“‘Release The Memo’ Is A Political Stunt, But I Want It Out Anyway…”

Authored by Mike Krieger via Liberty Blitzkrieg blog,

Before I get started, I want to put my cards on the table. I don’t trust Republicans like Devin Nunes for a moment. He doesn’t care about the civil liberties of Americans, and it’s become clear to me the whole “release the memo” thing is largely a political stunt. I’m not claiming there isn’t anything important in there, but rather that they don’t have the best interests of the U.S. citizenry in mind.  Nevertheless, I’m very much in favor of it being released for a variety of reasons.

 

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From my seat, both Republicans and Democrats in Congress are being dishonest about the memo, which makes perfect sense because the vast majority of politicians in Washington D.C. are corrupt liars who pretend to hate each other while consistently passing bipartisan legislation to abuse the American public. If that’s not obvious to you by now, I don’t know what it’ll take.

Devin Nunes and other Republicans in the House of Representatives have been attempting to portray their push to release the memo as some sort of civil liberties crusade. They claim it’ll expose the criminality of the deep state and how it abuses its unconstitutional surveillance powers. Perhaps it will, but that’s not at all what’s driving the effort.

Here’s the problem. The exact same people who are now complaining about FISA and intelligence agency abuse (which is certainly happening) just voted to give the U.S. government more surveillance power. If you think this sounds extremely shady, you’re absolutely right.

With that in mind, take a listen to what Judge Andrew Napolitano had to saw about the matter during a recent appearance on Fox News.

What does that tell you? It tells you these politicians who now claim to care about surveillance abuse coincidentally only happened to care after the anti-civil liberties FISA reauthorization passed. These so-called GOP freedom fighters didn’t make a stink about surveillance powers before Congress voted when it could’ve actually made a difference, but they waited until after. This tells you without a shadow of a doubt that this is a stunt to help Trump politically, not an effort to help the American public. More fake political wrestling. It’s really disgusting when you think about it.

All that said, I still want the memo released since I think some good could inadvertently emerge from it. Just because the GOP isn’t coming from an honest or decent place with this move, doesn’t mean it can’t result in a snowball effect which leads to serious and important revelations about how unaccountable intelligence agencies really operate.

What really got me thinking along these lines was a series of tweets by Democratic Senator Ron Wyden last evening. I found the following to be of particular interest.

The following from Republican Rep. Mark Meadows also caught my attention.

While it seems clear the memo’s intent is to help Trump politically – not protect the civil liberties of Americas – it also seems clear a lot of powerful interests don’t want it released because they know it could open up Pandora’s Box. In other words, it could lead to all sorts of uncomfortable follow up questions being asked that may inadvertently get the public more interested in unconstitutional surveillance. This might then push the debate out into the open, which is precisely where intelligence agencies don’t want it.

As Marcy Wheeler pointed out in an excellent interview on Democracy Now this morning:

Nunes is using, by the way, to release it, a legal measure that Congress has available to them to release classified information. It was discussed with the release of the torture report. It would’ve be appropriate to use it with the torture report, in this case it’s probably not an appropriate use of the law.

See what I mean about Pandora’s Box now? Read Wyden’s tweet again after listening to the Wheeler interview. With the release of the memo, it appears Nunes is crossing a line that should’ve been crossed a long time ago. Congress has been far too subservient to whatever intelligence agencies tell them to do, thus hiding all sorts of criminality and unconstitutional practices from the American public.

Glenn Greenwald highlighted this in a recent article titled, Republicans Have Four Easy Ways to #ReleaseTheMemo — and the Evidence for It. Not Doing So Will Prove Them to Be Shameless Frauds, in which he notes:

According to the procedural rules of both houses of Congress, their intelligence committees can declassify material in their possession if the committee votes that such declassification would be in the public interest. It is then declassified after five days unless the president formally objects. If the president does object, the full chamber votes on the question.

It is true that – in a measure of how embarrassingly deferential Congress is to the executive branch – neither the House nor the Senate intelligence committees has ever utilized this power, so it’s impossible to know how this gambit would play out in practice. But if Trump refused to release proof of the Obama administration’s misdeeds, congressional Republicans should have a straightforward way to overrule him.

The big question is, will a release of this memo break the seal and result in Congress being less deferential to intel agencies and the President in the future? Only time will tell, but that would be a good thing for transparency.

I also like the fact that Greenwald took Wyden to task on Twitter.

This is precisely the sort of pressure all of us should be putting on Congress.

As Julian Assange accurately noted last summer:

Enough secrets, we deserve to know just low lawless our government is.

