Venezuela postpones currency move after chaos, protests


Venezuela doesn’t have much longer before it is gone!

Obama Blames Russia For Hacking, Slams “Domestic Propagandists” For Rise Of “Fake News”


Tyler Durden's picture

As of this moment, president Obama is on his way to Hawaii, having just concluded his final press conference for 2016, and one of the last in his tenure as president. What did we learn in the rambling speech that lasted nearly two hours and saw one of the White House reporters faint? Not much that wasn’t already insinuated, if not proven, repeatedly: Obama stuck to the script, and said Russia “in fact” had “hacked into the DNC,” but that the actual voting process was not compromised. The White House was just trying to “let people know” what was going on, and the media interpreted the reasons.

While Obama took questions about Syria, China and Trump’s transition team, Obama mostly spoke about Russia and the allegations by US intelligence agencies that Moscow had hacked the US election. Obama said that his administration allowed the public “to make an assessment” by letting people know that “the Russians were responsible for hacking” the Democratic National Committee earlier this year, adding that the intelligence community did its job “without political influence.”

Citing alleged cyber security threats to the US, Obama said he had “told Putin to cut out the hacking” and indicated there would be consequences. which however he would not disclose.

“Our goal continues to be to send a clear message to Russia or others not to do this to us, because we can do stuff to you,” he said, adding that Washington’s response to Moscow’s alleged interference is being done “in a thoughtful, methodical way.” “Some of it we do publicly, some of it we will do in a way that they know but not everybody will,” Obama told reporters, adding that “the message will be directly received by the Russians and not publicized.”

“It’s not like Putin is going around the world publicly saying, ‘Look what we did, wasn’t that clever’ – he denies it,” Obama said.

When meeting with Russia’s President Putin in China in September, Obama said he confronted him directlyon the matter. The US leader told Moscow “to cut it out,” and apparently since then Washington “didn’t see further tampering with the election process.”

By then, however, WikiLeaks had already published the DNC documents. In October they began publishing the emails of Clinton’s campaign chair John Podesta, and the media “wrote about it every day,” Obama said.

Obama also told journalists that Hillary Clinton had a “disadvantage” in the presidential campaign because of “how the US media covered her.”

I don’t think she was treated fairly during the election. I think the coverage of her and the issues was troubling,” he said, calling the leaks “an obsession” of the press.

“It’s worth us reflecting how it is that a presidential election of such importance… came to be dominated by a bunch of these leaks,” Obama told reporters, accusing the “divided, partisan, dysfunctional political process” for making the US vulnerable to “potential manipulations that were not particularly sophisticated.”

“This was not some elaborate complicated espionage scheme,” Obama said, again accusing Moscow of having hacked into the Democratic party emails, both Clinton’s and Podesta’s, that contained “pretty routine stuff” such as John Podesta’s risotto recipe. What Obama failed to note is that the Podesta email hack provided an unvarnished, unfiltered and unique glimpse into the Washington corruption and cronyism at the very top levels, something the ordinary public could only dream of getting access to prior to the “Russian hack.”

Also, despite insisting Russia was responsible for making the DNC and Podesta documents public, Obama repeated several times that the actual election was not tampered with.

“My principal goal leading up to the election was making sure the election itself went off without a hitch, that it was not tarnished, and that it did not feed any sense in the public that somehow tampering had taken place with the actual process of voting. And we accomplished that,” Obama said.

“I can assure the public that there was not the kind of tampering with the voting process that was the concern,” he said later, answering another question. “The votes that were cast were counted, and counted appropriately.”

Incidentally, Obama did not miss the opportunity to take the low road, and mock Russia, saying “They’re a small country, they’re a weak country, they don’t produce anything that anybody wants to buy.”

US cyber security faces a “constant challenge,” the president said, adding that Washington has been warning other countries against cyberattacks. The US has been working on creating international norms in the field of cyber security, but along with defensive capabilities Washington also has “some offensive capabilities,” he warned.

Attributing a cyber attack to a particular government can be difficult, and is “not always provable in court,” he cautioned.

