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The international Press campaign aimed at destabilising President Trump continues. The smear machine, set up by David Brock during the transitional period [1], plays up, as much as it possibly can, the hot-tempered and often vulgar character of the Presidential Tweets. The media entente, organised by the mysterious NGO First Draft [2], repeats tirelessly that the Justice Department is investigating the links between the President’s campaign team and the dark conspiracy attributed to the Kremlin.
A study by Professor Thomas E. Patterson of the Harvard Kennedy School showed that the US, British and German Press have quoted Donald Trump three times more often than previous Presidents, and that, during the first 100 days of his presidency, 80% of their articles were clearly unfavourable to him [3].
During the FBI campaign [4] aimed at forcing President Nixon to resign, the US Press awarded itself the qualifier of “4th Estate”, thereby signifying that their owners had more legitimacy than the People. Far from folding under the pressure, Donald Trump, well aware of the danger represented by the alliance between the Medias and the 98% of senior civil servants who voted against him, declared a ‘war on the Press’, during his speech of 22 January 2017, one week after his inauguration. Meanwhile his special advisor, Steve Bannon, declared to the New York Times that, de facto, the Press had become the ‘new opposition party’.
In any case, the President’s electors did not withdraw their confidence in the President.
Let’s remember how this affair began, during the period of transition, which is to say before Donald Trump’s inauguration. A NGO, Propaganda or Not?, launched the idea that Russia had organised hoaxes during the Presidential campaign in order to scuttle Hillary Clinton and make sure Donald Trump would be elected. At the time, we underlined the links between this mysterious NGO and Madeleine Albright and Zbigniew Brzezinski [5]. The accusation, repeated at length by the Washington Post, denounced a list of agents of the Kremlin, including the Voltaire Network. And yet so far, nothing, absolutely nothing, has surfaced to support this Russian conspiracy theory.
Everyone has noticed that the arguments used against Donald Trump are not simply those which are usually deployed in political combat, but clearly those employed in war propaganda [6].
The Oscar for bad faith must go to CNN, which is handling this affair obsessively. The channel was forced to apologise after they had broadcast a report accusing one of Donald Trump’s close collaborators, the banker Anthony Scaramucci, of being paid indirectly by Moscow. Since this accusation was invented, and since Scaramucci is rich enough to take them to court, CNN apologised, and three journalists from their investigation team ‘resigned’.
Then journalist James O’Keefe’s Project Veritas published three video sequences filmed via spy-cam [7]. In the first, we see a CNN supervisor laughing in an elevator, saying that these accusations of the President’s collusion with Russia were “bullshit” broadcast in order to boost the “audience”. In the second, a star presenter and ex-collaborator of Obama confirms that the information was “drivel”. In the third, a producer declares that Donald Trump is mentally sick and that his electors are “dumb as shit” (sic).
In reply, the President posed a video-montage created from images, taken not from a Western movie, but dating from his work with the US wrestling Federation, the WWF. He can be seen pretending to beat up his friend Vince McMahon (husband of his Secretary of State for Small Businesses and Consumer Affairs) whose face was covered by the CNN logo. The video ends with an altered CNN logo reading Fraud News Network.
Apart from the fact that this event demonstrates that in the United States, the President does not have exclusive rights to vulgarity, it shows that CNN – which has raised the question of Russian interference more than 1,500 times in the space of two months – does not practise journalism and cares nothing about the truth. We have been aware of this for a long time concerning its reports on international politics – we are discovering it today about those concerning interior politics.
Although it is far less significant, a new dispute is now opposing the President and the presenters of MSNBC’s morning show, Morning Joe. They have been criticising him violently for months. It so happens that Joe Scarborough is an ex-lawyer and parliamentarian from Florida who fights against the right to abortion and for the dissolution of “useless” Ministries such as Commerce, Education, Energy and Housing. On the contrary, his partner (both on- and off-screen) Mika Brzezinski, is a simple prompter-reader who supported Bernie Sanders.