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17 Comments
Unit 472
Unit 472
February 2, 2018 8:44 am

I think Krieger doesn’t know what he is talking about though he does quote people Greenwald and Ron Wyden etc who fit a pattern and follow a road that eventually leads to Holocaust

Anonymous
Anonymous
February 2, 2018 8:47 am

” …….. they don’t have the best interests of the U.S. citizenry in mind.”

And those that want to keep the information from the American people …….. exactly whose best interests do they have in mind?

The truth is always in the best interests of the American citizens, a hiding of it for decades is the reason the country has the problems it has and can’t seem to do anything about them.

Knowing the truth sets you free, free from being controlled by lies.

Maggie
Maggie
February 2, 2018 8:48 am

RELEASE THE KRAKEN.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
February 2, 2018 8:51 am

Release it all. This is allegedly our government and our nation, it’s supposed to belong to the people, not the political class. Having gotten away with it for as long as they have they’ve lost the thread.

Full Spectrum Domino
Full Spectrum Domino
February 2, 2018 9:21 am

Are we not G-Men? We are WEZOL.

bubbah
bubbah
February 2, 2018 9:42 am

Honestly, I’ve read Krieger’s blog for a few years and I’m not impressed. It’s as if he became a new age type after his daughter’s birth or something. Also, clearly these Republicans may want the Memo released for both political and civil liberties reasons. It’s not mutually exclusive. I’m pretty damn cynical, but that doesn’t mean every single politician is somehow complicit in the globalist/police state type ideology. Particularly congress which always has its share of truth tellers of a sort that make it in. Ron Paul, Mike Gravel etc etc, its a small number of folks, but there are always congressmen that aren’t part of the machine. In the Senate it seems nearly impossible to find a truly honest America first person, I’m sure there are some…but the Senate is scary in the type of people that rise to the top in both parties.

Rdawg the fascist
Rdawg the fascist
  bubbah
February 2, 2018 7:08 pm

Krieger’s blog is called “Liberty Blitzkrieg”, as is shown in the link.

You know who this defender of liberty supported in the Presidential election? Jill Stein.

Let that shit sink in.

After I learned that, I knew I could safely ignore him.

Chubby Bubbles
Chubby Bubbles
  bubbah
February 2, 2018 7:53 pm

Why are you “sure there are some”. I don’t find any reason to believe someone can reach the level of congress-critter with zero understanding of how the game is played/

CCRider
CCRider
February 2, 2018 10:11 am

Gee, I thought government was to be totally transparent and it’s citizens afforded total privacy. At least that’s the bullshit story we were taught in my yankee education prison camp years ago. Then mericans wanted to be ‘safe’ and just trust in ‘our’ government. Although I agree with Krieger’s assessment that some good may come from this shit show I think it will eventually prove worthless in terms of any real dent in the deep state. Wake me when Ron Paul is assigned to audit the fed-or the revolution starts.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  CCRider
February 2, 2018 10:37 am

You live in your own little dream world, don’t you?

In any event, you’re not a part of it, you’ve decided to let other people decide for you.

CCRider
CCRider
  Anonymous
February 2, 2018 11:18 am

Fuck yourself sap. That’ll be the day I let assholes like you ‘decide’ for me. Decide-like they give a rat’s ass what you decide.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  CCRider
February 2, 2018 12:01 pm

You don’t vote, I do.

That means I decide, not you.

And you (deliberately) have no say so in it.

CCRider
CCRider
  Anonymous
February 2, 2018 12:31 pm

You’re common like dirt.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
February 2, 2018 10:42 am

Krieger is right that Republicans hadn’t been watching out for our civil rights until now. Once they realized that they personally could be targeted as Trump had been, it freaked them out – especially because they know that contrary to recent pronouncements by Swampers like Clapper and Hayden about the sanctity of the FISA process, 99%+ of applications for FISA warrants are rubber-stamped based on only the flimsiest of allegations.

Montefrío
Montefrío
February 2, 2018 11:10 am

I’m a long-time regular viewer of this site because Mr. Q is one of the absolute best article aggregators around, aside from being a splendid writer of his own material, but the years roll by and what I find in the changing roll of commenters is an increasing tendency to confirm James Brown’s lyric “Talkin’ Loud and Sayin’ Nuthin'” (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dZkjo3mNmsA).

Y’all do realize that it’s all gone too far to do much more than clawback a little bit than effect a total reform short of full-out action, no?

Rdawg the fascist
Rdawg the fascist
  Montefrío
February 2, 2018 7:05 pm

Naw, we’re not geniuses like yourself.

Chubby Bubbles
Chubby Bubbles
  Montefrío
February 2, 2018 7:55 pm

Every time I click on a “like” of something anti-state-ish here, I have to figure someone is tallying up those votes. I still can’t help myself.