* * *

Separately, in a tangential discussion about a topic dear to much of the “alternative media”, Obama shifted attention to the local media, and blamed talk radio and other “domestic propagandists” for the rise of “fake news,” including fictional news items published by state-sponsored actors.

“If fake news that’s being released by some foreign government is almost identical to reports that are being issued through partisan news venues, then it’s not surprising that that foreign propaganda will have a greater effect. It doesn’t seem that far-fetched compared to some of the other stuff folks are hearing from domestic propagandists,” Obama said.

“To the extent that our political dialogue is such that everything is under suspicion, everybody’s corrupt and everybody is doing things for partisan reasons, and all of our institutions are, you know full of malevolent actors, and if that’s the story that is being put out there, then when a foreign government introduces that same argument, with facts that are made up, voters who have been listening to that stuff for years, who have been getting that stuff every day from talk radio or other venues, they’re going to believe it.”

As they should, especially if it’s true.

Obama continued, lamenting that “our political dialogue is such that everything is under suspicion, everybody’s corrupt and everybody is doing things for partisan reasons,” and said “our vulnerability to Russia –or any other foreign power– is directly related to how divided, partisan, dysfunctional our political process is.”

“So if we want to really reduce foreign influence on our elections, then we better think about how to make sure that our political process, our political dialogue is stronger than it’s been.”

 

In other words, please stop criticizing the government as you are responsible for generating further partisan divisions, especially if the line of attack is similar to something the “propaganda” Russian press may put out.

While we would be the first to agree with this statement – if it were accurate – we can’t help but think to last week’s passage of the “Countering Foreign Propaganda and Disinformation Act of 2016“, whose ultimate purpose is to enforce a crackdown on any media – foreign and domestic – that the administration views as hostile.

Which is why we found Obama’s parting statement, that “the Russians can’t weaken us, but Putin can weaken us if we buy into notions that it is ok to intimidate the press“, particularly ironic.

Is This Why Snowden Had to Break the Law to Become an NSA Whistleblower?


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Submitted by Nick Bernabe via TheAntiMedia.org,

National Security Agency (NSA) inspector general George Ellard, an outspoken critic of whistleblower Edward Snowden, personally retaliated against another NSA whistleblower, Adam Zagorin reported at the Project on Government Overreach (POGO) on Thursday.

An intelligence community panel earlier this year found that Ellard had retaliated against a whistleblower, Zagorin writes, in a judgment that has still not been made public.

The finding is remarkable because Ellard first made headlines two years ago when he publicly condemned Snowden for leaking information about the NSA’s mass surveillance of private citizens, wherein Ellard claimed that Snowden should have raised concerns through internal channels. The agency would have protected him from any retaliation, Ellard said at the time.

Politico reported on Ellard’s 2014 comments:

 “‘We have surprising success in resolving the complaints that are brought to us,’ he said.

“In Snowden’s case, Ellard said a complaint would have prompted an independent assessment into the constitutionality of the law that allows for the bulk collection of Americans’ telephone metadata. But that review, he added, would have also shown the NSA was within the scope of the law.

“‘Perhaps it’s the case that we could have shown, we could have explained to Mr. Snowden his misperceptions, his lack of understanding of what we do,’ Ellard said.”

Yet documents confirmed earlier this year that Snowden had, indeed, reported concerns to several NSA officials—who took no action and discouraged him from continuing to voice concerns. Moreover, as Snowden told Vice News:

  “I was not protected by U.S. whistleblower laws, and I would not have been protected from retaliation and legal sanction for revealing classified information about law breaking in accordance with the recommended process.”

Ellard’s 2014 criticism of Snowden appears particularly threadbare after he has been found personally guilty of whistleblower retaliation.

The judgment also came from an external panel of Ellard’s fellow intelligence agency watchdogs. Zagorin writes:

  “[L]ast May, after eight months of inquiry and deliberation, a high-level Intelligence Community panel found that Ellard himself had previously retaliated against an NSA whistleblower, sources tell the Project On Government Oversight. Informed of that finding, NSA’s Director, Admiral Michael Rogers, promptly issued Ellard a notice of proposed termination, although Ellard apparently remains an agency employee while on administrative leave, pending a possible response to his appeal from Secretary of Defense Ash Carter.

