Five years ago today I published Accountability Citizenship because I felt the information age had dramatically changed the requirements for being a citizen of the United States. The events of the past few years have only increased my conviction that, now more than ever before, American citizens need a toolkit for information age citizenship. Accountability Citizenship offers a simple, concise methodology that can protect you from fake news and help you take control of your relationships with your elected officials. Available on Amazon.com, BarnesandNoble.com, and AccountabilityCitizenship.com! Do your part to protect our republic: get your copy today!
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I was proud to represent AccountabilityCitizenship.org at the Teaching American History Seminar at Alta High School in Sandy, Utah, today. The scope and focus of this national program is positive and encouraging. Sponsored by the Ashbrook Center at Ashland University in Ohio, TeachingAmericanHistory.org is part of Ashbrook's Core Documents Curriculum Project. This project aims to provide secondary school history teacher with access to quality collections of critical documents from American history, as well as suggestions on how to incorporate these collections into teaching American History. The program I witnessed, led by Dr. Scott Yenor of Boise State University, encouraged teachers to engage in rigorous discussion about the meaning of the documents under consideration. Debate and disagreement was encouraged--the emphasis was on anchoring the discussion in the actual text of historical documents. What I witnessed today was fully consistent with the stated mission of the Ashbrook Center: "The Ashbrook Center seeks to restore and strengthen the capacities of the American people for constitutional self-government. Ashbrook teaches students and teachers across our country what America is and what she represents in the long history of the world. Ashbrook creates informed patriots." Thank you to Victoria Hughes, Senior Director of the Ashbrook Center, and Tim Haglund, Donor Relations Manager, for introducing me to this super program. Your mission is similar to our own: "AccountabilityCitizenship.org increases voter participation to grow a community of positive, informed and engaged citizens. We do this by informing Americans about history, principles of logical thought, and reasoning on all sides of important issues." I am looking forward to finding ways to work together to achieve our common goals. I watch Fox News as well as MSNBC and other sources to see how they are covering current events. That is part of the process for which I advocate in my book, Accountability Citizenship. Over the weekend, I was very disappointed that Fox chose to cover only a very limited set of the facts surrounding the release of the controversial memo that seeks to prove that the warrant to wiretap former Trump advisor Carter Page was illegitimate because the evidence justifying the warrant was politically motivated. As we discuss frequently in this blog, you cannot prove anything if you limit the facts to only those that support your conclusion. That is precisely what Fox News and the GOP Members of Congress they interview are trying to do.
The facts arguing against this assessment are so overwhelming that it is difficult to view the Fox coverage as anything but an attempt to deceive the American people. Here are some of the facts omitted by Fox News and by Nunes' GOP memo: (1) In 2013, 3 years before Trump announced he was running for President, Carter Page came to the attention of the FBI because he was meeting with (and perhaps being recruited by) Russians who were later deported for being spies.. The FBI has a tape of Russian "diplomat" Victor Podobnyy calling Page "an idiot" and stating that he wanted money. Podobnyy, who was working at the Russian consulate, was eventually deported for espionage. (2) In March, 2016, then-candidate Donald Trump identified Carter Page as one of his advisors on international affairs. (3) In July, 2016, Page spoke (on invitation) at the Economic School in Moscow, criticizing US and European policy towards Russia and praising Putin. He met with senior Russian government officials and allegedly asked for ownership of a Russian company in exchange for eliminating sanctions against Russia. (4) Carter Page left the Trump campaign in September, 2016, after controversy erupted over his July activities in Russia. Since then, the Trump campaign and administration have sought to distance themselves from Mr. Page. (5) In October, 2016, the first FISA warrant authorizing monitoring of Carter Page was approved. It has been approved on three subsequent occasions, including once by Deputy Attorney General Rosenstein, the fellow who wrote the memo Trump used to justify firing James Comey. So now Devin Nunes wants to assert, in this "controversial" memo, that, even though there was sufficient reason for the Trump campaign to break ties with Carter Page in September, there was not enough evidence to justify monitoring his communications in October? Even though Carter Page was a person of interest related to Russian espionage three years before he became a Trump advisor, the FBI request to wiretap him was politically motivated? It just doesn't make sense. The facts are clear: By his own admission, Carter Page met with Russians high up in business and government in July of 2016, while serving as a named "foreign policy advisor" to the Trump