Opinion
By Jeff Childers
02-09-24
Good morning, C&C, itβs Friday! At last. Another week in the stack. Today is Michelleβs birthday, so Iβm moving fast to get her breakfast ready and I ask your forgiveness for extra typos and stuff in todayβs post. Tomorrowβs edition may be a little light since I have birthday plans for her tonight too. But hereβs your packed roundup: Tucker Carlson doesnβt exactly break the Internet, but his Putin interview is still remarkable in form and substance; Bidenβs special counsel declines to prosecute the former vice-president for illegal retention of classified documents, but you wonβt believe why; Moscow attacked after Tucker interview; Zelensky replaces beloved top general with deeply-unpopular pick; and Supreme Court prepares to rule in Trumpβs favor in βinsurrection ballotingβ case.
ππ¬ WORLD NEWS AND COMMENTARY π¬π
π₯ Welp, he did it. Itβs done. Tucker posted his interview with Russian President Vladimir Putin yesterday evening. It clocked in at a whopping two hours and seven minutes, and even that was edited.
CLIP: Tucker Carlson interviews President Putin (2:07:00).
The two men mostly avoided incendiary topics, and they discussed nothing anyone could call a conspiracy theory. The closest Tucker got was asking Putin who blew up the Nordstream pipeline, to which Putin answered, βyou, of course.β Was Putin joking? Or was he accusing the U.S.? It wasnβt clear, especially after Tucker joked back that he had an alibi that night.
It was amusing, but it was a dodge.
Whatever the intensely-skeptical liberal media was terrified would happen evidently did not happen, causing the high tide of corporate media hysteria to recede a little. I suppose they had fretted Putin would put a hex on them or, Kreskin-like, would mesmerize Berkeley into canceling drag day or something. While most corporate media are still calling the interview βpropagandaβ, at least the wailing that Tucker should be given the old Edward Snowden treatment trailed off. Well, slightly.
For example, the New York Timesβs headline was not hysterical, not at all, omitted the word βpropagandaβ, and was almost even-handed:
Itβs pretty remarkable, if you think about it, that this might be the very first time since the start of the war that New York Times readers have heard the Russian point of view. Which proved the interviewβs profound success, but Iβll get to that in a second.
On the other hand, proving that you canβt please everybody, skeptical conservatives expressed disappointment with the interview, perhaps preferring that Tucker wouldβve thrown caution to the wind, opened a βUkraine biolabsβ can of whoop-ass, and broached other salacious subjects. But he didnβt, and Putin was even more restrained than Tucker, tip-toeing around topics that might trigger liberals, such as LGBTQ and trans policy, which Putin is famous for criticizing and usually never misses a chance to get his digs in.
So what was going on? Why all the delicacy?
They were careful because the interview wasnβt aimed at conservatives. Conservatives are already skeptical of the war, and we already disbelieve whatever weβre being told by the Biden Administration. The interview was aimed instead at moderate democrats and independents. Democrat partisans wouldnβt watch it even if Putin had described a secret cure for cancer β although ironically he discussed cancer (denied having it) and joked about a cure.
Hereβs the take-away for thoughtful democrats: Putin isnβt a wild-eyed maniac; heβs thoughtful and intelligent. He isnβt crazy; heβs rational and has understandable reasons for what heβs doing, even if we donβt agree with his reasons. He isnβt unreasonable; he offered to negotiate peace and openly invited that discussion. He might be an enemy, but heβs not a chaos demon from the pits of Hell, like corporate media has always described him.
The message successfully penetrated that Putin is a sane leader with whom peace could possibly be negotiated, as the New York Timesβ headline proved. Maybe it was just the right time for that optimistic message.
More subversively, and probably unintentionally, the interview also deeply undermined the Biden Administration, by starkly contrasting our two leaders. One leader looks and sounds like Grandpa Simpson, and the other leader looks and sounds like what you would expect a world leader to look and sound like. I wonβt spoil it for you; you be the judge. But just:
I mean, right? You see it too, donβt you?
π₯ You just canβt make this stuff up. I know I keep saying that, but come on. How much can one blogging lawyer be expected to take? CNN ran the story yesterday headlined, βSpecial counsel report concludes Biden willfully retained classified information but will not face charges.β
Useless special counsel and obedient lapdog Robert Hur issued his vast, overwritten, 345-page report yesterday, and β this will shock you β he declined to prosecute Joe Biden for doing exactly the same thing Trump is being prosecuted for doing, keeping classified documents after he left office, except worse, because Biden wasnβt even the President at the time. Critically, the President has the power to declassify at will, and as Hurβs report noted, Congressional secrecy statutes donβt even apply to the President.
But they do apply to the vice president.
Trump carefully protected his documents in a video-monitored, Secret Service-protected safe room at Mar-a-Lago, a private club with layers and layers of security. Biden carelessly stacked his documents in some ripped bankerβs boxes out in the garage at a house βrentedβ to his drug-addled son, Hunter, next to a pile of junk. And in other even less-secure places.
