• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Home
  • Podcast
  • Full Measure
  • Blog
  • Donate
  • "Slanted" Preorder here

Sharyl Attkisson

Untouchable Subjects. Fearless, Nonpartisan Reporting.

  • US
  • World
  • Business
  • Health
    • Vaccine, Medical links
  • Special Investigations
    • Attkisson v. DOJ
    • Benghazi
    • "Collusion v. Trump" TL
    • Fake News
    • Fast and Furious
    • Media Mistakes on Trump
    • Obama Surveillance TL
    • Obamacare

News

Gabbard sues Hillary Clinton for defamation over "Russian asset" comments

Source: Wikipedia

Democratic presidential candidate Tulsi Gabbard recently filed a lawsuit against former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, claiming that Clinton defamed her by suggesting that she is a "Russian asset."

Clinton did not specifically mention Gabbard's name during the podcast last October, but she stated that the Republicans were grooming a Democratic presidential candidate for a third-party bid and that the candidate was a "favorite of the Russians." Clinton went on to say, "..she's a Russian asset. Yeah, she'a a Russian asset, I mean totally."

The Epoch Times reports that Clinton's office had not yet responded to its request for comment on the lawsuit, but when asked if Clinton was referring to Gabbard, a Clinton spokesperson told CNN, "If the nesting doll fits...."

Gabbard is reportedly seeking around $50 million in damages.

Click on the link below to read more at Epoch Times:

https://www.theepochtimes.com/tulsi-gabbard-sues-hillary-clinton-for-defamation-over-alleged-russian-asset-smear_3212279.html

Fight improper government surveillance. Support Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI over the government computer intrusions of Attkisson's work while she was a CBS News investigative correspondent. Visit the Attkisson Fourth Amendment Litigation Fund. Click here.

NEW: At least 2 FBI wiretaps of former Trump campaign volunteer were invalid

Former Trump adviser Carter Page
  • At least two of the FBI's Dept. of Justice-approved wiretap applications have been deemed invalid.
  • That means related government surveillance of ex-Trump campaign volunteer Carter Page was improper and possibly illegal.
  • The problematic wiretap applications were signed by James Comey, Dana Boente and Rod Rosenstein.
  • The Justice Department says the FBI lacked probable cause to believe Carter Page was acting as a foreign agent.

In a newly-released disclosure of crucial significance, the Department of Justice has determined that at least two of the FBI wiretaps against former Trump campaign volunteer Carter Page should not have been made and approved.

Therefore, the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) Court has declared its approval for the two wiretaps was "invalid." Any surveillance conducted under these wiretaps would have, therefore, been improper.

The new information is contained in a filing by the FISA Court. The court issued the order on January 7. It was released on the court's website today.

FBI Director  James Comey and acting attorney general Dana Boente signed the Carter Page wiretap application in April 2017.

FBI Deputy Director Andrew McCabe and Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein signed the Carter Page wiretap application in July 2017.

The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) Court finds its approval of these two wiretap applications was invalid

The wiretapping of U.S. citizens is supposed to be a carefully monitored and controlled process in order to ensure that government agents do not abuse their power or use it to spy for political or other nefarious purposes.

The Department of Justice Inspector General (IG) recently concluded that FBI officials committed multiple, egregious errors and abuses in the wiretap application process involving prolonged government surveillance of Page. The IG also determined that an FBI attorney falsified a document in order to get approval for the wiretapping.

Read about Attkisson v. Rod Rosenstein for government computer intrusions

Read the document by clicking the link below:

https://www.fisc.uscourts.gov/sites/default/files/FISC%20Declassifed%20Order%2016-1182%2017-52%2017-375%2017-679%20%20200123.pdf

Fight improper government surveillance. Support Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI over the government computer intrusions of Attkisson's work while she was a CBS News investigative correspondent. Visit the Attkisson Fourth Amendment Litigation Fund. Click here.

Supreme Court Justice Ginsberg bounces back again; says she is cancer-free

Ginsburg at an appearance in Fall 2019

Supreme Court Justice Ruth Ginsburg says she is "cancer-free." She reportedly provided that news earlier this month to CNN.

Ginsburg, who is 86, underwent radiation treatment last year for pancreatic cancer.