campaign. He was alleged to have asked for something of financial benefit in exchange for doing something of benefit to the Russian government (getting rid of sanctions). Regardless of the source of the last allegation, the fact that a group of Russian spies independently identified Page in 2013 as someone who wanted money, coupled with his behavior in 2016 seems to provide reasonable grounds for the FISA warrant. I think most Americans, at least those of us who lived through 9-11, will feel the same way. It seems pretty clear that monitoring Page would have been reasonable, regardless of which campaign he supported, based on his own behavior. The repeated assertions by President Trump that there was no collusion and no obstruction on the part of him or people working for him are completely contradicted by an overwhelming volume of evidence. The evidence against Trump's assertions includes the fact that two former Trump campaign and Trump administration officials have already pled guilty to lying about their ties and communication with Russia. When two of the four people initially indicted by Special Counsel Robert Mueller plead guilty to lying about their communications with representatives of the Russian government, that is evidence that the investigation is necessary and urgent. Given the COMPLETE set of facts regarding the FISA warrant and the Mueller investigation, I find the assertions that the investigation is politically motivated are just a smokescreen. When we go to the polls next November, the American people would do well to remember which of their elected representatives are trying to use a partial set of facts to deceive them. From his selection as the most outstanding athlete in his high school, to his service as a rifle platoon commander in Vietnam (Purple Heart, Bronze Star Medal with V for Valor), to his Senate confirmation as Director of the FBI in 2001 by a vote of 98-0, Robert Mueller has demonstrated character over a lifetime of excellence and honor.
The repeated assertions by President Trump that there was no collusion and no obstruction on the part of him or people working for him are completely contradicted by an overwhelming volume of evidence. The evidence against Trump's assertions includes the fact that two former Trump campaign and Trump administration officials have already pled guilty to lying about their ties and communication with Russia. But what about this big memo supposedly being released by Congressman Devin Nunes this week? Well, Nunes says the issuance (or renewal?) of the FISA warrant justifying wiretapping Carter Page was politically motivated. But the facts arguing against this assessment are overwhelming: (1) In 2013, 3 years before Trump announced he was running for President, Carter Page was identified as a source by Victor Podobnyy and two other Russians who were later charged with working as agents for Russian intelligence in New York. The FBI has a tape of Podobnyy calling Page "an idiot" and stating that he wanted money. Podobnyy, who was working at the Russian consulate, was eventually deported for espionage. (2) In March, 2016, then-candidate Donald Trump identified Carter Page as one of his advisors on international affairs. (3) In July, 2016, Page spoke (on invitation) at the Economic School in Moscow, criticizing US and European policy towards Russia and praising Putin. He met with senior Russian government officials and allegedly asked for ownership of a Russian company in exchange for eliminating sanctions against Russia. (4) Carter Page left the Trump campaign in September, 2016, after controversy erupted over his July activities in Russia. (5) In October, 2016, the FISA warrant authorizing monitoring of Carter Page was either approved or renewed. So now Devin Nunes wants to assert, in this "controversial" memo, that, even though there was sufficient reason for the Trump campaign to break ties with Carter Page in September, there was not enough evidence to justify monitoring his communications in October? It just doesn't make sense. The facts are clear: Page came to the attention of the FBI three years before the election because he was meeting with (and perhaps being recruited by) Russians who were later deported for being spies. In July, 2016, he was invited to speak in Moscow. His speech indicated he was sympathetic to Putin and against US policy toward Russia. By his own admission, he met with Russians high up in business and government. He was alleged to have asked for something of financial benefit in exchange for doing something of benefit to the Russian government (getting rid of sanctions). Regardless of the source of the last allegation, the fact that a group of Russian spies independently identified Page in 2013 as someone who wanted money, coupled with his behavior in 2016 seems to provide reasonable grounds for the FISA warrant. I think most Americans, at least those of us who lived through 9-11, will feel the same way. It seems pretty clear that monitoring Page would have been reasonable, regardless of which campaign he supported, based on his own behavior. https://www.wsj.com/articles/former-trump-aide-carter-page-was-on-u-s-counterintelligence-radar-before-russia-dossier-1517486401 |
AuthorAuthor of Thy King Dumb Come and Accountability Citizenship, Stephen P. Tryon is a businessman and technologist with extensive experience in e-commerce, a retired Soldier, and former Senate Fellow. Archives
January 2024
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