Russiagate fanatic Michael Isikoff, co-author of “Russian Roulette:
The Inside Story of Putin's War on America and the Election of Donald
Trump,” has been producing a series of “Conspiracyland ”
podcasts for Yahoo News so as to put an end to any suspicion that
Democratic or Clinton operatives murdered Seth Rich, the young
Democratic National Committee (DNC) staffer who was shot dead on his way
home from work on July 25, 2016, in Washington, D.C. Curious
project—Isikoff’s—because the best way to bury inconvenient suspicions,
expressions, or even truths is to ignore them, refuse to talk about
them, or pretend they don’t exist. Why start a radio drama series,
replete with music and special effects, about something you want people
to forget?
Seth Rich had access to the DNC emails. He could have downloaded them
to a thumb drive and then given the thumb drive to Wikileaks, or he
could have uploaded them to a dropbox, but no one has ever produced any
definitive proof that he did. Whether they were downladed or hacked, the
emails exposed the DNC conspiracy to steal the nomination from Bernie
Sanders. No one, however, has proven that that’s why Clinton lost. “The
evidence that WikiLeaks had an impact is circumstantial,” wrote Five Thirty Eight political
analyst Harry Enten in December 2016. “Trump, for instance, won among
voters who decided who to vote for in October [by] 51 percent to 37
percent, according to national exit polls .
That’s Trump’s best time period. He carried voters who decided in the
final week, when you might expect Comey’s letter to have had the largest
impact, [by] 45 percent to 42 percent. (Although, Trump’s margin among
those who decided in the final week was wider in the exit polls in some crucial swing states .)
And while Clinton’s lead was dropping in the FiveThirtyEight polls-only
forecast before the Comey letter was released, the drop accelerated
slightly afterward. Of course, onething didn’t sink Clinton.
The evidence suggests WikiLeaks is among the factors that might have
contributed to her loss, but we really can’t say much more than that.”
Former NSA Technical Director William Binney conducted several data
transmission experiments and thereby proved that the email could not
have been sent across the Atlantic at the speed indicated by the time
stamps. However, another security state pro suggested that the DNC might
have had an unusually speedy Internet connection. However, if that were
true, wouldn’t the DNC have long since produced their Internet service
bills to prove it?
In any case, it would seem more important that the DNC interfered in
the 2016 presidential election. They stole the nomination and most
likely the presidency from Bernie Sanders, but that was of course buried
in liberal hysterics over Trump’s election. The Democratic National
Press (DNP) had to find someone to blame besides the Democratsand their
own thieving national committee, so we were subjected to the two-year,
$30-million Russiagate investigation that finally ended with the
grudging conclusion that there’s no evidence to indict Trump.
-- Ann Garrison, "Russiagate Fanatic Michael Isikoff’s Curious Project" (BLACK AGENDA REPORT).