Texarkana Gazette

Who isn’t skeptical about ‘government findings’?

- Larry Elder

President Donald Trump, in Helsinki, expressed skepticism about the intelligen­ce community’s finding that Russia interfered with the 2016 presidenti­al election. Within 24 hours, the President walked back his skepticism and said he trusts the intel community and believes their finding that Russia interfered with the 2016 election.

But the Helsinki hysteria continued.

Some Trump cable critics pronounced him “treasonous.” How dare the President waffle on the intelligen­ce community’s definitive conclusion that Russia meddled? It’s “treasonous” to be guarded about official government conclusion­s? We’re going to need more prisons to house all the offenders.

After all, this is the same crowd that believed President George W. Bush “lied us into the Iraq war,” despite Bush’s reliance on the unanimous opinion of our intelligen­ce agencies. A recent Huffington Post/ YouGov survey found that 56 percent of Democrats still believe “Bush did … lie about weapons of mass destructio­n in order to get the U.S. into the Iraq War.”

About Helsinki, CNN’s Anderson Cooper called Trump’s remarks “one of the most disgracefu­l moments by an American President on the world stage.” Really? And where does Cooper rank the performanc­e of President Barack Obama, who invoked the lie of Ferguson while addressing the United Nations? Before the investigat­ion was concluded, Obama said: “I know the world also took notice of the small American city of Ferguson, Missouri—where a young man was killed. … So yes, we have our own racial and ethnic tensions.” The investigat­ion ultimately concluded that the officer used justifiabl­e force and the suspect did not have his hands up and did not say, “Don’t shoot.”

Some cable news hosts wondered why Trump’s Cabinet members failed to resign in protest over Trump’s alleged lack of respect for the intelligen­ce community. Do they mean the way President Bill Clinton’s Cabinet reacted after he called them into the Oval Office, told them he did not have an affair with Monica Lewinsky and sent cabinet members

like Secretary of State Madeleine Albright out to assert, “We believe the allegation­s against the President are untrue”? Yet, when the semen-stained blue dress later proved that Clinton lied to and used them, no one resigned!

As for Trump’s skepticism about government findings, a 2013 Washington Post/ ABC News poll found that most Americans reject the lone-gunman conclusion of the Warren Commission, which investigat­ed the assassinat­ion of President John F. Kennedy. Even Robert Kennedy reportedly told friends that he doubted the commission’s conclusion.

What about racial conspiracy theories believed by otherwise intelligen­t people?

Missouri’s Claire McCaskill, while running for the U.S. Senate, said, “(President) George (W.) Bush let people die on rooftops in New Orleans because they were poor and because they were black.” Nation of Islam Minister Louis Farrakhan publicly accused President Bush of intentiona­lly blowing up levees in New Orleans. Filmmaker Spike Lee also helped to peddle that ridiculous narrative.

The so-called “Black Lives Matter” movement is based upon the lie that the police routinely engage in racial profiling against blacks, despite numerous government studies disproving the “racial profiling” narrative vigorously promoted by social justice activists, leftwing cable channels and politician­s who want blacks angry so that they vote Democrat.

Despite a House Select Committee’s persuasive finding that a lone gunman, James Earl Ray, assassinat­ed Martin Luther King Jr., some King family members disagreed.

As to rejecting the conclusion­s of government reports, during the O.J. Simpson double homicide case, the LAPD was led by Willie Williams, the department’s first black police chief. Because of the constant and serious allegation­s of evidence planting, Chief Williams ordered an investigat­ion. The probe found no evidence of any evidence planting or other intentiona­l acts by cops, criminalis­ts or investigat­ors to compromise the case. Neverthele­ss, the polls continued to show that most blacks, at the time, believed O.J. Simpson was “innocent.” The “free O.J. crowd” could not have cared less about Williams’ report.

So add Trump to the list of Americans who are skeptical about some government findings, less so about others. But as for people who still claim “Bush lied, people died” and who still consider O.J. Simpson an innocent man “framed by the racist LAPD”—pray for them, and keep them away from sharp objects.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States