Trump acknowledging there are real leaks might be the most truthful thing he's ever called out against the media.
Should I go ahead and startup the The Pence Presidency thread?
I'm just going to stick to copy and pasting Glen Greenwald:
It’s hard to put into words how strange it is to watch the very same people — from both parties, across the ideological spectrum — who called for the heads of Edward Snowden, Chelsea Manning, Tom Drake, and so many other Obama-era leakers today heap praise on those who leaked the highly sensitive, classified SIGINT information that brought down Gen. Flynn.
It’s even more surreal to watch Democrats act as though lying to the public is some grave firing offense when President Obama’s top national security official, James Clapper, got caught red-handed not only lying to the public but also to Congress — about a domestic surveillance program that courts ruled was illegal. And despite the fact that lying to Congress is a felony, he kept his job until the very last day of the Obama presidency.
I did miss the part of the masthead where it says "Kremlin Propaganda," though.
Yeah, Edward Snowden and Chelsea Manning were both on the National Security Council under Obama. I like Greenwald, but that's a pretty weak analogy.
Clapper was.
It's the first part of the quote I was reacting to.
I thought so, but I don't see how the analogy is weak ... unless I'm missing something obvious (which is really possible these days).
I thought so, but I don't see how the analogy is weak ... unless I'm missing something obvious (which is really possible these days).
unless I'm missing something obvious (which is really possible these days).
It’s even more surreal to watch Democrats act as though lying to the public is some grave firing offense when President Obama’s top national security official, James Clapper, got caught red-handed not only lying to the public but also to Congress — about a domestic surveillance program that courts ruled was illegal. And despite the fact that lying to Congress is a felony, he kept his job until the very last day of the Obama presidency.[/I]
I mean, the last part is the laugh line, but it's also sort of grim-funny to see Paul Manafort say that he's "never been involved with anything to do with the Russian government or the Putin administration."
Here's the next drip.
Same story, uses some different qualifiers (i.e. "constant communication). Names Flynn specifically in addition to Manafort.
Speaking of Manafort, he gets the silver medal for unintentionally funny statements about serious matters (gold being "inadvertently briefed with incomplete information").
Mr. Manafort, who has not been charged with any crimes, dismissed the officials’ accounts in a telephone interview on Tuesday. “This is absurd,” he said. “I have no idea what this is referring to. I have never knowingly spoken to Russian intelligence officers, and I have never been involved with anything to do with the Russian government or the Putin administration or any other issues under investigation today.”
He added, “It’s not like these people wear badges that say, ‘I’m a Russian intelligence officer.’”
I mean, the last part is the laugh line, but it's also sort of grim-funny to see Paul Manafort say that he's "never been involved with anything to do with the Russian government or the Putin administration."
Comparing Snowden and Manning to Flynn is a terrible analogy because they weren't on the President's staff and if you put the arrow in the other direction, their actions could not be traced to any one actor within the Bush and Obama administrations but were aimed at an overall policy. Clapper is a good analogy because he was. If there's anything odd here, it's that many who decried Snowden's antics seem agnostic on Flynn's.