In a Tweet, the President insulted them by calling them “Psycho Joe” and “low I.Q. Crazy Mika”. No-one doubts that these characterisations are close to the truth, but setting them down in this way is obviously aimed only at damaging the journalists’ self-esteem. In any case, the two presenters wrote an op-ed in the Washington Post calling the President’s sanity into question. Mika Brzezinski is the daughter of Zbigniew Brzezinski, one of the string-pullers of Propaganda or not?, who died a month ago.
The vulgarity of the Presidential Tweets has nothing to do with insanity. Dwight Eisenhower, and especially Richard Nixon, were far more obscene than Trump, and were nonetheless two grand Presidents.
Furthermore, the impulsive nature of his Tweets does not necessarily mean that the President is himself impulsive. In reality, on each subject, Donald Trump reacts immediately with aggressive Tweets. Then he throws ideas around in all directions, unhesitatingly contradicting himself from one declaration to the next, and then closely observes the reactions they provoke. Finally, having formed his own opinion, he meets the opposing party and generally comes to an agreement with them.
Donald Trump does not possess the good Puritan education of Barack Obama or Hillary Clinton, but incarnates the resilience of the New World. Throughout his electoral campaign, he continually presented himself the man who would clean up the innumerable dishonesties that this good education serves to disguise in Washington. And it was he and not Madame Clinton that the United States voted into the White House.
Of course, one might take the President’s controversial declarations seriously, choosing one that’s shocking and ignoring those that state the contrary. We should not confuse the Trump style with his policies. On the contrary, we must examine his decisions - and their consequences - closely.
For example, let’s take his decree aimed at refusing entry to the United States to foreigners whose Secretary of State has been unable to confirm the identity.
It was observed that the population of the seven countries for which he limited access to the United States is in the majority Muslim. We compared this fact with the declarations of the President during his electoral campaign. Finally, we created the myth of a racist Trump. There were a number of showboat trials aimed at repealing this ‘Islamophobic decree’, until the Supreme Court confirmed its legality. Then we moved the goal-posts by affirming that the Court had based its decision on a second draft of the decree, which included several flexibilities. This is true, except that these flexibilities were already set out (with different wording) in the first version.
Arriving at the White House, Donald Trump did not deprive the US citizens of their health insurance, nor declare the Third World War. On the contrary, he opened a number of economic sectors which had been stifled for the benefit of certain multinationals. Besides which, we have witnessed a disengaging of the terrorist groups in Iraq, Syria and Lebanon, and a noticeable calming of the tension in all of the Greater Middle East, with the exception of Yemen.
How much farther will this go – what will be the outcome of the confrontation between the White House and the medias, between Donald Trump and certain moneyed powers?
Notes
[1] “The Clinton system to discredit Donald Trump”, by Thierry Meyssan, Translation Pete Kimberley, Al-Watan (Syria) , Voltaire Network, 28 February 2017.
[2] “The New Media World Order”, by Thierry Meyssan, Translation Pete Kimberley, Voltaire Network, 7 March 2017.
[3] “News Coverage of Donald Trump’s First 100 Days”, Thomas E. Patterson, Harvard Kennedy School, May 18, 2017.
[4] We only learned thirty years after the fact that the mysterious ‘Deep Throat’ who fed the Watergate scandal was none other than W. Mark Felt, the ex-assistant of J. Edgar Hoover, who was himself the number 2 of the FBI.
[5] “The NATO campaign against freedom of expression”, by Thierry Meyssan, Translation Pete Kimberley, Voltaire Network, 5 December 2016.
[6] “Anti-Donald Trump: war propaganda”, by Thierry Meyssan, Translation Pete Kimberley, Voltaire Network, 7 February 2017.
[7] “Project Veritas dévoile une campagne de mensonges de CNN”, Réseau Voltaire, 1er juillet 2017.
Courtesy Thierry Meyssan; Translation Pete Kimberley
http://www.voltairenet.org/article197005.html
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