 The closely held but unclassified finding against Ellard is not public. It was reached by following new whistleblower protections set forth by President Obama in an executive order, Presidential Policy Directive 19. (A President Trump could, in theory, eliminate the order.) Following PPD-19 procedures, a first-ever External Review Panel (ERP) composed of three of the most experienced watchdogs in the US government was convened to examine the issue. The trio—[Inspectors General (IGs)] of the Justice Department, Treasury, and CIA—overturned an earlier finding of the Department of Defense IG, which investigated Ellard but was unable to substantiate his alleged retaliation.”

 “The finding against Ellard is extraordinary and unprecedented,” Stephen Aftergood, director of the Secrecy Program at the Federation of American Scientists, told Zagorin. “This is the first real test drive for a new process of protecting intelligence whistleblowers. Until now, they’ve been at the mercy of their own agencies, and dependent on the whims of their superiors. This process is supposed to provide them security and a procedural foothold.”

Ellard served as inspector general of the NSA for nine years, Zagorin notes.

The revelation about Ellard echoes other reports of retaliation against whistleblowers from the internal watchdogs meant to protect them, and further affirms Snowden’s repeated argument that he had no choice but to go public with his mass surveillance leaks.

What Did The Russian People Know About The US Election Result?


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The Russians knew!!…

In a wonderfully ironic and perfectly consipiratorial result, Statista’s Dyfed Loesche notes that, it turns out that the Russian were best at predicting who would win the U.S. presidential elections. According to research by Ipsos, only two other countries, or rather a majority of respective citizens, were giving Trump the thumps-up before the race for the White House had started. The rest of the world was convinced that Hillary Clinton would win.

The Mexicans were most convinced that Clinton would make it – understandably so. (Sometimes it’s hard to distinguish wishful thinking from sober realism.) Strange though, that the British who had witnessed the Brexit vote in June didn’t have a stronger foreboding that you indeed should never say never. The respondents were questioned in the month leading up to the presidential election on November 8, 2016.

Infographic: Russians Had an Inkling Trump Would Win | Statista
You will find more statistics at Statista

See – this proves Putin did it… and he told all the Russian people too!!!

Putin Lashes Out At Obama: “Show Some Proof Or Shut Up”


Tyler Durden's picture

Putin has had enough of the relentless barrage of US accusations that he, personally, “hacked the US presidential election.”

The Russian president’s spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, said on Friday that the US must either stop accusing Russia of meddling in its elections or prove it. Peskov said it was “indecent” of the United States to “groundlessly” accuse Russia of intervention in its elections.

“You need to either stop talking about it, or finally show some kind of proof. Otherwise it just looks very indecent”, Peskov told Reporters in Tokyo where Putin is meeting with Japan PM Abe, responding to the latest accusations that Russia was responsible for hacker attacks.

Peskov also warned that Obama’s threat to “retaliate” to the alleged Russian hack is “against both American and international law”, hinting at open-ended escalation should Obama take the podium today at 2:15pm to officially launch cyberwar against Russia.

Previously, on Thursday, Peskov told the AP the report was “laughable nonsense“, while Russian foreign ministry spox Maria Zakharova accused “Western media” of being a “shill” and a “mouthpiece of various power groups”, and added that “it’s not the general public who’s being manipulated,” Zakharova said. “the general public nowadays can distinguish the truth. It’s the mass media that is manipulating themselves.”

Meanwhile, on Friday Sergei Lavrov, Russia’s foreign minister told state television network, Russia 24, he was “dumbstruck” by the NBC report which alleges that Russian President Vladimir Putin was personally involved in an election hack.

The report cited U.S. intelligence officials that now believe with a “high level of confidence” that Putin became personally involved in a secret campaign to influence the outcome of the U.S. presidential election. “I think this is just silly, and the futility of the attempt to convince somebody of this is absolutely obvious,” Lavrov added, according to the news outlet.

