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Senators Accuse Russia Of Disrupting US Election (washingtonpost.com) 199

An anonymous Slashdot reader quotes The Washington Post: Two senior Democratic lawmakers with access to classified intelligence on Thursday accused Russia of "making a serious and concerted effort to influence the U.S. election," a charge that appeared aimed at putting pressure on the Obama administration to confront Moscow... "At the least, this effort is intended to sow doubt about the security of our election and may well be intended to influence the outcomes," the statement said. "We believe that orders for the Russian intelligence agencies to conduct such actions could come only from very senior levels of the Russian government..."

White House officials have repeatedly insisted that they are awaiting the outcome of a formal FBI investigation, even though U.S. intelligence are said to have concluded with "high confidence" that Russia was responsible for the DNC breach and other attacks. The White House hesitation has become a source of frustration to critics, including senior members of Congress.

Meanwhile, U.S. intelligence officials are reportedly investigating whether Donald Trump's foreign policy adviser "opened up private communications with senior Russian officials -- including talks about the possible lifting of economic sanctions if the Republican nominee becomes president."
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Senators Accuse Russia Of Disrupting US Election

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  • oh, yes (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Saturday September 24, 2016 @12:37PM (#52953829)

    As if the US never tries to influence elections in many many countries. Oh, wait .. they don't matter. They are not the US.

    • Re: oh, yes (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Saturday September 24, 2016 @02:11PM (#52954189)

      Not only that, but we KNOW - thanks to these hacks - that the DNC was attempting to (and arguably succeeded in) subverting the will of the people.

      Basically, they're not mad that people can subvert US elections (if they were, they'd be supporting Voter ID laws), they're mad that THEY got caught subverting the democratic process, and are now trying to deflect attention to Russia to avoid having to answer to their own crimes.

      If anything, Russia has provided a service to the US in strengthening our democratic process.

      • by guises ( 2423402 )
        Oh for gods' sake, they oppose voter ID laws because those laws exist only to subvert elections. And while I don't like how the Democratic primary was handled at all, primary elections are not part of the democratic process. They are a method which private organizations (political parties) utilize to make decisions, while publicly adopting the veneer of democracy.
    • Re:oh, yes (Score:4, Informative)

      by CanadianMacFan ( 1900244 ) on Saturday September 24, 2016 @03:04PM (#52954391)

      Ssshhh... you aren't supposed to point out the hypocrisy.

    • Wonder whether the senators in question would have been so outraged had Putin been trying to tilt the election towards Hilary instead of Trump.
  • by Bruce66423 ( 1678196 ) on Saturday September 24, 2016 @12:39PM (#52953839)

    "Meanwhile, U.S. intelligence officials are reportedly investigating whether Donald Trump's foreign policy adviser "opened up private communications with senior Russian officials -- including talks about the possible lifting of economic sanctions if the Republican nominee becomes president."

    WTF? There's no reason for the 'intelligence officials' to get involved with this, it's perfectly legal behaviour for a candidate. That it is being sprayed about is a measure of desperation of some people to stop Trump. Whilst I have sympathy with their purpose, their behaviour is deeply wrong.

    • by Richard_at_work ( 517087 ) on Saturday September 24, 2016 @12:46PM (#52953869)

      If there is any, and I mean *any*, evidence that Trumps communications to said senior Russian officials came with a "wink and a nod", or indeed anything more specific, then there is every reason for the FBI to get involved....

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by DaHat ( 247651 )

        So Obama should have been investigated by his own FBI over this? http://www.telegraph.co.uk/new... [telegraph.co.uk]

        They've already given Hillary & her crew a pass for multiple rather explicit criminal acts, why not investigate the otherside based on hearsay, who knows what you might find?

        • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday September 24, 2016 @01:22PM (#52954039)

          > So Obama should have been investigated by his own FBI over this?

          A sitting president telling a foreign leader that he will have more political manuevering room after an election is not even remotely like a candidate for president negotiating with a foreign leader against american interests.