Many Americans have been rooting for Ginsburg's recovery after a long string of health issues. In 2018, she had lung cancer. In 2009, she had early-stage pancreatic cancer. Before that, she had colon cancer. And last November, after her latest pancreatic cancer treatment, she missed work due to a "stomach bug," and was also hospitalized for a possible infection.

Justice Ginsburg has battled pancreatic cancer twice, lung cancer and colon cancer.

News reports

Ginsburg has managed to bounce back after each health-related episode.

Ruth Bader Ginsburg's Supreme Court photograph

She will celebrate her 87th birthday on March 15.

Fight improper government surveillance. Support Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI over the government computer intrusions of Attkisson's work while she was a CBS News investigative correspondent. Visit the Attkisson Fourth Amendment Litigation Fund. Click here.

Pesticide blamed for bee decline: industry denies it

Worker honey bees
Source: Wikipedia

The pesticide industry disputes that a widely used class of insecticides is adding to the reported decline in the world-wide bee population. That's according to a story in TheIntercept.com.

The insecticides, called neonics, are the most widely-used class of pesticides in the world. They were banned in Europe in 2018, after longstanding safety concerns. A 2009 study showed that even the lowest levels of the pesticide hurt non-targeted insects, such as bees and other pollinators, according to The Intercept.

Neonics are still used in the U.S. today, mostly by farmers seeking to protect their crops. The Intercept reports, "[t]he chemical is found in soil samples from coast-to-coast, in waterways and in drinking water."

Studies show that the pesticide impairs bees' ability to navigate and forage for food, weakens their immune systems, and makes them prone to infestation by parasitic mites, says The Intercept. It also suggests that other insects that are not supposed to be impacted are affected, such as butterflies, dragonflies, earthworms, and other insect populations. Even songbirds were reportedly shown to lose weight after they consumed just a few seeds treated with neonics.

Soon after the studies began pointing to concerns with neonics, the leading producers--Bayer, Syngenta, and Monsanto--implemented a sophisticated effort to discredit the studies, while casting the pesticide companies as champions of the bees' cause, according to The Intercept:

Lobbying documents and emails obtained by The Intercept show a vast strategy by the pesticide industry to influence academics, beekeepers, and regulators, and to divert attention away from the potential harm caused by pesticides. As a result, the global neonic industry generated $4.42 billion in revenue in 2018. In the meantime, the effects are being seen in massive die-offs. Certain insect species are nearing extinction.

Lee Fang, The Intercept

A spokesperson for one pesticide manufacturer says honey bee colonies have actually been increasing around the world and that the neonic products went through extensive tests before being approved for use. But The Intercept says the studies cited were all conducted by pesticide manufacturer employees or consultants.

Experts appear to agree that bee health is affected by multiple factors, but they disagree on whether pesticides are a major contributing factor.

Click on the link below to read the full article in The Intercept:

https://theintercept.com/2020/01/18/bees-insecticides-pesticides-neonicotinoids-bayer-monsanto-syngenta/

Fight improper government surveillance. Support Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI over the government computer intrusions of Attkisson's work while she was a CBS News investigative correspondent. Visit the Attkisson Fourth Amendment Litigation Fund. Click here.

On the 70th anniversary of Orwell’s death: The danger of third parties “curating” and “fact checking” our info

Political writer George Orwell, who died Jan. 21, 1950

It is a dangerous practice: Government, corporations, universities, news outlets and “experts” curating our information so that we cannot access, see or believe that which they determine we should not access, see or believe.

If anyone had suggested to Orwell, or the American founders, that we would invite this sort of manipulation and control of our information, they wouldn’t have believed it.

The idea was first introduced on the national stage by President Obama in October of 2016 right before the presidential election. He insisted that somebody needed to step in and “curate” our information in the “Wild, Wild West” internet environment.

Nobody had been clamoring for any such thing. 

So the challenge for those who came up with this bright idea-- in my opinion in an effort to control news and information-- was to convince the public to accept something very un-American: their information being shaped and censored by others.

Watch Attkisson's Tedx talk: Astroturf and Manipulation of Media Messages

This feat was accomplished in concert with the anti-fake news effort, started in September 2016 through a nonprofit called First Draft. (First Draft was funded by Google, owned by Alphabet, run by Eric Schmidt, a major Hillary Clinton funder and supporter.) The anti-fake news effort was also an effort by special interests to step in and control news and internet information. 