As a reminder, last night Obama vowed retaliatory action against Russia for its meddling in the US presidential election last month.  “I think there is no doubt that when any foreign government tries to impact the integrity of our elections that we need to take action and we will at a time and place of our own choosing,” Obama told National Public Radio.

US intelligence agencies in October pinned blame on Russia for election-related hacking. At the time, the White House vowed a “proportional response” to the cyberactivity, though declined to preview what that response might entail. Meanwhile, both President-elect Donald Trump, the FBI, and the ODNI have dismissed the CIA’s intelligence community’s assessment, for the the same reason Putin finally lashed out at Obama: there is no proof.

That, however, has never stopped the US from escalating a geopolitical conflict to the point of war, or beyond, so pay close attention to what Obama says this afternoon.

According to an NBC report, a team of analysts at Eurasia Group said in a note on Friday that they believe the outgoing administration is likely to take action which could result in a significant barrier for Trump’s team once he takes office in January.

“It is unlikely that U.S. intelligence reports will change Trump’s intention to initiate a rapprochement with Moscow, but the congressional response following its own investigations could obstruct the new administration’s effort,” Eurasia Group analysts added.

At the same time, Wikileaks offered its “validation” services, tweeting that “Obama should submit any Putin documents to WikiLeaks to be authenticated to our standards if he wants them to be seen as credible.

We doubt Obama would take the whistleblower organization on its offer, even if he did have any Putin documents to authenticate.

Earnest Struggles to Answer How ‘Effective’ Obama’s Response to Russian Hacking Was


No one has ever shown any “evidence” that Russia or Putin “hacked” into and changed the election results making Trump the winner over Hillary. There were leaks from insiders apparently at the DNC and from someone with access to Podesa that provided internal emails to Julian Assuage at Wikileaks. which presented the DNC and the Clinton team in a negative like. The national traditional media played this material down so the general public never really new much about this, however it to help support Trump with his already large band of deplorables. Hillary was her own worst enemy and ran a poor campaign which was the primary reason she lost twice; first to Obama and then second to trump.

To claim now that Putin elected Trump is absurd; Putin is a ruthless tyrant and if he actually had all this information he wold have kept it to use against Hillary after she was elected as blackmail. Trowing that information away to supported elect trump would have don’t him little good as trump is the master negotiator and would have made a tougher world leader than Hillary so there was no upside to Putin supporting Trump and the argument falls apart!

Why I Oppose George Soros


Soros, I believe, is trying to do the same thing as Karl Marx. He is funding an experiment to alter society into what he thinks it should be. I believe in Adam Smith and the best way to help society is to rid it of people like Soros who think they have the right to reshape society into what they believe it should be. The invisible hand works fine and it is the essence of nature. People like Soros admit they do not believe in God, so that means they also assume the universe is theirs to manipulate and play the role of  God. People like Soros always want to rule the world through central planning. It is just not possible, for humanity is the inventor driven by the mother of everything — necessity — never the rulers.

lions-killing-elephantSorry, I have studied the world through the eyes of our clients globally, watching how we all act in our own self-interest just as animals in the wild also have a survival instinct. The design of nature is that one species survives by consuming another. The idea that we can create utopia where everyone enjoys perfect harmony is against the design of nature.

In trading, Soros was quick to recognize a currency peg that was against the natural cycle and thus was overvalued. He jumped on that currency and devoured it just like a lion. Then he wants to pretend to be God and make it an open society?

Soros needs to first study his own actions that are the same as a lion and its prey. He is not competent to judge the world while he bribes or supports politicians who will agree to his idea as long as he hands them the money.

Sorry, I believe in laissez-faire because the system is far too complicated for man to try to change it.

Mutually Beneficial Leverage – Nigel Farage Visits Trump Tower Today…


It is somewhat funny, perhaps quizzically so, that people cannot see the mutually beneficial play amid the strong relationship formed between Donald Trump and Nigel Farage.   Essentially and substa…

Source: Mutually Beneficial Leverage – Nigel Farage Visits Trump Tower Today…

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The Many Times Russian Hackers Didn’t Damage Hillary’s Campaign


WOW those Russians are real good!

Why Feminists Hate Men: What They Won’t Tell You!