          You want comparisons of people who got "a pass?"
          Reagan trying to delay Iran's hostage release to deny Carter the credit. [nytimes.com]
          Nixon trying to delay the end of the vietnam war to deny LBJ the credit. [politico.com]

          It is completely within the realm of the possible that Trump is conspiring with Putin to fuck over american efforts to defeat ISIS in order to deny credit to the democrats. And if he is doing that, we all deserve to know.

          • fuck over american efforts to defeat ISIS

            Obama is bombing SAA positions, and Hillary has promised to remove Assad if elected. I don't see any evidence the Democrats want to defeat ISIS.

        • by Lennie ( 16154 )

          I'll just quote the Anonymous Coward that got scored to 0:

          "a candidate for president negotiating with a foreign leader against american interests."

          I think this would be bad if they made a deal, don't you ?

          • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

            by DaHat ( 247651 )

            Interesting how neither the AC nor you put 2+2 together.

            Outrage over the allegation of a presidential candidate working with a foreign leader 'against american interests'... while giving a pass to a sitting President who has actively done that for... 8 years now?

            No doubt ISIS has been grateful for a Obama Presidency (because power vacuums are such a good idea), and hopes for a Clinton (aka 'no boots on the ground') one to follow.

            Russia too has benefited greatly from the opportunities given to them by this a

            • by Lennie ( 16154 )

              (I posted a comment but it seems it got lost, because it doesn't exist anymore. So this is actually a shorter version)

              OK, so let me be clear I'm in Europe. So I might have it wrong, but I'll give my perspective.

              I totally agree things like ISIS are a total fuck up. I'm just saying, you have a 2 party system and both parties and their candidates suck.

              It's a history of fucks ups, something like 40 years of them, the parties don't seem to matter at all.

              My perspective is: the system is currently fundamentally br

              • Americans are super divided and some would rather have Putin pick Trump than risk a Hilary sadly for ideological reasons.

        • What evidence of wrong doing?

          Republicans have spent $500 million tax payer dollars investigating Hillary. If you think they had any actual eveidnece that could pass even a court of public opinion they would use it.

          Hillary is a power hungry bitch, I use to think she was smart but I can't even think that anymore. But how stupid do you have to be to think that she can hide legal wrong doing with that kind of money against her?

          Hillary is the single most vetted candidate ever troublicans have been examining ever

          • Other than being a bitch and unlikeable that haven't found any laws she broke.

            She broke the laws about handling classified information. Comey then just declared they weren't going to recommend prosecution.

      • After the election (Score:4, Interesting)

        by Okian Warrior ( 537106 ) on Saturday September 24, 2016 @01:08PM (#52953957) Homepage Journal

        If there is any, and I mean *any*, evidence that Trumps communications to said senior Russian officials came with a "wink and a nod", or indeed anything more specific, then there is every reason for the FBI to get involved....

        And of course, selling a third of our Uranium reserves to Russia or selling dual-use technology to Russia doesn't count. It's not important, and was scrubbed from someone's Wikipedia entry.

        Thinking through the outrage over Palmer Luckey (Oculus Rift founder) from his support of Trump, and all the crass, oafish things that have happened during this election, one thing seems clear.

        The time to address these issues is after the election.

        That's the only time where anyone can legitimately claim that their concern is real, and not partisan sniping.

        The ends don't justify the means, and it's not worth tearing down the system "just this once". Getting your candidate elected is not worth sacrificing their legitimacy to do it.

        If your candidate was worth his/her salt, then you wouldn't need any of these dirty tricks. Right now, the only limits we should have are legal ones.

        I note that while Lyndon Johnson was negotiating the end of the Vietnam War, [candidate for president] Richard Nixon called up [Vietnam revolutionary leader] Pol Pot and said that if he delayed negotiations, Nixon would give him a better deal when elected. Negotiations failed, Nixon was elected and the Vietnam war was extended for 2 more years.

        This was an American citizen interfering in the political process of the US, and promising aid to our enemy. It was clearly illegal, and the FBI of the time knew about it.

        And did nothing. Illegal, and the FBI did nothing. Ring a bell?

        Recently, Hillary literally(*) accused Trump of treason [foxnews.com]. That seems a bit over the line even for Democrats, and it seems illegal on it's face.

