State Department Won’t Say If It’s Colluding With Big Tech To Censor Speech Ahead Of 2024 Election
The State Department didn't respond when pressed on whether it's colluding with Big Tech to censor so-called 'disinformation.'
Congressional Republicans are fighting back after an NGO with ties to Ukraine and the U.S. State Department created a watch list of American individuals and media outlets — including Blaze Media — supposedly known to have promulgated "Russian disinformation" or otherwise made "anti-Ukrainian statements."
Last week, an NGO best known as Texty.org but that is sometimes referred to as the Data Journalism Agency created a list of some 380 politicians and activists on the left and right as well as more than 75 entities that are supposedly "opponents of Ukraine."
According to Texty.org's article about the watch list, these people and organizations established themselves as Ukrainian opponents by taking steps such as delaying further Ukraine funding by a few months or calling for "a stronger audit" of how such funds have been allocated, as Blaze News previously reported.
The Texty.org article even called out the Democrat congressional group known as "the Squad" for daring to utter "anti-war speeches."
'All Americans can agree that our tax dollars should not be supporting direct attacks on U.S. persons based upon reasonable political disagreement, and especially not direct attacks on U.S. legislators based solely upon their vote.'
Blaze Media managed to secure a spot on the list by supposedly sharing "false and manipulative" information about the origins of the Ukraine/Russia war and otherwise disseminating "common narratives of Russian propaganda," according to an email from Texty.org's deputy editor in chief, Inna Gadzynska.
Rep. Jim Banks (R-Ind.) also found himself on that list, as did 115 other Republicans in the House of Representatives. On Wednesday, Banks sent a letter to his Republican colleagues on the House Appropriations Committee, calling on them to defund Texty.org.
Then, during a full committee markup of the fiscal year 2025 State, Foreign Operations, and Related Programs funding bill, those Republicans banded together to include a provision that would prohibit Texty.org from receiving federal funding.
"I was just designated an ‘opponent of Ukraine,’ after being sanctioned by the Russian regime," Banks said in a statement. "I’m not bothered by what foreign nations think of me. But it’s shameful for our agencies to be using Hoosiers’ tax dollars to collaborate with foreign groups that attempt to intimidate U.S. citizens and lawmakers. I’d like to thank the Republicans on the Appropriations Committee for defunding any such work with the Data Journalism Agency."
Banks was not the only Republican on the watch list to take decisive action against Texty.org. Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida and Sen. J.D. Vance of Ohio also reached out to Secretary of State Antony Blinken, requesting to learn more information about the connection between the State Department and Texty.org co-founder Anatoly Bondarenko, who participated in TechCamp, "a public diplomacy program" established by the Bureau of Educational & Cultural Affairs, a subdivision of the State Department.
"Needless to say, whatever one thinks of American foreign aid or support for Ukraine, all Americans can agree that our tax dollars should not be supporting direct attacks on U.S. persons based upon reasonable political disagreement, and especially not direct attacks on U.S. legislators based solely upon their vote," the letter to Blinken said.
Blaze Media cofounder Glenn Beck suggests Bondarenko may even be involved in inciting a color revolution in the United States. "[Bondarenko] is a guy who has deep ties to the State Department and to color revolutions by hosting a TechCamp in one of those countries," he recently told Peter Gietl, managing editor of Return, a tech division of Blaze Media.
Beck believes that people such as Bondarenko and George Soros have "perfected" conducting color revolutions elsewhere and are now attempting to implement one here. "[They want] to topple her and maker her into a democracy instead of a republic," he explained.
Gietl agrees. "Unfortunately these color revolution organizations that have been used to attack foreign enemies are being directed to set their sights on the American people," Gietl said in a statement to Blaze News. "These groups and the U.S. State Department that funds them aren’t loyal to the Constitution or even the American people. They’ve sworn allegiance to the oligarchical bureaucracy that rules us."
Gietl also celebrates the move by congressional Republicans to push back against this globalist aggression, calling it "an important first step."
"Every American should be enraged our tax dollars are being spent funding foreign NGOs who then attack elected members of Congress and journalists who question U.S. involvement in this war. It has become a tactic to smear anyone on the right or anti-war as being Russian disinformation shills. We’re not going to stand for it.
"Blaze Media is going to keep the pressure on until every American taxpayer dollar is stripped from them."
Texty.org denies creating an "enemies list" or a "kill list." "The editorial team of Texty.org.ua does not deny, condemn, or dispute the right of American citizens, media, and institutions to express any opinions or hold any political beliefs. We value and respect freedom of speech, which is essential for a democratic society," a statement from Texty.org read in part.
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NBC News is launching a full-throated defense of Hunter Biden, unearthing an old narrative and claiming its adherents are "vindicated."
After the New York Post dropped the Hunter Biden laptop bombshell a few weeks before the 2020 presidential election, dozens of intelligence professionals tried to connect the laptop to a Russian disinformation campaign. For a while, the narrative proved useful, and Joe Biden even used it during a debate to shut down Donald Trump.
But it wasn't true, which the top U.S. intelligence official confirmed at the time.
Now, more than three years later, NBC News is trying to vindicate Hunter Biden by suggesting the career intelligence officials were not wrong after all.
On Saturday, the outlet published a story titled, "Former U.S. spies warned in 2020 that the Hunter Biden scandal had Russian fingerprints. They feel vindicated now."
The story includes interviews with several of the intel officials, who essentially claim victory.
