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HORIST: Will the New York Times ever get back to journalism?

<p>The <em>New York Times<&sol;em> recently reported a story claiming that the United States intelligence services have increased America’s ability to launch cyber-attacks on the  Russian energy grid&period;  The <em>Times<&sol;em> also reported – based on unnamed sources – this new more aggressive approach was intentionally kept from President Trump out of fear that he may countermand the new policy or may blurt it out to the Russians&period;  They just cannot stop spinning every news story into anti-Trump political propaganda&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The spin on the story &&num;8212&semi; as it rolled across the anti-Trump media &&num;8212&semi; is that the President is so inept and reckless that seasoned bureaucrats cannot tell him what is going on&period;   That was the message seeded by the <em>Times<&sol;em> and dutifully carried on both MSNBC and CNN by the networks politicized anchors&comma; hosts and panelists&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>As he is want to do&comma; Trump responded in an attack on the <em>Times<&sol;em> – accusing them of treason&period;  It is yet another unfortunate example of the President using Twitter to expose one of his less attractive qualities – his knee-jerk combative and pugnacious style&period;  In doing that&comma; he takes the oxygen out of the room for a more specific and persuasive response – and provides more grist for the anti-Trump media mill&period;  In that regard&comma; Trump is his own worst enemy&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Trump went a bit too far when he accused the <em>Times <&sol;em>of treason&period;  Those – and other provocative words– are being used &lpar;misused&rpar; entirely too often these days&period;  Trump has been accused of treason&comma; an asset or agent of Russia&comma; a criminal without any basis in fact&period;  It is just all mindless name calling and should stop&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Despite Trump’s New York street response&comma; there are a number of things very disturbing about the <em>Times<&sol;em> reports – and they could be&comma; and should be&comma; articulated in a more effective manner&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>To the unbiased minds&comma; the major concern with the story is that the <em>Times<&sol;em> – apparently with the aid of unidentified past and present employees of &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;the intelligence community” –has given a lot of publicity to a classified activity that should have been carried out away from the public forum – and especially away from the ears and eyes of the Russian government&period;  There does not appear to be any reason why the Russian government should be informed&period;  This has all the markings of what should have been a covert operation&period;  But then&comma; keeping the national security as the key consideration would prevent a political attack on Trump&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>In all the reports&comma; it remained unclear if the story in the <em>Times<&sol;em> was built on illegal leaks from within the intelligence community&period;  Or was this something that was formally announced&quest;  Since it was an exclusive with the <em>Times<&sol;em>&comma; you can probably discount an official announcement&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Trump may have responded badly&comma; but that does not mean that the <em>Times<&sol;em> can be absolved of doing harm to the country&period;  Would this story have received the &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;breaking news” treatment if not for the media’s ability to spin an anti-Trump narrative&quest;  That is a more than fair question&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>The other disturbing element is the fact – if the story is correct – that Executive Branch bureaucrats would take such action and conceal such major activities from the boss – the head of the Executive Branch&period;  As described by the <em>Times&comma;<&sol;em> the informants all work for the President&period;  Distress that Trump actually IS the President has led Democrats and major portions of the press to promote a belief that senior officials within the Executive Branch are somehow independent – or quasi-independent &&num;8212&semi; of the President&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Like Trump or not&comma; for employees of the Executive Branch to intentionally operate outside the constitutional authority of the President is minimally inappropriate and arguably illegal&period;  To beef up the cyber attack on Russia is not some midlevel management decision&period;  It clearly must be authorized by the President&period;  It is something the bureaucrats can recommend&comma; but not implement themselves&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>One of the concerns expressed in the <em>Times<&sol;em> article is that the President would countermand the actions&period;  He could – and would have every right and authority to do so&period;  Those who think otherwise need to study the Executive Branch organization chart and the Constitution&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Finally&comma; we are told by the <em>Times<&sol;em> that those involved were concerned that Trump would intentionally or inadvertently reveal the program to officials of other governments – including Russia&period;  That can hardly be a concern since the bureaucrats and the <em>Times<&sol;em> have already done that&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>To conspire against the President’s authority in this way is figuratively a mutiny aboard the ship of state&period;  It is not&comma; by definition&comma; treason&comma; as the President declared&comma; but it is a betrayal of the Constitution and those bureaucrats’ sworn duty to &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;obey and defend” it&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Trump’s specifically calling the <em>Times<&sol;em> the &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;enemy of the people” is again too hyperbolic&comma; but it is not easy to absolve the <em>Times <&sol;em>of wanting to hit at Trump regardless of any damage to the country – and to do it with unnamed sources is more than shameful&period;  It is a gross violation of what used to be called journalism&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>So&comma; there &OpenCurlyQuote;tis&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;

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