Thankfully Wikileaks has provided a portal where you too can help decipher the web of yoga emails and enlighten the public way before 2075 so if you have a hankering, click and enter whatever keywords suits your fancy. I typed in Tea Party and they were plenty worried about the Tea Party. In fact Sidney Blumenthal wrote several emails about them and thought the Koch Brothers were behind it and it was just another part of the "Vast Rightwing Conspiracy".
After Hillary's speech the other night on the Alt-Right, who's wearing the tinfoil hat now?...
Anyways, below you will see an email sent from Hillary to Robert Russo, her special assistant...whatever that means....The email originated from someone with the name sbwhoeop and included an article written by Ryan Lizza from the NewYorker.
Interesting to me is the original date from sbwhoeop email to Hillary was Jan 23rd, 2012 9:52 Am and what Hillary forwarded to her "special assistant" was on Jan 23rd, 2012 at 1:23 Pm. Was this one of those collusions between Hillary and the MSM to get approval before an article goes to press? Like the ones that happened to rig her nomination?
Ryan Lizza's article was posted on January 30th, 2012 the death of the MSM has been greatly under-exaggerated...
....
I started writing this post wanting to convey one of the many reasons the so called conservative media is not respected anymore. Read the following from Ryan Lizza's article and it immediately reminds those in the Alt-Right and anyone friendly with the Alt-Right why they are now known as Cuckservatives.
They were taken in by Obama, infatuated almost when the rest of us out here knew that Obama, who sat in the church of one of America's most virulent pastors was not going to be a good thing. WE weren't taken in. WE knew we were getting someone that was going to fundamentally transform America.
Now you guys are sulking and mad as Hell at us...as someone friendly with the Alternative Media I would say get used to your new normal because the grown-ups are now in charge and doing what you guys seem to be incapable of doing which is reporting the hard truths...
.......
From: H <hrod17@clintonemail.com>
Sent: Monday, January 23, 2012 1:23 PM
To:'Russorv@state.gov'
Subject: Fw: fyi
Pis print for me.
From: sbwhoeop
Sent: Monday, January23, 201209:52AM
To: H Subject:fyi
http://www.newyorker. com/reporting/2012/01/30/120130fafact_lizza
On a frigid January evening in 2009, a week before his Inauguration, Barack Obama had dinner at the home of George Will, the WashingtonPost columnist, who had assembled a number of right-leaning journalists to meet the President-elect.
Accepting such an invitation was a gesture on Obama's part that signalled his desire to project an image of himself as a post-ideological politician, a Chicago Democrat eager to forge alliances with conservative Republicans on Capitol Hill.
That week, Obama was still working on an Inaugural Address that would call for "an end to the petty grievances and false promises, the recriminations and worn-out dogmas that for far too long have strangled our politics."
Obama sprang coatless from his limousine and headed up the steps of Will's yellow clapboard house. He was greeted by Will, Michael Barone, David Brooks, Charles Krauthammer, William Kristol, Lawrence Kudlow, Rich Lowry, and Peggy Noonan. They were Reaganites all, yet some had paid tribute to Obama during the campaign. Lowry, who is the editor of theNational Review, called Obama "the only presidential candidate from either party about whom there is a palpable excitement."
Krauthammer, an intellectual and ornery voice on Fox News and in the pages of the Washington Post, had UNCLASSIFIED U.S. Department of State Case No. F-2014-20439 Doc No. C05793534 Date: 11/30/2015 written that Obama would be "a president with the political intelligence of a Bill Clinton harnessed to the steely self-discipline of a Vladimir Putin," who would "bestride the political stage as largely as did Reagan."
And Kristol, the editor of tWeekly Standard and a former aide to Dan Quayle, wrote, "I look forward to Obama's inauguration with a surprising degree of hope and good cheer." Over dinner, Obama searched for points of common ground. He noted that he and Kudlow agreed on a business-investment tax cut. "He loves to deal with both sides of the issue," Kudlow later wrote. "He revels in the back and forth. And he wants to keep the dialogue going with conservatives."
Obama's view, shared with many people at the time, was that professional pundits were wrong about American politics. It was a myth, he said, that the two political parties were impossibly divided on the big issues confronting America. The gap was surmountable. Compared with some other Western countries, where Communists and far-right parties sit in the same parliament, the gulf between Democrats and Republicans was narrow. Obama's homily about conciliation reflected an essential component of his temperament and his view of politics. In his mid-twenties, he won the presidency of the Harvard Law.
Read the rest here...