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IPFS News Link • Conspiracies

Russiagate: The Smoking Gun, Part I

• http://www.ronpaulinstitute.org by peter van buren

In summer 2016 Hillary Clinton's private email server and her improper handling of classified information was the political story. Consensus was the election was Hillary's to lose, that her opponents in general and especially the Trump clown show, could not stop her. Despite the MSM's heroic attempts to downplay the importance of the emails, the issue lingered in the public mind, often aided by Hillary's own contradictory statements. The emails nagged at the Clinton campaign — her unsecured server lay exposed during her SecState trips to Russia and China, and the deepest fear was that her internal communications might appear one day on Wikileaks, ending her career.

Clinton fought back. The initial shot was fired on July 24, 2016 by campaign manager Robby Mook, who was the first to claim there was a quid pro quo between Trump and Russia. "It was very concerning last week that Donald Trump changed the Republican platform to become what some experts would regard as pro-Russian," Mook said, referring to a false story from the GOP convention just a few days earlier. The New York Times sent up a warning flare to all MSM media the next day announcing Clinton was making the Trump-Russia allegation a "theme" of the campaign. As if she knew just what was coming next, Hillary took that as her cue to claim the Russians were trying to destroy her campaign, a theme which soon morphed into the Russians were trying to help Trump. That soon became Trump and Putin were working in collusion to elect Trump as a Manchurian candidate.

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