"It validates exactly what we were warning about," said Marc Polymeropoulos, a CIA veteran who signed the letter. John Sipher, another CIA veteran and letter signatory, boasted, "The recent revelations show that we were prescient."
NBC News' thesis is based upon claims that special counsel David Weiss lodged against Alexander Smirnov, a former FBI confidential human source who is facing charges for allegedly lying to the FBI. In court documents last week, Weiss claimed that Smirnov had "extensive" contact with high-level Russian intelligence officials.
Despite Weiss only making the claim — and not providing hard evidence in court, which would be unusual because information about Russian intelligence is normally highly classified — NBC is claiming the intelligence officials are "vindicated" because of what Smirnov is accused of lying about: He allegedly told the FBI that Ukrainian energy company Burisma paid then-Vice President Joe Biden and Hunter Biden $5 million each in 2015 and/or 2016.
The network's framing aside, the report still admitted there is no connection between the laptop and Russian disinformation.
"No public evidence has emerged pointing to a Russian government role in how the laptop materials were made public," NBC News reported.
Even more important: Weiss himself has acknowledged the laptop in court documents and its content as legitimate evidence against Hunter Biden.
In a court filing last month, Weiss explained:
In August 2019, IRS and FBI investigators obtained a search warrant for tax violations for the defendant’s Apple iCloud account. In response to that warrant, in September 2019, Apple produced backups of data from various of the defendant’s electronic devices that he had backed up to his iCloud account. Investigators also later came into possession of the defendant’s Apple MacBook Pro, which he had left at a computer store. A search warrant was also obtained for his laptop and the results of the search were largely duplicative of information investigators had already obtained from Apple.
These facts — the lack of evidence connecting the laptop to Russian intelligence and Weiss' own acknowledge of the laptop — are why the intelligence officials "should feel zero vindication," a spokesperson for the House Judiciary Committee said.
"The Hunter Biden laptop was always real and always authenticated. They knew, or should have known, that and they still ran with their verifiably bogus letter. The people who signed the letter should feel zero vindication," spokesman Russell Dye told NBC News.
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Former acting CIA Director Mike Morell allegedly "misled" signatories of the infamous letter downplaying the Hunter Biden laptop story by telling them he would clear the letter with the CIA before releasing it.
On Oct. 18, 2020, Morell sent intelligence officials an email soliciting their endorsement of the letter. According to the New York Post, he promised to "clear the statement with the Publication Review Board at CIA" the next day.
But on Oct. 19, 2020, Politico broke news of the letter, using it to claim the laptop story was "Russian disinfo."
The timeline suggests, according to the Post, that the "required pre-publication security review by the CIA, a lifelong obligation for all former agency employees," never happened because the review process can take months.
More from the Post:
[The letter] also omitted the boilerplate disclaimer required by the CIA to be included in any such intelligence assessment, which would have declared: “All statements of fact, opinion, or analysis expressed are those of the author and do not reflect the official positions or views of the Central Intelligence Agency.”
Last week, the Washington Examiner reported that the email Morell sent on Oct. 18 explicitly contained the motive for drafting the letter: to give then-presidential candidate Joe Biden a "talking point" at his next debate with Donald Trump.
More news is coming out about the letter as House Republicans investigate its origins. Last month, Morell purportedly testified under oath that Secretary of State Antony Blinken, then a senior adviser to Biden's presidential campaign, was the impetus to the letter, having planted the seed that Russia was behind the laptop story.
For his part, however, Blinken has denied any involvement in the letter.
Daniel Hoffman, a former CIA station chief, revealed to Fox News last month that Morell asked him to sign the letter. But he ultimately chose not to because he saw "no evidence" that Russia was involved, nor were the arguments of the letter subjected to routine debate and scrutiny — such as the security review that Morell allegedly promised.
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Secretary of State Antony Blinken denies being the "impetus" behind an infamous letter casting the Hunter Biden laptop story as Russian disinformation.
Just weeks before the 2020 election, the New York Post revealed it had obtained a laptop that allegedly belonged to Hunter Biden.
The media and former national security experts immediately rushed to downplay the laptop as yet another attempt by Russian actors to meddle in a presidential election. Days after the laptop story broke, Politico reported the laptop story is "Russian disinfo" based upon a letter that more than 50 national security experts had signed.
The New York Post reported that former acting CIA Director Michael Morrell recently testified under oath that Blinken — who at the time was a foreign affairs adviser to Biden's campaign — was, according to the House Judiciary Committee, "the impetus" behind the letter.
In an interview with Fox News that aired on Monday, Blinken denied any involvement in the creation of the letter.
"With regard to that letter, I didn't — wasn't my idea, didn't ask for it, didn't solicit it. And I think the testimony that the former deputy director of the CIA, Mike Morell, put forward confirms that," Blinken said.
In reality, his response puts him at direct odds with Morell.
While Morell has not spoken publicly about his testimony, House Republicans allege that Morell testified that Blinken contacted him after the laptop story broke and planted the seed that it was a Russian disinformation campaign. Morell subsequently solicited signatures for the infamous letter.
Meanwhile, in his interview with Fox News, Blinken refused to acknowledge that the laptop is not Russian disinformation.
"I'm not engaging in politics," Blinken said. "I've got a lot on my agenda, some things that we've just talked about — trying to help the Ukrainians in the Russian aggression against them, engaging with allies and partners around the world in dealing with some of the challenges posed by China. We have a situation now in Sudan that’s fully occupied my time, so that's where my focus is."
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