In a relatively short period of time, they had us. Curate our information, we cried. Block “untrue” news reports and blogs! Fact check political ads and certain politicians! Remove selected social media accounts! We invited special interests and political players to control our information under the guise of knowing what’s best for us.

No longer can we bear or do we deserve to hear various views and interpretations of facts. The curators decide which views are right and true They universally declare the others to be debunked or discredited. 

Never mind that the appointed curators are advancing their own views or special interests. No matter that the corporations employing the fact checks are looking out for their owners or corporate interests; or currying favor with government regulators— sometimes even doing the government's bidding. 

From a pure factual standpoint, government, news outlets, social media and other corporations are hardly parties that should be trusted to oversee “curation” efforts. History is littered with examples of them being wrong, conflicted or providing false information. 

One of the best most recent examples is the now disproven accusation that Donald Trump was working with Russia President Vladimir Putin. The wild conspiracy claims dominated the news for more than two years. The curators told us there was hard evidence. It would all be revealed soon! These views and reports were distributed, unfettered. What was censored and criticized as “debunked” by the curators? Social media, news reports and commentary that correctly questioned the conspiracies and pointed to malfeasance by the intelligence community. In the end, of course, the curators were wrong; the “debunked” skeptics were correct.

A more recent example is the effort by curators to label, as debunked, reporting by Politico and others on Ukraine interference in the 2016 U.S. election. It turns out there are far more supportable facts and admissions in the public record on Ukrainian interference than on Russia interference.

What’s more, those who have correctly pointed to Ukraine’s alleged role in 2016 have almost universally acknowledged there was Russia tampering, as well-- that both are true. But the curators have falsely framed the facts, claiming that "conspiracy theorists" say Ukraine rather than Russia interfered in the 2016 campaign. In this way, the curators aren’t just curating, they are tampering with the facts. Altering reality. And why wouldn’t they? We have invited them to feel free.

And a third example is the stranglehold on information the vaccine industry and their advocates  have on information about vaccine side effects and links to autism. I recently reported on a sworn affidavit signed by Dr. Andrew Zimmerman, a world renowned pro-vaccine pediatric neurologist who served as the government’s expert witness in vaccine autism cases. He was, at the time, defending vaccine companies on behalf of the U.S. government.

But in the affidavit, Dr. Zimmerman said that after initially believing vaccines are not linked to autism, he became aware of advances in science revealing that vaccines do cause autism in rare cases, after all. He goes on to testify that government lawyers from the Department of Justice hid this fact from families and the court, and misrepresented his opinion in cases fought by parents of vaccine-injured autistic children.

Dr. Andrew Zimmerman, the pro-vaccine govt. expert who says vaccines can cause autism, after all, in "exceptional" cases.

People are free to dismiss Dr. Zimmerman’s findings, of course, but the fact that he signed the affidavit it is not in dispute and the information should not be censored. However, Facebook’s “science fact checkers” have improperly flagged this reporting as untrue. Either these science experts are proxies for the vaccine industry or are sorely uninformed. Either way, they are not qualified to determine fact vs. fiction on your social media feed. All the while, misleading, incomplete and false information about vaccine safety is routinely promoted as “true.”

Facebook "independent fact-checker" wrongly flag a true news report

Read Dr. Zimmerman's full affidavit here

We should remember that the government incorrectly determined security guard Richard Jewell was responsible for the Atlanta Olympic bombing. (He was actually a hero who helped move people away from a suspicious backpack before it exploded.) The FBI falsified the polygraph of a Chinese scientist to make it look like he was a spy. Former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper falsely testified to Congress that there was no mass surveillance on millions of Americans. Social media videos were used out of context to defame a Catholic high school student as if he had aggressively confronted a Native American. Rape allegations in a landmark Rolling Stone article turned out to be untrue. Washington Post Pulitzer Prize winner Janet Cooke had falsified her sourcing. New York Times award winning reporter Jayson Blair plagiarized and faked his stories.

Corporations have been wrong or misled us on information about cigarettes and cancer, food safety, the dangers of Ford Explorers equipped with Firestone tires, x-rays, asbestos, medicine and vaccines pulled off the market for safety reasons and countless other topics. Charities such as the Red Cross have been found guilty of misusing funds and providing false information. Facebook has gotten caught misleading consumers and advertisers. Social media company insiders have blown the whistle on biased and dishonest practices at their firms. Just as concerning-- government, corporate, media and other curators sometimes fact check as “incorrect” matters that are simply matters of opinion.