        But now is not the time to complain, we've let these people have the run of our media, our internet, and our zeitgeist. Let's let it play out for another 6 weeks, then we can carefully examine these things with the benefit of hindsight.

        (*) Using the correct definition of literally

        • by Anonymous Coward

          Pol Pot was Cambodian, doofus.

        • by hey! ( 33014 )

          Pol Pot was Cambodian. Now go get Grandpa his bourbon, I'm a gettin' testy with you youg 'uns.

        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by Gussington ( 4512999 )

          one thing seems clear.

          The time to address these issues is after the election.

          That would be fine with any other candidates ay any other election, but one of these ones is actually threatening to shut this important pillar of democracy down. If you say anything bad he'll sue you.
          Hate to pull Godwin, but Trump really is the most Hitler-like candidate since well, er Hitler.

          • Hate to pull Godwin, but Trump really is the most Hitler-like candidate since well, er Hitler.

            People like you are why Trump will win.

        • by Megol ( 3135005 )

          How many errors did you pack in there? >5 at least (stopped counting). So why should anyone trust anything you say/write when you can't even do a basic level of fact checking?

      • The FBI isn't going to do squat about Trump because much of the FBI thinks Hillary ought to be in jail and a lot of them are very frustrated that political realities made that impossible.

      • "Wink and a nod?" You like whispering to the Russian President that he'll have ? [telegraph.co.uk]
    • by The Real Dr John ( 716876 ) on Saturday September 24, 2016 @01:07PM (#52953955) Homepage

      The US really hates it when other countries do the exact same thing that the US does all over the world every day. I just wish more people in the US would tell their representatives to stop meddling with the rest of the world, whether it is carpet bombing Afghanistan, drone strikes in Pakistan, coups in the Ukraine, aiding rebels in Syria, destroying Libya, helping the Saudis bomb Yemen, or any of the other non-productive, highly destructive regime-change activities we are involved in every day. It is all about defense contractor profits and keeping the Middle East destabilized. Just expect lots more blowback as this all continues without your input or consent.

      • by OzPeter ( 195038 )

        The sad thing is that it's been going on for well over 120 years

        Overthrow: America's Century of Regime Change from Hawaii to Iraq [amazon.com]

      • most of the US hates it when the US does it too. Our political system is, like most, set up to protect the rights of our ruling class. The working class, by and large, has little or no say in such matters. Poll Americans and outside of Jews who want us to keep protecting Israel there's very few who want us dabbling in the rest of the world's politics. Isolationism plays well and in a country as wealthy as ours would probably work. We'd have to give up cheap iPhones and beef up our Nukes (We'd need something
        • Our political system is, like most, set up to protect the rights of our ruling class. The working class, by and large, has little or no say in such matters .

          In case someone is about to say they need a citation for your claim, here it is.

          https://scholar.princeton.edu/... [princeton.edu]

          People should stop showing their distaste for this rigged system by sitting out elections, and instead vote for the third party of their choice. Voting your conscience is a great way to voice your actual opinion, rather than going along with the two corporate owned parties. And if the other half of the country that don't vote each election actually voted, instead of giving up, it would change thi

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        A few stories down you can read about US efforts to meddle with North Korea. They seem to be addicted to it.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by quantaman ( 517394 )

      "Meanwhile, U.S. intelligence officials are reportedly investigating whether Donald Trump's foreign policy adviser "opened up private communications with senior Russian officials -- including talks about the possible lifting of economic sanctions if the Republican nominee becomes president."

      WTF? There's no reason for the 'intelligence officials' to get involved with this, it's perfectly legal behaviour for a candidate. That it is being sprayed about is a measure of desperation of some people to stop Trump. Whilst I have sympathy with their purpose, their behaviour is deeply wrong.

      And if the talks included a quid pro quo about Russia disrupting the US election to help Trump win?

      Hell, even if they didn't include include subtle mentions of Russia manipulating the elections what other reason would Trump's campaign have to secretly talk to Russia during the campaign? If Trump wins the election he's got 2 months to set up his transition, certainly that's more than enough time to have discussions with Russia as the President elect.

