Summary of the FBI's plot against the president
If you're like most Americans you're either working hard to pay your mortgage or rent and feed your family, or you're going to school. Either way, you don't have time to keep up with what's really going on in this country politically. Pressed for time, you do what almost everyone does: You get your "news" from television.
Problem there is, the networks lie to you. About everything. So here's what's really happening:
An anti-Trump group named "FusionGPS" offered to provide the DNC an Hilliary with dirt on her opponent for the 2016 election. Hilliary and the DNC accepted, and paid Fusion upwards of $150,000 for what's been called a "dossier" on Trump, compiled by a retired British intel agent, Christopher Steele.
One tiny problem: The material in the "dossier" was totally fictional. But that didn't matter to the Dems, since they knew none of their allies in the Lying Mainstream Media would bother investigating whether the material was true. All that mattered was the claims it contained.
But to be able to USE the lurid, made-up material the Dems had to find a way to get it in front of the public, but without being seen to be the providers, or admitting who paid for it. Cuz if the Clinton campaign just popped up and said "Look what we found!," lots of voters would ask...difficult questions.
That wouldn't do, eh?
So the Clinton campaign and the DNC came up with several ways to get the salacious dossier material into the public eye without revealing that they'd commissioned--and paid for--the thing. One method was to slip a copy to anti-Trump senator John McCain, in London. McCain brought the thing to the FBI. Mission accomplished.
But the DNC also had Plan B: One of the people working for Fusion was a pro-communist woman named Nellie Ohr, who had a very useful advantage: Her husband, Bruce, was an "associate deputy attorney general" in the Criminal Division of Obama's "Justice Department." He was billed as "an expert on transnational organized crime," including Russian organized crime.
So Fusion had Nellie give a copy of the fictional, salacious dossier to her husband, who--to the surprise of no one on the planet--immediately gave it to his co-workers at Justice, from which it soon found its way to the FBI (which is under the DOJ).
The honest, non-partisan agents at the FBI promptly leaked word of the dossier to a leftist website, Buzzfeed, which tantalized readers by reporting rumors of the existence of "evidence" in the hands of the FBI that candidate Trump had cavorted with Russian prostitutes. The FBI then used the Buzzfeed article to legitimize the fictional dossier and justify wiretapping members of the Trump campaign.
This was the "insurance policy" that FBI agent Peter Strzok referred to in one of the 10,000 text messages he exchanged with his mistress, FBI lawyer Lisa Page.
The New York Times and The Washington Post reported on November 22, 2019, that the not-then-released Justice Department inspector general report would conclude that there was no evidence that Strzok engaged in politically biased actions against Trump.
And keep in mind that Strzok wasn't just some low-level agent: astonishingly, he was Chief of the Counterespionage Section! Moreover, by astonishing coincidence Strzok led the FBI's investigation into Hillary Clinton's use of a personal email server.
Man, those coincidences just keep coming, don't they? But all just totally coincidence, citizen. Absolutely NO evidence of any organized effort to keep Trump from being elected, nope nope nope.
So the DNC and Clinton campaign paid for the Steele dossier, gets it to the FBI, which then uses it as THE legal basis for asking the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court to let them wiretap Trump aides. But be assured this was all totally up and up, eh?
A senator asked Horowitz--the Inspector General whose name is on the IG report--"Are you aware ever of another presidential campaign being targeted by the FBI like the Trump campaign was?”
Horowitz answered in the negative and also confirmed what we all knew was the case: that the DNC did pay for the Steele dossier that has been proven to be false and defamatory nonsense that was used to justify the spying.
Now consider this: ALL of the above information is confirmed and in the public domain. If you hadn't heard about it, it's because the Mainstream Media didn't say anything about it, or mentioned it as a single cover-their-ass sentence near the end of a "newscast."
And now the media is spinning like mad, trying to convince voters that not a single act--not ONE--was due to malice or the anti-Trump bias of the various players. Instead the media will spin that the people who abused their powers were pure as the driven snow, and were simply acting on their well-founded suspicions that Trump was and is working for...wait for it...Russia.
This is why you saw so much wailing last week claiming Trump was pressuring Ukraine to "find dirt on a political rival" (Biden) while totally ignoring Biden's videotaped bragging that he'd threatened that country with the loss of a billion-dollar loan guarantee if they didn't stop investigating the corruption thru which a Ukrainian energy firm hired his coke-addict son for a million bucks a year.
