now–and received back the following response:

“While Republicans chose to shovel $1.5 trillion in giveaways to giant corporations and billionaires, Sen. Warren decided to make a charitable contribution to the state of Massachusetts. She supported the millionaire’s tax ballot initiative to make this higher tax rate permanent. She believes the wealthiest should pay their fair share in taxes.”

In short, Warren seems to be crediting the GOP tax cuts for finally inspiring her to pay her fair share to Massachusetts, which she refers to as a ‘charitable contribution’ (but is it deductible?).

However, Carr suggested a more plausible theory—politics.

“The fake Indian wants to raise your taxes, but she doesn’t want to pay anything extra herself, except in election years,” Carr said.

Not only is Warren up for election in 2018 (with a warchest of about $15.5 million that far outstrips her two challengers, she is a safe lock to keep her seat), but she also has eyed the 2020 presidential race.

As the left and its media partners already have laid the stage for making President Donald Trump’s taxes a major talking point, it makes a lot of sense that she would want to get her own house in order.

‘Fake News’ Orgs Seethe Over Trump Op-Ed

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‘I do not think the president of the United States has absolute access to media….’

After Breitbart Investigation, CNN Retracts Latest Trump Russian Conspiracy Story(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) To see President Donald Trump this week delving into so heady an issue as Medicare reform, not over Twitter, but in the op-ed section of a mainstream newspaper, may have been a shock for some.

As Trump has felt the impacts of a cultural momentum shift from his thriving economy and political victories, one might argue that he is trying to recast himself in a more presidential light.

For any political figure whose ideas fell in lockstep with the leftist media, it likely would have been splashed across front pages as another high-water mark in an ever-growing acceptance of his mantle as party leader.

Instead, CNN reframed the debate by castigating USA Today for daring to normalize the president’s platform.

It claimed fact checkers dispatched to dismantle his argument “immediately identified a number of whoppers in the piece, while various members of the media questioned the newspaper’s decision to run it at all.”

It quoted former New York Times editorial page editor Andrew Rosenthal, who said snidely, “I think the idea that every word the president utters has inherent news value is a trap. Just because the president says it, that doesn’t make it news. … I do not think the president of the United States has absolute access to media.”

USA Today‘s Bill Sternberg defended the decision, saying Trump was held to the same standard as anyone else.

Sternberg said his paper “provides a forum for a diversity of views on issues of national relevance. We see ourselves as America’s conversation center, presenting our readers with voices from the right, left and middle.”

However, the anti-Trump sentiment in CNN’s hit-piece was echoed by sources from The Boston Globe and The Washington Post.

At a moment when the Democratic Party finds itself becoming increasingly radicalized and unhinged political by Trump’s successes, the nation’s leading newspapers have followed suit, redefining their own standards and demonstrating on countless occasions their bad faith in presenting evenhanded coverage of the Trump administration.

The New York Times began tossing out its rulebook even before the election. As Trump’s voter appeal became evident, far-left columnist and talking-point driver Paul Krugman was one of the first to issue the clarion call that objectivity need no longer apply. “If Donald Trump becomes president, the news media will bear a large share of the blame,” he wrote in his Sept. 26 2016 column “The Falsity of False Equivalence.”

Krugman continued: “[T]hey have treated more or less innocuous Clintonisms as major scandals while whitewashing Trump. … [T]he problem hasn’t just been the normalization of Trump, it has been the abnormalization of Clinton.”

NYTimes Editor Calls Opinion Page ‘Far Left Wing’
Dean Baquet/Photo by nrkbeta (CC)

But if the underlying guilt Krugman pinned on his newsroom colleagues for Clinton’s downfall weren’t enough, the validation they received from Times Executive Editor Dean Baquet did the trick.

Baquet claimed to be facing a dilemma: His fiercely liberal readership base was complaining that the paper was being too fair to Trump in hesitating to call him out on falsities that it deemed endemic only to his particular worldview.

“He lies about small stuff. He says one thing one day and says something different the next day. He insists that things are true that are sort of demonstrably wrong,” Baquet said.

Shortly after the election, Baquet declared that The Times, having blown it in the lead-up to the election, planned to rededicate itself to the task of holding the president accountable.