Hereβs how the Reportβs introduction described Bidenβs classified documents handling βprocedureβ:
Our investigation uncovered evidence that President Biden willfully retained and disclosed classified materials after his vice presidency when he was a private citizen. These materials included (1) marked classified documents about military and foreign policy in Afghanistan, and (2) notebooks containing Mr. Biden’s handwritten entries about issues of national security and foreign policy implicating sensitive intelligence sources and methods. FBI agents recovered these materials from the garage, offices, and basement den in Mr. Biden’s Wilmington, Delaware home.
We also expect many jurors to be struck by the place where the Afghanistan documents were ultimately found in Mr. Biden’s Delaware home: in a badly damaged box in the garage, near a collapsed dog crate, a dog bed, a Zappos box, an empty bucket, a broken lamp wrapped with duct tape, potting soil, and synthetic firewood.
One of the most memorable parts of Hurβs report, even if not legally significant, was his description of Biden as essentially being an Alzheimerβs patient. The main reason Hur astoundingly offered for not prosecuting Biden is that a jury would have found the former vice president to be a sympathetic witness as a frail elderly person with severe memory loss:
In his interview with our office, Mr. Biden’s memory was worse. He did not remember when he was vice president, forgetting on the first day of the interview when his term ended (“if it was 2013 – when did I stop being Vice President?”), and forgetting on the second day of the interview when his term began (“in 2009, am I still Vice President?”). He did not remember, even within several years, when his son Beau died. And his memory appeared hazy when describing the Afghanistan debate that was once so important to him. Among other things, he mistakenly said he “had a real difference” of opinion with General Karl Eikenberry, when, in fact, Eikenberry was an ally whom Mr. Biden cited approvingly in his Thanksgiving memo to President Obama.
At trial, Mr. Biden would likely present himself to a jury, as he did during our interview of him, as a sympathetic, well-meaning, elderly man with a poor memory.
They had to split hairs somehow. Team Bidenβs challenge was to somehow distinguish between what Biden did and what Trump did, so they can keep prosecuting Trump while letting Biden wander off. They picked possibly the dumbest distinction, that Biden was too stupid, old, and careless to know that what he was doing was wrong.
Donβt be fooled, this strategy of incompetence is cunningly aimed at a legitimate legal distinction: the records statute at issue requires the government to prove βwillfulness.β
Hurβs theory, stated quite plainly in his report, is that Biden is guilty, no question, but a jury wonβt believe that someone as out-of-contact with reality as Biden could have willfully violated the classified records statute. Hur repeatedly said he wasnβt taking a position on whether Biden was willful or not; he seems to think Biden was willful, even questioning whether Biden might have deliberately staged the documents in his garage, and later cooperated with the FBI, to support a fake βcarelessnessβ or βforgetfulnessβ defense.
But having carefully weighed all the proβs and conβs, and being a good little doggy, Special Prosecutor Hur concluded that since he β himself β thought a jury would probably just sympathize with a frail elderly dementia patient like Biden, the government wouldnβt reliably be able to prove willfulness. So Hur decided not to prosecute. Case closed.
Biden obviously enjoys the benefits of the First Class legal system, and Trump is back in coach with the rest of us. When the democrats bleat that βno one is above the law,β they mean except for people in First Class.
Hurβs reasoning was particularly moronic because the βcrimeβ occurred at the instant the documents were illegally retained β the day Biden left office as vice-president. The real difference between the two cases is not whether Trump βfailed to cooperateβ and Biden βcooperated,β because those are things that happened or didnβt happen long after the alleged crimes were committed (to the extent crimes were committed). The real difference is that Trump was President and Biden was only-vice president, and there are worlds of difference between those two jobs under the Constitution and other applicable law.
Hur is also wrong on willfulness issue. The question isnβt whether Joe Biden has the cognitive ability to willfully violate the records statute today, when he has only three firing neurons left. The question is whether Joe Biden had the cognitive ability to willfully violate the records statute at the time the crime was committed. Thatβs what a jury would have to decide, and likely Biden wouldnβt even testify, since most criminal defendants donβt.
Even if Biden did testify, a jury might reasonably conclude Biden was faking. After all, who would believe the President of the United States is really a dementia patient? Please. Any decent prosecutor could make that argument.
Hur is obviously not a decent prosecutor.
All in all, it was the worst possible time to publish the Hur reportβs strategic limited hangout claiming Bidenβs lack of mental capacity, what with the Tucker-Putin interview happening at the same time. The contrast between Putin β alert, intelligent, focused β and Biden β so forgetful a jury would never convict him β is literally breathtaking.
The Hur report raises serious questions about the election. I have become very skeptical about Democratsβ sincerity in pretending to run Joe Biden as their candidate. Try to imagine what Trump could do just in terms of devastating campaign ads based on the Hur reportβs comments about Bidenβs lack of mental capacity. A ten-year-old could make that ad.
Iβll end with this headline, picture, and paragraph from Politicoβs article last night. Hereβs the bizarre headline:
Hereβs the unflattering photo they put right under that headline:
And hereβs the one tricksy paragraph they slipped into the story that set the stage:
Haha! I mean, come on. At this point, theyβre practically carrying Biden down to the bus depot so they can throw him under the wheels.