      Secretly telling a rival power, who is already accused of d

    • by brxndxn ( 461473 )
      Agreed.. what's wrong with this? If it's not wrong that Israel meddles in damn near every one of the US' affairs, it's not wrong that Russia voice their opinion either. But, I will sure as hell tell you that the American support for Trump is not based on Russia's support. The media has been telling us not to vote for Trump 24/7.. and history will tell you that you don't fucking tell Americans what to do.
      • by sjames ( 1099 )

        If it's not wrong that Israel meddles in damn near every one of the US' affairs

        Who here said they were fine with that? But by your logic, if you're NOT fine with that, you shouldn't be fine with Trump either.

    • by hey! ( 33014 ) on Saturday September 24, 2016 @06:48PM (#52955195) Homepage Journal

      Well, technically it is illegal for a private citizen to tamper with US foreign relations, and about the only way to do that effectively is to be a presidential candidate and open side negotiations with a foreign power in anticipation of your possible election (e.g. to continue doing something or taking a position against American interests until you are in power and will give them a better deal).

      In that case this is both an issue for the FBI (for the criminal aspect) and the CIA (for the working against US interests aspect).

      Over the years there have been charges of presidential candidates tampering with US foreign policy: Nixon in Vietnam; Reagan with Iran. In both cases the candidate succeeded. The evidence for Reagan's involvement with Iraq is circumstantial at best, which is what you'd expect because if Reagan had violated the Logan Act it would have been William Casey who orchestrated it. But there IS solid evidence that Nixon did try to ensure that the North Vietnamese didn't agree to any ceasefires with Johnson -- not only a violation of the Logan Act, but since we were at war with the North Vietnamese quite possibly a rare actual case of treason.

  • by Dutchmaan ( 442553 ) on Saturday September 24, 2016 @12:51PM (#52953883) Homepage
    I hate elections!.. Actually... I love the concept of elections.. I hate the people who just ruin the process for everyone!
  • Hypocrisy, much? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by bradley13 ( 1118935 ) on Saturday September 24, 2016 @12:57PM (#52953913) Homepage

    The US, of course, has never tried to interfere with, or influence, a foreign election.

    Anyway, I actually doubt that Russia in interfering at all, in 2016. The political elite in the US have produced the current situation all by itself: people are fed up with being presented with a non-choice (it was supposed to be Jeb vs. Hillary), so they did their damnedest to make it Bernie vs. Trump. Half succeeded, too, and Trump's chances are looking pretty good.

    Pisses of the political elite no end, and since nothing could possibly be their fault, it must be the Ruskies. Or maybe aliens.

  • by Crashmarik ( 635988 ) on Saturday September 24, 2016 @01:00PM (#52953921)

    If they are behind the leaks of the DNC emails that showed Sanders was never going to be allowed to run that's something every registered Democrat had a right to know.

    If they are behind the release of the fact Obama used a pseudonym to email hillary, despite the fact he denied having any knowledge of her private email. That's good to know too.

    Then there is the price list for all the government posts that were handed out.

    At the very least they have done us one hell of a favor.

    • If they are behind the leaks of the DNC emails that showed Sanders was never going to be allowed to run that's something every registered Democrat had a right to know.

      Are you thinking of a different batch of emails?

      I saw some emails suggesting that the DNC really preferred Clinton (duh) but didn't really do anything pro-Clinton other than try to influence some reporters on stories that also involved the DNC.

      If they are behind the release of the fact Obama used a pseudonym to email hillary, despite the fact he denied having any knowledge of her private email. That's good to know too.

      This I have not heard of.

      Then there is the price list for all the government posts that were handed out.

      Yeah... I follow this stuff pretty closely and I don't even know what fact you're trying to twist.

      • by DaHat ( 247651 ) on Saturday September 24, 2016 @01:25PM (#52954045)

        If they are behind the release of the fact Obama used a pseudonym to email hillary, despite the fact he denied having any knowledge of her private email. That's good to know too.

        This I have not heard of.

        It was part of a Friday document dump... you weren't supposed to hear about it: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/new... [dailymail.co.uk]

        • If they are behind the release of the fact Obama used a pseudonym to email hillary, despite the fact he denied having any knowledge of her private email. That's good to know too.

          This I have not heard of.

