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Benghazi Linked to WH
The watchdog group Judicial Watch
obtained the documents through the Freedom of Information Act. The
emails contained within the documents show that top White House official
Ben Rhodes, who was an assistant to the president and deputy national
security adviser for strategic communications, worked to craft the
infamous Susan Rice talking points. In fact, it was Rhodes who pushed
the YouTube narrative. In an email it states that the "goal" is "to
underscore that these protests are rooted in an Internet video, and not a
broader failure of policy." The other goal stated in the email to
Jay Carney and the president's inner circle states, "To reinforce the
President and Administration's strength and steadiness in dealing with
difficult challenges."
These emails were not released last year when the administration was forced, by the Republicans, to turn over information related to the crafting of
the talking points in order to move forward with the confirmation of CIA director John Brennan. You'll also recall
that the former director of the CIA, Michael Morell, recently testified
that the intelligence community was not responsible for the YouTube
video narrative.
The lingering question almost from the beginning has been: who pushed
the narrative that the attack in Benghazi was the result of protests
over a YouTube video? Now we know the answer, and it was the White
House. The reason for this has been obvious...(continued)
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Outrageous: Bennie Thompson
We have yet another Democratic politician who sees virtually everything
through a racial lens. Opposition to Obama is not because of his
liberal policies but because he is black.
Rep. Bennie Thompson is from Mississippi. Over the weekend he gave a
radio interview to a new Nation of Islam program. During the interview,
Thompson made disparaging remarks about Mitch McConnell, Justice
Clarence Thomas, the governor of Mississippi and those who disagree with
Obama and ObamaCare.
According to BuzzFeed,
Thompson says that he's never seen a president treated with this much
disrespect until Obama came into office. He says, "That Mitch McConnell
would have the audacity to tell the president of the United States - not
the chief executive, but the commander-in-chief - that 'I don't care
what you come up with we're going to be against it.' Now if that's not a
racist statement I don't know what is."...(continued)
>>TV Tonight (10PM ET on Fox News)
Tonight Sharyl Attkisson weighs in on the newly released Benghazi
e-mails. Plus should the NBA have acted sooner in the Donald Sterling
scandal? And another exclusive look at the how the VA is betraying our
veterans.
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