61 Hacks Who Peddled Russian Collusion And Should Never Be Trusted Again By Margot Cleveland for The Federalist
GNN Note – If you’re still watching/listening to any corporate news, outside of Tucker Carlson, you are being lied to about everything.
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Since 2016, some big names—both inside the government and out—have peddled the Trump-Russia collusion conspiracy with such vigor you’d think they invested their life savings in Reynolds Metal Company. Now that Special Counsel Robert Mueller has closed the door on such hysteria, let’s take a look back at the Most Mistaken Men and Women in America (and the world).
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Who will win the NYPost’s “Mueller Madness”? Brought to you by @SohrabAhmari, it’s the Bad Punditry Brackets. So many bad pundits to choose from. My favorite? John Brennan — because he’s not just a pundit, he’s a playah too. https://t.co/Uocu9CO4Zu … pic.twitter.com/bo7QzWOpbi
— Mike (@Doranimated) March 26, 2019
Christopher Steele: Is there anywhere else to begin, really? The former British spy destroyed any semblance of seriousness when he included reports of the pee-prostitutes in his dossier. But the rest of the report was equal parts claptrap.
There was no secret meeting between Kremlin courtiers and former Trump campaign advisor Carter Page. No trip to Prague by Michael Cohen. No quid pro quo election assistance for the lifting of sanctions. No there there. Yet his so-called report was a key basis for this entire Russian hoax saga.
Of course, all those taken in by Steele—or assisting him in trumping up years of investigations of a U.S. president based on smoke and mirrors—make the list too: Glenn Simpson, DOJ lawyer Bruce Ohr, the former FBI duo of Peter Strzok and Lisa Page, fired FBI heads James Comey and Andrew McCabe, dossier courier David Kramer, and former senator Harry Reid, among others.
Then there’s Jane Mayer, whose ode to Steele at The New Yorker sought to prop up the un-propable. Former National Security Agency lawyer Susan Hennessey, a CNN contributor, also gave credence to the dossier constantly, in one instance claiming “the intelligence community and law enforcement seem to be taking these claims seriously.”