Watch Attkisson's TedX talk: How Real is Fake News?

These are the people we are trusting to be arbiters of what information we should be allowed to see and believe.

Without alternate information that some of these powerful interests initially claimed to be wrong or “debunked,” the facts might never have been discovered.

Sometimes, the reality about serious issues of public importance starts with a single whistleblower, a patient’s story, or a conversation on the internet. When curators have the power to make it where we cannot find this information, the truth risks staying hidden. We would live a controlled, Orwellian existence, knowing only precisely what they wish for us to know, thinking only that which they say is the right way to think, with contrary information dropped down the memory hole like it never even existed.

My own view is that, in general, information that is not deemed to be illegal should be accessible. Social media already has all kinds of tools to allow users to filter out objectionable posts, if they wish to use them. If people want a vested interest to “fact check” for them, they should be able to opt into that service. But the rest of us should be left alone.

The magic of the internet is that it puts information in the hands of most anyone rather than just the powerful. Allowing that information to be controlled, manipulated, filtered, improperly discredited or erased is a slippery slope fraught with peril.... and very Orwellian, indeed.

Fight improper government surveillance. Support Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI over the government computer intrusions of Attkisson's work while she was a CBS News investigative correspondent. Visit the Attkisson Fourth Amendment Litigation Fund. Click here.

WATCH: One expert says going nuclear is the key to solving global warming

The following is a transcript of my investigative report on Full Measure. Click on the link at the end of the transcript to watch the video report.

One of the biggest energy challenges of our time is how to produce more energy in a way that’s considered cleaner for the environment. In his book: A Bright Future, Swedish nuclear engineer Stefan Qvist — writes that some countries have solved climate change and the rest can follow, if they just embrace what he says is a misunderstood platform: nuclear power. We recently caught up with him in London.

Stefan Qvist: What we're trying to explain in the book is basically there are a few countries in the world that have clean electricity 24 hours per day, year round. And those are Sweden, France and Ontario. And all three places did it by a combination of renewable energy and nuclear power.

Sharyl: You have a phd as a nuclear engineer. What are a couple of misconceptions you think people have about nuclear power?

Stefan Qvist: One is the volume and how dangerous nuclear waste is. And another one is the safety record of nuclear power. Both of them have been quite thoroughly misunderstood and we tried to go through that in the book quite comprehensively.

Sharyl: Do you find a lot of people don't know that nuclear power is green energy?

Stefan Qvist: Yes. Less and less. Fortunately, if you asked me five years ago, most people probably wouldn't know that nuclear energy is low carbon and doesn't emit greenhouse gasses. Today that's starting to become public knowledge, which is very good.

Sharyl: It's often said that when nuclear goes wrong, it's catastrophic. How do you get people comfortable with that calculation?

Stefan Qvist: In terms of of people dying from a disaster, energy related disaster, one the worst one we've seen in world history by far is the hydroelectric dam bursting in China in the 1970s, killed over, well in some estimates over 200,000 people. Nothing is completely safe. Nothing is completely clean, but we have to choose the best out of poor options almost everywhere in society and economy.

Support Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI

Sharyl: So what are a couple of comments you have on Fukushima, which is a recent disaster that people know about and hear a lot about?

Stefan Qvist: Yeah. So Japan was struck by an epic natural disaster that killed 16,000 people. Certainly compared to other energy accidents that we've seen with the oil platforms exploding or hydroelectric power, dams failing or gas pipelines exploding, Fukushima, in terms of relative effects to human life, is quite benign compared to those, but obviously a very serious and horrible accident anyway.

Sharyl: A comment on the Chernobyl disaster?

Stefan Qvist: It was actually constructed and redesigned the Soviet engineers. This is technology that will never be built in the West that will never be allowed to be operated in that way in the west.

Sharyl: What are the lessons learned from Three Mile Island in the United States?

Stefan Qvist: So it was really kind of a proof of concept of the safety built into Western type of nuclear power reactors. You have a a really severe event, you have core melt and no one got hurt. So I, that's the, the main lesson I guess.

Sharyl: Why can nuclear solve a problem do you think, an energy problem that wind and solar alone cannot?

