[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help] 

Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

Carnival Cruise Boarding Fight

Court Upholds Nearly $1 Million Fine Against Restaurant That Ignored Pandemic Indoor Dining Ban

Lefties Losing It - Power Hour

Conspiracy Connections

(Must Watch) Tucker Carlson David Collum

DeSantis sends Lt. Gov to bring illegal migrant back to Florida to face charges for crash killing 3

Authorities Hit White Man Who Was Savagely Beaten During Cincinnati Brawl with a Criminal Charge

Cash Jordan: Illegals PLUNDER Denver… Walgreens Shuts 13 Stores

2026 Year without a summer

Daniela Cambone: Marc Faber Weighs 100% All-In Gold Play

Trump ‘running circles’ around world leaders as weak Starmer in ‘spotlight’ for failing the UK

Trump Demands Fed Governor "Must Resign Now" Over Mortgage Fraud Probe

African Countries Can't Practice Maintenance

How a Fake Engineer DESTROYED South Africa’s Railway System

Israel DEMANDS X Remove Posts and X COMPLIES

Cash Jordan: 19 Supermarkets FLEE Washington... "It's WORSE Than Venezuela"

Capital faces federal probe after police accused of falsifying crime data

China’s Quantum Radar COULD EXPOSE Every U.S. Submarine on Earth

Coming soon

External Debt By Countries 2025 (MUST SEE)

Future Headline

A Palestinian beauty queen will take part in the Miss Universe pageant later this year

Mamdani's "Affordability" Agenda Could Be Extremely Costly

Restoring Law & Order In Crime-Ridden Cities May Be Key To Resolving Affordability Crisis

Cash Jordan: Moped 'Army' TERRORIZES DC... Trump ERASES 'Entire UBER Workforce' in 23 Hours

CAMPI FLEGREI SUPERVOLCANO. BUBBLING BEACH WATER

Aid To Ukraine Can Never Be Audited

Texas Vaccine Exemption Requests Spike 36 Percent

Cash Jordan: Angry Voters TRASH Migrant Shelter… ‘Forcibly Deporting’ Every Single Illegal

Bud Light Considers Tapping Sydney Sweeney To Rehab Tarnished Image


Resistance
See other Resistance Articles

Title: Matt Taibbi: The New York Times Can't Stop Sucking
Source: [None]
URL Source: https://www.zerohedge.com/political ... w-york-times-cant-stop-sucking
Published: Aug 3, 2025
Author: Tyler Durden
Post Date: 2025-08-03 23:59:05 by Horse
Keywords: None
Views: 142
Comments: 2

Authored by Matt Taibbi via Racket News,

Predictably, the New York Times pooh-poohed the release of the classified annex to the Durham report. Charlie Savage wrote:

Kash Patel, the F.B.I. director, and other Trump allies have declared that a newly declassified report on the Russia investigation provides “evidence that the Clinton campaign plotted to frame President Trump and fabricate the Russia collusion hoax.” The reality is almost precisely the opposite… The report shows that a purported email that Trump supporters have long tried to portray as a smoking gun is instead most likely a fake. Russian spies appear to have tried to make it seem authentic by assembling passages lifted from actual emails by different hacking victims…

Mr. Trump and his aides have coupled those releases with wild and inaccurate claims about what they show, spinning the reports as proof of his long-running narrative that the investigation was a hoax instigated by enemies for political reasons.

This whole “assembled by Russian spies” line is based on one assessment about a pair of emails likely pulled by Russians from other real American victims of hacking. Beyond this instance of a “composite,” the paper ignores the gigantic load of material from the same source, which has been described in multiple other reports as real and affecting numerous American “victims” from the Executive and Legislative branches, as well as think-tanks and NGOs.