Nothing to see here, citizen. Move on.
Problem there is, the networks lie to you. About everything. So here's what's really happening:
An anti-Trump group named "FusionGPS" offered to provide the DNC an Hilliary with dirt on her opponent for the 2016 election. Hilliary and the DNC accepted, and paid Fusion upwards of $150,000 for what's been called a "dossier" on Trump, compiled by a retired British intel agent, Christopher Steele.
One tiny problem: The material in the "dossier" was totally fictional. But that didn't matter to the Dems, since they knew none of their allies in the Lying Mainstream Media would bother investigating whether the material was true. All that mattered was the claims it contained.
But to be able to USE the lurid, made-up material the Dems had to find a way to get it in front of the public, but without being seen to be the providers, or admitting who paid for it. Cuz if the Clinton campaign just popped up and said "Look what we found!," lots of voters would ask...difficult questions.
That wouldn't do, eh?
So the Clinton campaign and the DNC came up with several ways to get the salacious dossier material into the public eye without revealing that they'd commissioned--and paid for--the thing. One method was to slip a copy to anti-Trump senator John McCain, in London. McCain brought the thing to the FBI. Mission accomplished.
But the DNC also had Plan B: One of the people working for Fusion was a pro-communist woman named Nellie Ohr, who had a very useful advantage: Her husband, Bruce, was an "associate deputy attorney general" in the Criminal Division of Obama's "Justice Department." He was billed as "an expert on transnational organized crime," including Russian organized crime.
Bruce Ohr |
So Fusion had Nellie give a copy of the fictional, salacious dossier to her husband, who--to the surprise of no one on the planet--immediately gave it to his co-workers at Justice, from which it soon found its way to the FBI (which is under the DOJ).
The honest, non-partisan agents at the FBI promptly leaked word of the dossier to a leftist website, Buzzfeed, which tantalized readers by reporting rumors of the existence of "evidence" in the hands of the FBI that candidate Trump had cavorted with Russian prostitutes. The FBI then used the Buzzfeed article to legitimize the fictional dossier and justify wiretapping members of the Trump campaign.
This was the "insurance policy" that FBI agent Peter Strzok referred to in one of the 10,000 text messages he exchanged with his mistress, FBI lawyer Lisa Page.
The New York Times and The Washington Post reported on November 22, 2019, that the not-then-released Justice Department inspector general report would conclude that there was no evidence that Strzok engaged in politically biased actions against Trump.
And keep in mind that Strzok wasn't just some low-level agent: astonishingly, he was Chief of the Counterespionage Section! Moreover, by astonishing coincidence Strzok led the FBI's investigation into Hillary Clinton's use of a personal email server.
Man, those coincidences just keep coming, don't they? But all just totally coincidence, citizen. Absolutely NO evidence of any organized effort to keep Trump from being elected, nope nope nope.
So the DNC and Clinton campaign paid for the Steele dossier, gets it to the FBI, which then uses it as THE legal basis for asking the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court to let them wiretap Trump aides. But be assured this was all totally up and up, eh?
A senator asked Horowitz--the Inspector General whose name is on the IG report--"Are you aware ever of another presidential campaign being targeted by the FBI like the Trump campaign was?”
Horowitz answered in the negative and also confirmed what we all knew was the case: that the DNC did pay for the Steele dossier that has been proven to be false and defamatory nonsense that was used to justify the spying.
Now consider this: ALL of the above information is confirmed and in the public domain. If you hadn't heard about it, it's because the Mainstream Media didn't say anything about it, or mentioned it as a single cover-their-ass sentence near the end of a "newscast."
And now the media is spinning like mad, trying to convince voters that not a single act--not ONE--was due to malice or the anti-Trump bias of the various players. Instead the media will spin that the people who abused their powers were pure as the driven snow, and were simply acting on their well-founded suspicions that Trump was and is working for...wait for it...Russia.
This is why you saw so much wailing last week claiming Trump was pressuring Ukraine to "find dirt on a political rival" (Biden) while totally ignoring Biden's videotaped bragging that he'd threatened that country with the loss of a billion-dollar loan guarantee if they didn't stop investigating the corruption thru which a Ukrainian energy firm hired his coke-addict son for a million bucks a year.
Nothing to see here, citizen. Move on.
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