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Dick Morris: Worse Than Watergate - Media Now Is Co-Conspirator

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The current FBI/NSA/CIA/State Department/Obama scandal is far worse than the past outrages of Watergate and Iran-Contra scandals. What makes it so is that the media has switched sides.

In Watergate and Iran-Contra, the media played the role of prosecutor (or at least investigator) tracking down the scandal and reporting the developments to an aroused public. But in the current scandal, the media is the co-conspirator with the rogue spooks at the various intelligence agencies.

As we point out in our book “Rogue Spooks: The Intelligence War on Donald Trump,” the media has switched sides and is now working closely with the bad actors to slant the news and ignore bad stories.

Even as the conservative blogs — and this site — meticulously report developments, nothing makes the front pages of the nation’s main newspapers or the network TV news.

There, the only scandal you hear about is the phony, long-discredited allegation of collusion between the Kremlin and the Trump campaign.

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The fact that official government agencies used material paid for, generated and likely written by the campaign of a candidate for president to get a warrant to spy on the other campaign — just months before the election — is of no interest to the media.

Nor do they seem to care that tax money was spent to pay the “expenses” of a negative researcher (Steele) employed by one of the candidates.

Nor are they particularly alarmed that there was an open channel from Hillary Clinton’s negative ops through the State Department to the FBI.

Nor does it seem to matter that, after the election, FBI agents regularly leaked to the media (to the very outlets we are talking about) to discredit a sitting president — their boss.

Do you think the mainstream media is working against President Donald Trump?

What makes this all particularly dangerous is that it lies within our power to discipline and reform the executive branch agencies involved in the misconduct, but we can do nothing about the corrupt, co-conspiratorial media.

By contrast, in Watergate, the media — through Deep Throat (the de facto head of the FBI Mark Felt) — guided the investigation of the malfeasance, fully aware of the danger it posed to our democratic system of government.

And when the overreach and outright violations of law in the Iran-Contra scandal were exposed, it was the media that unearthed the illegal shipment of arms to the Contras in Nicaragua and the against-policy payments to Iran.

Now the media is not the cop on the case, but is one of the miscreants.

As in the international CIA playbook, the media has been enlisted to run phony stories, generate fake news and cover up exposés of the truth. In foreign nations, bribery is necessary to suborn the media. In Washington, ideology suffices. This makes it even worse.

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The intelligence community has come to regard spying, surveillance of government officials and co-operation with the establishment candidate for president as campaigning by other means. And that makes this scandal worse, far worse, than Watergate.

And harder to fix.

Dick Morris is a former adviser to President Bill Clinton as well as a political author, pollster and consultant. His most recent book, “Rogue Spooks,” was written with his wife, Eileen McGann.

The views expressed in this opinion article are those of their author and are not necessarily either shared or endorsed by the owners of this website. If you are interested in contributing an Op-Ed to The Western Journal, you can learn about our submission guidelines and process here.

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Dick Morris is a former adviser to President Bill Clinton as well as a political author, pollster and consultant. His most recent book, "50 Shades of Politics," was written with his wife, Eileen McGann.




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