π₯ For his part, Putin was attacked for his participation in the Tucker interview. What I mean is, he was literally attacked. Or at least, Moscow was. Newsweek ran the story early this morning bluntly headlined, βFire rips through Moscow.β
Fires broke out all across the Russian capital last night following the Tucker interview, at manufacturing plants, refineries, and apartment buildings. (In other words, the attackers deliberately targeted civilians.) It was obviously the coordinated work of Ukrainian special forces, and given the civilian targets, is legally considered terrorism and war crimes, and not legitimate warfare.
Some speculated the attack was designed to provoke Russia into retaliating by hitting back at civilian targets in Ukraine, thereby giving the United Nations evidence of βwar crimesβ against Russia. I doubt Putin will take the bait. But itβs remarkable that the Ukrainians would sacrifice their own citizens just to grab a propaganda point.
Remind me sometime to tell you about my theory that all our food plant fires and refinery explosions are tit-for-tat sabotage.
π₯ Now, in the sagging middle of his Proxy War, at a time when he needs fresh volunteers more than ever, President Zelensky of Ukraine finally figured out his top Generalβs price, or brainstormed some other way of purging the beloved commander. Or maybe he just finally found a replacement. Aljazeera ran the story yesterday headlined, βUkraineβs Zelenskyy names new army chief after dismissing Zaluzhnyi.β
Zelensky made a, well, controversial choice to replace popular top General Zaluzhny. Letβs just say the Ukrainian rank-and-file are pretty skeptical. Politicoβs headline said it starkly:
The Butcher! General Oleksandr Syrskyi, 58, the countryβs former ground forces chief, is described as being βdeeply unpopularβ with the troops. Not just unpopular. Deeply unpopular. Itβs not quite like putting a drag queen in top command, but itβs also not not like that either. For example, Syrskyi is most infamous and most hated for ordering troops to keep stumbling into a human meat grinder in Bakhmut, sending wave after wave of soldiers to their useless deaths under fierce opposition fire.
After hearing about the new appointment, one Ukrainian commanding officer tweeted that Syrskyiβs leadership was βbankruptβ (name withheld to protect the officer):
Whether liked by the troops or not, and who cares what they think, General Syrskyiβs greatest strength seems to be following orders. He is unlikely to question Zelensky or give him much pushback at all, and one can appreciate how the Ukrainian president might prefer a yes-man at this stage. Syrskyiβs greatest weakness is the same as his strength: unquestioningly following politicians orders.
What can we say? Replacing your top military leadership in the middle of a war is a desperate, last-ditch move. Maybe new ideas could change the momentum, who knows. The idea is, if youβre already losing, you might as well try something. But by all accounts, General Syrskyi does not seem like the kind of thinking-outside-the-box leader who can come up with a way of turning things around.
Even corporate media is skeptical so far. Weβll see how the world reacts, but this is likely to make people even more skeptical.
π₯ Iβm getting intensely skeptical about the militaryβs future in this country. Presented without much comment, because what can I say? From the Navy Times, two weeks ago:
Somewhere, in some remote conference room or war planning bunker, top Navy commanders weighed two options to fix the branchβs flagging recruitment problem: either stop queering the Navy, or else drop the requirement that enlistees pass high school. Between the two options, they decided dropping a high-school education was the way to go.
I mean, what did high school ever do for anyone anyway? Congratulations, middle-schoolers! Youβre in.
Seriously, though, I suspect whatβs really going on is the Navy is preparing to start accepting non-citizen foreign nationals who canβt document their high-school educations because they grew up in cartel-controlled Columbia or in the cracolΓ’ndias of Brazil. But Iβm only guessing.
π₯ Finally, it wasnβt just me and the Ukrainian troops who were skeptical yesterday. The U.S. Supreme Court held oral arguments on the Trump Insurrection challenge yesterday morning. As you recall, Coloradoβs Supreme Court found Trump unqualified for the ballot under an archaic 14th Amendment Constitutional provision precluding βinsurrectionistsβ (i.e., post-Civil War former Democrat slave owners) from holding certain offices or serving as electors.
Most intelligent legal minds, including mine, believed there was no way the 14th Amendment applied to President Trump. And, after hearing the Justicesβ skeptical questions, including the liberal Justices, it looks like Trump is going to win the case in a landslide, not even close, maybe even 9-0.
There were lots of great moments, but to give you some a taste of what Coloradoβs lawyers were up against, hereβs a short clip of possibly the most liberal Justice on the Court, and you can tell she wasnβt buying it:
CLIP: Justice Ketanji Jackson appears very skeptical over Trump βinsurrectionβ challenge (2:32).
And .. they know. Corporate media is preparing their readers for disappointment, From the Associated Press yesterday:
Even though we expected this to happen, itβs still great news.
I told you 2024 was going to be off the chain.
Have a fantastic Friday! You never need to be skeptical about your Coffee & Covid, just step over Joe Bidenβs political corpse and come on back tomorrow morning for another delicious, extra-large mug of C&C goodness.
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Β© 2022, Jeff Childers, all rights reserved
The views expressed in this commentary are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official position of Citizens Journal Florida