Stefan Qvist: Well, the main reason is that wind and solar obviously rely on the wind and the sun being available. So it's much more effective, much more cost effective, and it's proven to work much better if you have something in the system that doesn't rely on the weather cooperating with you as well. We all share the same atmosphere and the same globe, but some countries have found a way to at least produce electricity cleanly, 24 hours per day around the year. And that's something that other countries can be inspired by because we have an existing solution to that. And that's basically what we mean when we say how some have solved climate change.

Germany is planning to close all of its nuclear power plants by 2020 in response to the Japan nuclear disaster. Nuclear power supporters say that will mean back to relying on more energy from coal.

Click on the link below to watch the video report on Full Measure:

http://fullmeasure.news/news/politics/clean-energy

Thank you to the thousands who are supporting the landmark case of Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI for the government computer intrusions.

Mother wins second "medical kidnap" case after government forcibly vaccinates baby

A vaccine being administered

A California mother has won a second big settlement in her fight over the government's unlawful seizure and unauthorized vaccination of her 20-month-old baby who reportedly had suffered reactions to early immunizations.

This time, the victory was over social services and the hospital where the child was vaccinated, according a recent article published in PJMedia.com.

Rachel Bruno had already reportedly been awarded a half a million dollars from the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Office for its role in the unlawful seizure of the child.

County officials reportedly took the 20-month-old without a warrant in connection with an investigation of a suspicious injury to Bruno's newborn baby. There were no allegations of abuse or neglect of the 20-month-old, according to reports.

Bruno's 20-month old was forcibly subjected to medical tests and a battery of immunizations to "catch up" with recommended vaccination schedules --- seven shots containing twelve virus' at once, according to the story. The parents did not consent to the testing or immunizations, says PJMedia.com.

If the child's pediatrician had been consulted, officials who took custody would have learned that the baby was intentionally being vaccinated at a slower pace than usual after a troubling reaction to early vaccinations, according to the story.

Bruno was separated from her children for forty days while the Sheriff's Office investigated allegations of a suspicious injury to her newborn. No evidence of abuse or neglect of either child was ever discovered and Bruno was not charged, according to PJMedia.com.

Click on the link below to read the full article and read excerpts of depositions from the social worker and sheriff's deputy involved:

https://pjmedia.com/parenting/california-mom-wins-second-big-settlement-against-cps-for-seizing-vaccinating-son-without-warrant/

Fight improper government surveillance. Support Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI over the government computer intrusions of Attkisson's work while she was a CBS News investigative correspondent. Visit the Attkisson Fourth Amendment Litigation Fund. Click here.

President Trump names 8 Congressional members of impeachment defense team

Congressman Mark Meadows (R-NC) is a member of President Trump's impeachment defense team

President Trump has announced eight Congressional members of his impeachment defense team:

Congressman Doug Collins
Congressman Mike Johnson
Congressman Jim Jordan
Congresswoman Debbie Lesko
Congressman Mark Meadows
Congressman John Ratcliffe
Congresswoman Elise Stefanik
Congressman Lee Zeldin

According to the president's announcement, the "initial" team will work "to combat this hyper-partisan and baseless impeachment."

Read the entire statement by clicking the link below:

https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefings-statements/statement-press-secretary-announcing-congressional-members-presidents-impeachment-team/

Fight improper government surveillance. Support Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI over the government computer intrusions of Attkisson's work while she was a CBS News investigative correspondent. Visit the Attkisson Fourth Amendment Litigation Fund. Click here.
« Previous Page
Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

Coming Soon

Subscribe

Get the Latest Stories Straight to Your Inbox

Follow Sharyl Attkisson

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • RSS
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Recent Comments

  • Mickey Pullen on Hydroxychloroquine: Politicizing Medicine (PODCAST)
  • Mike Marinak on Hydroxychloroquine: Politicizing Medicine (PODCAST)
  • Debunking “The Hotchkiss Republicans Report” - The Hotchkiss Record on "Collusion against Trump" timeline

Subscribe

Get the Latest Stories Straight to Your Inbox

Footer

Pages

  • Home
  • About
  • Podcast
  • Support
  • Contact

2ndary Pages

  • Full Measure Stations
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Subscribe to SharylAttkisson.com

SPECIAL INVESTIGATIONS

  • Attkisson v. DOJ/FBI
  • Benghazi
  • Fake News
  • Fast & Furious
  • Obamacare

Ad

Ad