Author Topic: Is the Presidential Race Actually between the IRS and Wikileaks?  (Read 570 times)

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Offline EasyAce

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Is the Presidential Race Actually between the IRS and Wikileaks?
« on: September 19, 2016, 05:20:49 pm »
The release of either Trump’s tax returns or Clinton’s destroyed e-mails could determine who enters the White House.
By John Fund
http://www.nationalreview.com/article/440147/wikileaks-release-could-determine-election-clinton-emails-trump-tax-returns

Quote
Of course, the presidential race is between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump. But what if there’s another parallel race going
on — a race to see how much scandalous material on both candidates will leak out before the election and who will be most damaged
by it. Call it a contest between the IRS’s secrets (which Trump has reason to be nervous about) and Wikileaks (whose past leaks
have already jolted Hillary’s campaign).

The past of both candidates might contain material that could tilt the direction of the presidential election. Donald Trump has
steadfastly refused to release his tax returns despite early promises to do so and polls showing that 62 percent of Americans think
it’s important for him to do. He has to worry about a potential leak of his IRS returns similar to the one Mitt Romney suffered in
2012.

In Hillary Clinton’s case, Wikileaks founder Julian Assange told the left-wing radio program Democracy Now in July that he has
already released Hillary Clinton e-mails that “connect together with the cables that we have published of Hillary Clinton, creating
a rich picture of how Hillary Clinton performs in office, but, more broadly, how the U.S. Department of State operates.” He has
strongly hinted that further e-mails could shed light on the cozy relationship between State and the Clinton Foundation as well
as on the State Department’s motivations for covering up details of the Benghazi terrorist attack in 2012.

Both sides are clearly nervous about possible revelations before the November election — or even before the first presidential
debate on September 26. Donald Trump Jr., the candidate’s son, admitted to the Pittsburgh Tribune Review last week that the
real reason for the non-release of the tax returns had to do with their political impact, rather than any ongoing IRS audit. Speaking
to the paper’s editors, Trump Jr. said, “Because he’s got a 12,000-page tax return that would create . . . financial auditors out of
every person in the country asking questions that would detract from [my father’s] main message.” In other words, the returns
could reveal that his father’s wealth is substantially less than the $10 billion he claims, or that he makes fewer charitable
contributions than he has stated, or that he takes advantages of tax loopholes and often pays zero or little in taxes.

Representative Steve King, an Iowa Republican, had his own explanation for why the campaign won’t release any tax returns.
“There would be all kinds of misinterpretations of that and maybe some real interpretations of that between now and November,”
he told CNN last Wednesday. “That would be the only discussion we’d have.”

So instead the Trump campaign will take its chances that the returns won’t leak. Mainstream media outlets are already sending
out everything but engraved invites for someone to leak the returns. Last week, CNN reported that both Dean Baquet, the executive
editor of the New York Times, and Bob Woodward, an associate editor at the Washington Post, told a Harvard symposium they
would go to jail to protect any sources who gave them the tax returns.

As for Hillary Clinton, Democratic sources tell me that they are worried her infamous deleted e-mails (destroyed by something
called BleachBit, of all things) could resurface in leaks from either the FBI or foreign-intelligence agencies — or even ordinary
hackers. PJ Media cites congressional sources who say that portions of the Clinton e-mails were hacked by Guccifer (a Romanian
blogger now in prison for intercepting the e-mails of Clinton confidant Sidney Blumenthal). Files containing the contents of
additional e-mails from Hillary and Blumenthal might already be accessible in password-protected parts of the “deep Web,” a part
of the Web that is not discoverable through standard search engines.

What could be in Hillary’s e-mails? In addition to embarrassing details of the hand-in-glove relationship some of her aides kept
with the Clinton Foundation, there could be documents related to Benghazi, PJ Media reports. NRO’s Andrew McCarthy, a former
federal prosecutor, has reported that many analysts and members of Congress believe that Hillary Clinton and the State Department
were actively arming Islamic jihadists seeking to topple the Assad dictatorship in Syria in 2012 — and that they were having
weapons shipped from Benghazi to the jihadists.

Some of the recipients could even have had links to the Islamic State in Syria (ISIS). Circumstantial evidence keeps piling up that
Clinton and the State Department had a reason to obscure the truth about the Benghazi terrorist attack that killed four Americans.
“What if just weeks before the 2012 election it had been revealed that the Obama administration was shipping arms through a
third country to benefit Islamic radicals?” one congressman on the House Intelligence Committee asked me. “It would have been
another version of the Reagan-era Iran-Contra scandal, and it would have led to a public uproar that could have affected Obama’s
reelection. Clinton and the State Department have strenuously denied any involvement with the shipment of arms to Syrian
jihadists.

Why is Assange so eager to boast that his future revelations will damage Hillary Clinton? He has repeatedly said he believes that
the current failed state in Libya was caused by her aggressive support of the American role in overthrowing Libyan dictator
Moammar Qaddafi. He has called her a “liberal war hawk” who would misuse American military power if she were president.

There’s another more ironic explanation for Assange’s antipathy to Hillary. The public justification for the existence of Wikileaks
is that it supports “radical transparency” — a belief that decisions taken behind closed doors by government officials and elites
should be revealed to the public as much as possible. And what candidate for high government office in a democratic country
is less transparent than Hillary Clinton, who this month went so far as to conceal here diagnosis of pneumonia? It would be rich
irony indeed if Hillary Clinton’s obsession with secrecy acted like a red flag in front of a bull and motivated people to strip away
her protective layers right before the most crucial political moment of her life.


"The question of who is right is a small one, indeed, beside the question of what is right."---Albert Jay Nock.

Fake news---news you don't like or don't want to hear.

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Re: Is the Presidential Race Actually between the IRS and Wikileaks?
« Reply #1 on: September 19, 2016, 05:30:29 pm »
Interesting take on the election, and somewhat true.
The Republic is lost.