More irritating is Savage’s diatribe against Patel and the hoax “narrative,” offered without mentioning the roughly ten million instances in which the Times botched its coverage of Patel and Republican investigations into Russiagate. When Patel and then-House Intelligence Committee chair Devin Nunes released the much-denounced “Nunes memo” about FISA abuse in early 2018, Savage personally “annotated” the document, which would be vidicated more or less entirely by an Inspector General investigation nearly two years later. About the accusations of FISA abuse, which included use of the Steele dossier to obtain surveillance authority, Charlie wrote:

The FBI had ““grave concerns about material omissions of fact that fundamentally impact the memo’s accuracy,’” adding, “In accusing the F.B.I. of omitting important information, this memo’s critics say the memo itself omits crucial context: other evidence that did not come from Mr. Steele, much of which remains classified.”

This is the much-used initial argument that the Steele material wasn’t important to the FISA warrant. Savage went with this talking point multiple times, also saying in another piece, “Mr. Steele’s information was only one thread in a tapestry of evidence from various sources that the memo ignored, exaggerating its relative importance.” Inspector General Horowitz dashed that, concluding Steele “played a central and essential role”;

Savage went on in the “annotation”: “It makes no note of the fact that [Carter] Page attracted the F.B.I.’s interest in 2013, when agents came to believe that Russian spies were trying to recruit him.” Why didn’t Patel include that detail? Because Page was an informant in good standing with the CIA at the time, a fact an FBI lawyer was criminally convicted for omitting. Savage, who later wrote about Kevin Clinesmith’s conviction, omitted the same critical detail as Clinesmith — perhaps unknowingly, but still;

Savage wrote, “The language used here on Mr. Steele’s relationship with the F.B.I. suggests that it was formal. But he never entered into any formal relationship from which he could be suspended or terminated, according to people familiar...” Steele was terminated as a source by the FBI “for cause” on November 17, 2016, years before the annotation article, showing Savage’s “people familiar” either weren’t “familiar” or were yanking his chain. Colleague Scott Shane would describe the firing as a decision by the FBI to “end the formal relationship” with Steele. Oops.

For what it’s worth, the Times without Savage’s help also swallowed the Hamilton 68 hoax whole and described the #ReleaseTheMemo hashtag as the work of Russian “bots”; ran an editorial called “The Nunes memo is all smoke, no fire”; and ran a full house editorial (one that again cited the phony Hamilton 68 dashboard, by the way) describing the Nunes report as a “fake scandal” designed, like the Clinton email investigation, to distract from the “real conspiracy” investigated by Robert Mueller. This sounds remarkably like today’s story, which described the Durham release as an effort to “change the subject from its broken promise to release Jeffrey Epstein files.” They write the same stories, over and over. It never ends.

The part that really infuriated today, however, was this section:

In reality, the F.B.I. opened its investigation based on a lead it received from the Australian government in late July 2016, after WikiLeaks released Democratic emails stolen by Russian hackers and disrupted the Democratic convention. The tip involved a Trump campaign adviser suggesting, before the hacking had become public, that the campaign had received outreach from Russia and knew what it would do.

This paragraph is an outrage. It’s carefully written to conceal how utterly the Times botched one of the most impactful stories of the Russiagate affair, a story called “How the Russia Inquiry Began: A Campaign Aide, Drinks and Talk of Political Dirt.” This professed to be the origin story of Russiagate, explaining that on July 26th, 2016, four days after Wikileaks leaked thousands of documents damaging to the Democratic Party, Australian authorities told American counterparts about a suspicious Russia-themed conversation Trump aide George Papadopoulos had with a diplomat named Alexander Downer.

The infamous “drinks and dirt” story

The Times reported that Papadopoulos had been told of “dirt” Russia had, in the form of “thousands of emails that would embarrass Mrs. Clinton,” given to him by a Maltese professor named Josef Mifsud, presented as a cutout for Russia. This was described as a “driving factor” for the FBI opening its “Crossfire Hurricane” investigation into Trump and Russia on July 31, 2016.

Almost everything about this story was wrong. It took a while, but Downer himself eventually admitted there was no “dirt” talk, or email talk. From the public Durham report:

According to Downer, Papadopoulos made no mention of Clinton emails, dirt or any specific approach by the Russian government to the Trump campaign team with an offer or suggestion of providing assistance. Rather, Downer's recollection was that Papadopoulos simply stated "the Russians have information” and that was all.

