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Tuesday, October 20, 2009

How they lied


This is true; Anita Dunn, Obama's Communications Chief and proud admirer of Mao Tse Tung (in the video, watch her tongue; she looks like a serpent!), said it herself. It's not a report from a third party, not a hatchet job from the Republicans, not a disgruntled ex-employee. It's the word from the horse's mouth, how they misled the American people.

It's ironic that, while Dunn says they used YouTube to disseminate their message with the intent of controlling the press, that it's now YouTube being used to disseminate how they lied, and why. How they did it: They put out several videos featuring David Pluff, and then the establishment media just parroted that; no confirmation, no additional checking by the media. I'm not sure who's more to blame, the campaign, or the media. 

I wonder how the press is taking this, having been completely duped.  Do they even care? Journalism died a quiet, willing death, that's for sure.

Dunn is an idiot for revealing this, but I am thankful for it. Here it is:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mLpmqO4xoHI

So now, how do we trust this Administration? 
Answer: We don't.
How do we trust the press?
Answer: We don't.
And the tyranny is complete.



Top White House Official Says Obama Team 'Controlled' Media Coverage During Campaign - Political News - FOXNews.com:
"The Obama campaign's press strategy leading up to his election last November focused on 'making' the media cover what the campaign wanted and on exercising absolute 'control' over coverage, White House Communications Director Anita Dunn told an overseas crowd early this year.

In a video of the event, Dunn is seen describing in detail the media strategy used by then-Sen. Barack Obama's highly disciplined presidential campaign. The video is footage from a Jan. 12 forum hosted by the Global Foundation for Democracy and Development in the Dominican Republic.

'Very rarely did we communicate through the press anything that we didn't absolutely control,' Dunn said, admitting that the strategy 'did not always make us popular in the press.'"

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