          It was part of a Friday document dump... you weren't supposed to hear about it: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/new... [dailymail.co.uk]

          The POTUS using a pseudonym to communicate via email is hardly a scandal, more of an extra layer of security in case someone does get their hands on classified emails (and possibly a way to make finding records more difficult).

          And without knowing his email setup it doesn't prove that he knew her actual email address, only that someone in the White House IT Dept knew it and configured his client to handle it.

          • by DaHat ( 247651 )

            The POTUS using a pseudonym to communicate via email is hardly a scandal,

            Most transparent administration evah!

            The actual 'scandal', is that it seems Obama lied when he said he only found out about her email system through media reports (a way he has learned about many things).

            more of an extra layer of security in case someone does get their hands on classified emails

            Why would the President be emailing classified information on an unclassified system?

            (and possibly a way to make finding records more difficult

      • Cost to get a government appointment

        https://www.google.com/search?... [google.com]

        Obama Emailing Hillary

        http://lmgtfy.com/?q=Obama+use... [lmgtfy.com]

        Sanders never considered as nominee

        http://lmgtfy.com/?q=DNC+Email... [lmgtfy.com]

        • Cost to get a government appointment

          https://www.google.com/search?... [google.com]

          Cushy ambassadorships go to prominent donors (or their kids). Fishy though far from a "price list", and it's also a standard practice for every administration. It's unfortunate but hardly a revelation, especially since I remember this stuff from 2009.

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Re "If they are behind the leaks of the DNC emails that showed Sanders was never going to be allowed to run that's something every registered Democrat had a right to know."
      That was an insider walking out like with the Pentagon papers https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]. Another nations ability to get in, stay in and move vast amounts of data undetected is really a bit too much of a cyber fantasy. The ability to find evidence and then tell the waiting media of another nations methods, ip range, code fragment
    • If they are behind the leaks of the DNC emails that showed Sanders was never going to be allowed to run that's something every registered Democrat had a right to know.

      People don't need to be told the bleeding obvious. The only thing that's surprising is that Sanders is a democrat at all instead of an independent given his views.

  • Hey Washington... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by zurkeyon ( 1546501 ) on Saturday September 24, 2016 @01:01PM (#52953933)
    DOESN'T IT SUCK to have people spying on YOUR Communications? Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha Ha! Serves You Right!
  • Accusation = guilt nowadays haven't you noticed? I swear I heard him say "Long live the King!"
  • It appears as though the USA is doing a well enough job on it's own at disrupting elections. The Russians probably thought this all a joke.

  • Senator. Singular. (Score:5, Informative)

    by MacDork ( 560499 ) on Saturday September 24, 2016 @01:14PM (#52953991) Journal

    FTFA: "Sen. Dianne Feinstein and Rep. Adam B. Schiff"

    Schiff is in the House, not the Senate. Furthermore, where did they get this rock solid information from?

    Director of National Intelligence James R. Clapper Jr., cited a long history of Russian efforts to influence elections abroad, and said that âoeit shouldnâ(TM)t come as a big shock to peopleâ that Moscow might seek to use cyber capabilities for that purpose.

    Clapper, the guy that lied to congress about intelligence activities. [youtu.be]

    I think that says it all.

  • "At the least, this effort is intended to sow doubt about the security of our election and may well be intended to influence the outcomes,"

    The only thing I've seen is the truth be exposed. If you didn't make underhanded deals that needed to be exposed, there wouldn't be a problem. As for security, it's shit, it's absolute shit and the people who created this mess need to have spotlights shone on them until their fraud is exposed and they are jailed.

  • So the US are openly picking battles with Russia AND North Korea now?

    Guys, seriously, has the terrorist thing worn thin or something? Or have you realised that piling into other people's countries and "fixing" them achieves fuck-all that people in that country consider "fixing"?

    If you want another hundred billion for the military just say so, stop picking fights with people who either do - or may soon - have the capability to fight back once and for all.

    And if the Russians are manipulating your election an

  • One of which is the fact that Tony Podesta, a big Hillary bundler and brother of John Podesta, her campaign manager, is registered lobbyist for Putin's bank [battleswarmblog.com]:

    The revelations of the so-called Panama Papers that are roiling the world’s political and financial elites this week include important facts about Team Clinton. This unprecedented trove of documents purloined from a shady Panama law firm that arranged tax havens, and perhaps money laundering, for the globe’s super-rich includes juicy insights into how Russia’s elite hides its ill-gotten wealth.

