Top eleven "Russian-hack" questions the Electors should ask the CIA
By Jon Rappoport
Assuming these "rogue-Electors" from the Electoral College
get a briefing on the "Russian election-hack" from the CIA, and assuming
the Electors have a few working brain cells, and assuming they care,
here are the top 11 questions they should ask the CIA presenter:
Questions One through Three (repeated with enthusiasm and
fervor): Are you just going to feed us generalities and tell us you
can't detail specifics because that would compromise your methods and
personnel? We can read the generalities in the Washington Post, whose
owner, Jeff Bezos, chief honcho at Amazon, has a $600 million contract
with the CIA to provide cloud computing services, so he and the Post and
the CIA are in bed together.
Question Four: We need a precise distinction here. How did
"Russia hacked the DNC, Hillary, Podesta, and Weiner emails and fed the
emails to WikiLeaks who released them" suddenly morph into
"Russia hacked the election vote"?
Question Five: The security systems that protected the DNC,
Hillary, Podesta, and Weiner emails were so feeble a child could have
gotten past them in a few minutes. Why should we assume high-level
Russian agents were involved?
Question Six: Not only does the CIA have a history of lying
to the American people, lying is part of your job description. Why
should we believe you? Take your time. We can have food brought in.
Question Seven: We're getting the feeling you're talking down
to us as if we're the peasants and you're the feudal barons. Why is
that? Do you work for us, or do we work for you? Once upon a time,
before you went to work for the Agency, were you like us, or were you
always arrogant and dismissive?
Question Eight: Let's put aside for a moment the question of
who leaked all those emails. What about the substance and content of the
emails? Was all that forged or was it real? If you claim there was
forgery, prove it. Put a dozen emails up on that big screen and take us
through them, piece by piece, and show us where and how the forgery
occurred. By the way, why didn't you allow us to bring several former
NSA analysts into this briefing? Are we living in the US or the USSR?
Question Nine: Are you personally a computer expert, sir? Or
are you merely relaying what someone else at the CIA told you? Would you
spell your name for us again? What is your job description at the
Agency? Do you work in public information? Are you tasked with "being
convincing"?
Question Ten: Do you think we're completely stupid?
Question Eleven: Let's all let our hair down, okay? Forget
facts and specifics. Of course we want to overthrow the election and
install Hillary Clinton in the Oval Office. So do you. We're on the same
team. But we need you to give us something, anything. So far, this
briefing is embarrassing. Once we get out of here, we want to tell a few
persuasive lies. Give us a Russian name, any name. Or a location in
Russia we can use. The brand name of a Russian vodka. Caviar. Something
that sounds Russian. Make up a code with letters and numbers. Help us
out. How about the name of an American who who's actually a Russian spy?
You could shoot him later today in a "gun battle at a shopping mall."
That would work.
Good luck.
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