Downer also said he “did not get the sense Papadopoulos was the middle- man to coordinate with the Russians.” More infuriating? The FBI dropped Papadopoulos as a lead weeks into the Crossfire Hurricane inquiry, with Deputy Director Alexander McCabe testifying that his comments “didn’t particularly indicate” contact with Russians:

Screwing up “dirt” and “thousands of emails” is bad, but the McCabe testimony shows the FBI knew in in August of 2016 that Papadopoulos was a dead-end. But “current and former American officials” polished that turd and fed it to the Times a full year and a half later. The paper then used it for its blockbuster tale about how Papadopoulos played a “critical role” in the Russiagate drama.

This will go down as an infamous screw-up and smear. Papadopoulos was totally uninvolved with any intelligence scheme and merely used as a technical pretense to start what proved to be a bogus investigation. Still, the Times plastered his face all over its front page as the scandal’s poster child, in what in hindsight was a proud advertisement for how badly they’d been bent over by their sources.

Now, years later, Savage not only re-writes this passage without the name “Papadopoulos” and without references to “dirt” or “thousands of emails,” but uses sleight-of-hand to suggest what was said between the young Trump aide and the Australian diplomat was meaningful. He describes a “Trump campaign adviser suggesting, before the [Russian] hacking had become public, that the campaign had received outreach from Russia and knew what it would do.” Knew what it would do? Savage leaves out the fact that Papadopoulos had not, in fact, received outreach from Russia, and did not have or claim to have foreknowledge of hacking. He played no meaningful role. It’s part of the Times legend that he did, however, so Charlie twisted the prose like a pipe cleaner to fit the few remaining usable factoids.

The irony is that while Papadopoulos was not the real beginning of Russiagate, the story Durham told about the U.S. acquiring a large chunk of intelligence from Russia far earlier in 2016 likely was. This was real intelligence concerning Russia that was embarrassing to Clinton, not Trump. Even at this late date, after so many Russiagate stories the paper screwed up, they continue to vomit up this nonsense. Give back your Pulitzer, you clowns!


Poster Comment:

Ukraine's Anti-Graft Agencies Say They Uncovered Major Drone Procurement Bribery Case

The move follows a dramatic reversal of law that had curbed the anti-corruption agencies and sparked rare wartime demonstrations.

https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/ukraines-anti-graft-agencies-say-they- uncover-major-drone-procurement-bribery-case

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

#1. To: All (#0)

https://www.naturalnews.com/2025-08-03-sam-altman-pitches-world-id-to-bankers.html

Sam Altman pitches world ID to bankers as AI threatens traditional identity systems

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman is now taking his controversial iris-scanning identity project directly to the financial sector, framing his World ID system as a necessary bulwark against a coming crisis of AI-driven fraud. Speaking at a U.S. Federal Reserve conference on banking regulation on July 22, Altman warned that artificial intelligence has already rendered most existing authentication methods obsolete and the financial industry is dangerously unprepared. "AI has fully defeated most of the ways that people authenticate – all of these fancy, take a selfie, wave or do your voice or whatever," Altman said. "I am very nervous that we have a significant impending fraud crisis."

The Truth of 911 Shall Set You Free From The Lie

Horse  posted on  2025-08-04   0:00:04 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: All (#1)

https://x.com/BGatesIsaPyscho/status/1951540901823611113

Concerned Citizen @BGatesIsaPyscho

🚨🇬🇧 Under the cover of darkness in the middle of the night - Bus loads of Migrants are ferried into a Luxury Hotel in Canary Wharf, London - one of the Capitals most expensive areas.

All Military Age Fighting Men who look like they’re dressed in Uniform clutching an envelope.

What’s in the envelope & who provided it to them?

Watch https://x.com/i/status/1951540901823611113 The whole thing becomes more sinister by the day.

The Truth of 911 Shall Set You Free From The Lie

Horse  posted on  2025-08-04   0:03:14 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest


[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Sign-in]  [Mail]  [Setup]  [Help]