Meanwhile, the rest of the media reinforced and justified biased coverage within its own “echo chamber“—a phrase made popular by Obama’s deputy national security adviser Ben Rhodes (who happens to be the brother of CBS President David Rhodes) to describe the spin cycle of selective leaking used to build the flimsy case for an Iran denuclearization agreement and the media’s obsequious acceptance of it.

In April 2016, The Boston Globe cast out the very first tenet of the journalism code of ethics—“seek the truth and report it”—by running a fake anti-Trump front page. Thus, it came as no surprise when Globe op-ed editor Marjorie Pritchard spearheaded an initiative by around 350 newspaper opinion sections to run editorials criticizing the president over his adversarial relationship with journalists. As many pointed out, the spectacle sort of proved Trump’s point.

The liberal flagship newspapers have continued to redouble efforts to rationalize their one-sidedness. The Times, for example, dismissed criticism for bringing onto its editorial board Sarah Jeong, who had repeatedly made overtly racist comments directed at white people over social media.

And although journalists have regularly relied on anonymous sources to report on the Trump administration, The Times pushed its standard even farther by allowing an anonymous op-ed from someone claiming to be a senior official who was part of the Trump “resistance.”

Because of the media’s own credibility crisis, the American public seems less swayed with every challenge it issues over Trump’s ‘truthiness.’ On Tuesday, the Los Angeles Times reported that most simply dismiss Trump as venting when he criticizes the media as being “enemies of the people.”

But by painting their own extremism as a counterbalance to Trump’s alleged hyperboles, the self-inflicted damage that the media has done on itself poses the greatest danger to democracy, subverting the entire fact-gathering process of the Fourth Estate into an agenda-driven war of attrition that it is unlikely to win.

Congressional Doxxer Denied Bail After Search Reveals Cyber-Crime Evidence, Cocaine

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‘He was asked to resign for failing to follow office procedures. We did not have reason to believe that he posed a risk…’

Dem Doxxer of Republicans Worked for Feinstein, Jackson-Lee
Jackson Cosko

(Ben Sellers, Liberty Headlines) A federal judge on Tuesday ruled that Jackson Cosko, an unpaid staffer for Congressional Democrats who posted online the personal information of several Republican senators backing Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh’s confirmation, is not eligible for bail.

Cosko, 27, was arrested on last week on charges of illegally accessing the personal information of five U.S. senators. He then edited their Wikipedia pages to include phone numbers and home addresses, a malicious cyberattack commonly referred to as doxxing.

Although the Wikipedia pages were quickly scrubbed of the personal details, the information already had been tweeted out on a government watchdog account that monitors and posts all edits to Wikipedia pages from Congressional IP addresses.

According to WMUR, investigators allegedly found a trove of evidence while searching Cosko’s home, including a to-do list for hiding his alleged cybercrimes that included backing up files, mailing backup files, burning aliases and wiping down computers.

They also found a list of planned targets, an array of portable electronic storage devices and cocaine.

Cosko is also charged with threatening a witness who saw him in the act. After a staffer who knew him well saw him in the act, Cosko allegedly wrote an email saying “If you tell anyone I will leak it all,” reported WMUR.

The current charges (not factoring in additional drug charges) carry penalties of up to 20 years in prison.

After prosecutors argued that Cosko posed a flight risk, Magistrate Judge Deborah A. Robinson ruled that he should remain in custody pending trial, reported the Associated Press. No trial date has been set yet.

Most recently, Cosko interned in the office of Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee, D-Texas, but he previously worked until May 2018 as a systems administrator in the office of Sen. Maggie Hassan, D-N.H. He allegedly used Hassan’s computers to access the information.

A spokesman for Hassan told the AP that Cosko “was asked to resign for failing to follow office procedures. We did not have reason to believe that he posed a risk.”

Cosko also had worked in the office of Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., the ranking minority member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, who first brought to public attention the sexual assault accusations made by Christine Blasey Ford against Kavanaugh. Feinstein helped set Ford up with her legal counsel prior to her confidential letter being leaked to the media.

After the story first broke, internet sleuths initially believed they had traced the breach to a staffer in the offices of California Rep. Maxine Waters.

Waters blasted the accusations, saying “I am utterly disgusted by the spread of the completely false, absurd, and dangerous lies and conspiracy theories that are being peddled by ultra-right wing pundits, outlets, and websites.”