            Almost lost among the many revelations is the fact that Russia’s biggest bank uses The Podesta Group as its lobbyist in Washington, D.C. Though hardly a household name, this firm is well known inside the Beltway, not least because its CEO is Tony Podesta, one of the best-connected Democratic machers in the country. He founded the firm in 1998 with his brother John, formerly chief of staff to President Bill Clinton, then counselor to President Barack Obama, Mr. Podesta is the very definition of a Democratic insider. Outsiders engage the Podestas and their well-connected lobbying firm to improve their image and get access to Democratic bigwigs.

            Which is exactly what Sberbank, Russia’s biggest financial institution, did this spring. As reported at the end of March, the Podesta Group registered with the U.S. Government as a lobbyist for Sberbank, as required by law, naming three Podesta Group staffers: Tony Podesta plus Stephen Rademaker and David Adams, the last two former assistant secretaries of state. It should be noted that Tony Podesta is a big-money bundler for the Hillary Clinton presidential campaign while his brother John is the chairman of that campaign, the chief architect of her plans to take the White House this November.

            Sberbank (Savings Bank in Russian) engaged the Podesta Group to help its public image—leading Moscow financial institutions not exactly being known for their propriety and wholesomeness—and specifically to help lift some of the pain of sanctions placed on Russia in the aftermath of the Kremlin’s aggression against Ukraine, which has caused real pain to the country’s hard-hit financial sector.

            It’s hardly surprising that Sberbank sought the help of Democratic insiders like the Podesta Group to aid them in this difficult hour, since they clearly understand how American politics work. The question is why the Podesta Group took Sberbank’s money. That financial institution isn’t exactly hiding in the shadows—it’s the biggest bank in Russia, and its reputation leaves a lot to be desired. Nobody acquainted with Russian finance was surprised that Sberbank wound up in the Panama Papers.

            though Sberbank has its origins in the nineteenth century, it was functionally reborn after the Soviet collapse, and it the 1990s it grew to be the dominant bank in the country, today controlling nearly 30 percent of Russia’s aggregate banking assets and employing a quarter-million people. The majority stockholder in Sberbank is Russia’s Central Bank. In other words, Sberbank is functionally an arm of the Kremlin, although it’s ostensibly a private institution.

    Snip.

    John and Tony Podesta aren’t fooling anyone with this ruse. They are lobbyists for Vladimir Putin’s personal bank of choice, an arm of his Kremlin and its intelligence services. Since the brothers Podesta are presumably destined for very high-level White House jobs next January if the Democrats triumph in November at the polls, their relationship with Sberbank is something they—and Hillary Clinton—need to explain to the public.

    And this is just one of many Clinton ties to Putin...

  • by JBMcB ( 73720 )

    Anyone remember when Mitt Romney called out Obama for not paying enough attention to Russia, and Obama laughed it off with "The 1980s are now calling to ask for their foreign policy back becausethe Cold War’s been over for 20 years.”

    Good times!

  • Two senior Democratic lawmakers with access to classified intelligence on Thursday accused Russia of "making a serious and concerted effort to influence the U.S. election,"

    >>>>

    Two senior Democratic lawmakers (because all the Republican ones were "out to lunch") with access to classified intelligence (which they shouldn't have revealed even the existence of, if they're really and truly classified) on Thursday (the best day for reporting viral news) said that the people (who were actually aliens w

  • I'm not sure exactly how much influence the Russians could have on an American Election. The US pretty much looks towards itself when it comes to news, and as for Election Issues, it's an even tighter focus inward. There is, of course, the influence you can get by throwing something out there and letting the victims (American News outlets, US citizens, and the Candidates themselves) do the actual influencing portion, however innocently they come by it.

    But any non-US entity really has always had that power,
  • Maybe one of the reasons Clinton is about tied with Donald Trump is because the Clinton camp sounds like a bunch of lunatics ranting and raving about Russia. Trump works for Russia, Jill Stein works for Russia, the Intercept works for Russia...

    David Brock seriously seems to have lifted his whole election strategy for Clinton from a crazy guy walking around Downtown Chicago wearing a sandwich board.

    What if instead of making up conspiracy theories about Trump, they made valid critiques of Trump? Is it reall

    • by bmo ( 77928 )

      The Clinton campaign /is/ criticizing Trump on the racism thing.

      There are a few problems with that:

      1. The people who are voting for him don't care. "He's racist? Yes? And? I'm racist too. Why *wouldn't* I want to vote for him?"

      2. People with memories longer than a gnat's remember the whole "superpredators" bullshit. Calling Trump a racist is a bit kettle/pot.

      3. The Clintons haven't been exactly minority friendly except when it's politically expedient. LGBTQI rights? Only in the past few years.

      "You

  • by argStyopa ( 232550 ) on Saturday September 24, 2016 @02:19PM (#52954219) Journal

    ...than the ACTUAL sitting US president bargaining away missile defense?

    https://www.washingtonpost.com... [washingtonpost.com]

    • by dbIII ( 701233 )
      Go ask your Dad about Kennedy.
    • Yes because in one instance, it is an American with a proven record of acting in the best interests of other people and the country(even if you disagree with the policy you must still admit he intends to do the right thing),
      In the other is an American with a history of fucking over other Americans at every opportunity, and has suspected connections to an enemy state that could be cleared up with some simple transparency but refuses to do so, and evidence that he cares more about his own financial position
    • We elected one person to manage foreign policy. Whereas the other guy is just some rich dude. So regardless of the actual outcome of any discussion it is far worse that a member of the rich elite get to do something that should be rightfully the reserved job of the elected government. Yes it is much worse.

  • "Fluoridation is the most monstrously conceived and dangerous communist plot we have ever had to face"

    And now it is rigging elections like Florida in the year 2000.

  • by rainer_d ( 115765 ) on Saturday September 24, 2016 @03:24PM (#52954471) Homepage

    Reagan got the Teheran hostages free by promising to unfreeze some shah-assets.

    They were actually released on election day - and that's just a very public example.

    Also, it's pretty clear that Russia has sent a little warning in the form of the Shadow Broker files.

    That's why the Obama-Administration is so tight-arsed about calling out Putin. The Russians probably know a lot more about a couple of very shady intelligence operations than they could ever have gained from Ed Snowden - and they made it clear that they can leak it anytime.

    The Russians basically said:
    "We can play this game, too, you know? Don't rock the boat, be happy with your book-contracts, the Nobel-prize and your cushy 50000 USD/gig speaking engagements".

  • The current President preached accountability and transparency. Good enough for him, good enough for me. Keep on hacking those email accounts and making the dirt bags career politicians squirm.

    Doing a great job there Russia!

  • Those damn Russians always making Hillary Clinton install her own insecure email server and routing mail from Obama to Hillary and back.... how dare they. Next they'll be using weird mind control to make Trump into a racist arsehole.
  • The White House is hesitating over making any accusations along these lines because they know full well that if you make those accusations you'd better be able to back them up and the evidence to back them up is almost impossible to get. We may know that the Russians are behind it, but I doubt we've got the evidence to actually prove it to any acceptable standard and if we go off making official accusations without being able to prove them we're going to look like fools.

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Discussing stuff with Russia now is not as bad as Reagan's discussions with Iran before his election.
    Consider it partisan politics as usual.
    Why put the country ahead of a political party? That's commie talk to people in politics.
  • The Dems have seen Hillary's huge lead vanish, and the election is a real horse race. If current trends continue, Trump could win. Obama doesn't want that. The alleged interference is just setting up an excuse for ignoring the election results if Trump wins.

  • If the candidates were open and transparent AND if voters only cared about ability to govern, then no one could influence the election. But that isn't going to happen. But labor unions by far and away have the largest influence vector for elections, followed by large corporations. Large corporations by the amount of money they contribute, usually have more influence on a continuing basis, but often hedge their bets by donating to both sides in the election. Lately though some large entities (I'm looking at

The unfacts, did we have them, are too imprecisely few to warrant our certitude.

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