Washington Posts conspiracy theory quiz declares existence of deep state fake news contradicting its own reporting
If you believe in a âDeep Stateâ embedded in the US government, then youâre falling down the conspiracy ârabbit hole,â the Washington Post claims. Yet the Post believes this theory too. It just doesnât call it a âDeep Stateâ.
Nine in 10 Americans believe at least one conspiracy theory, researchers found earlier this summer. Yet conspiracy theories run the gamut from âBigfoot existsâ to âthe Holocaust never happenedâ, and the Washington Post published a quiz this week to remind its readers which ones to believe and which to discard. The answers tell a story in themselves.
In a series of multiple-choice questions, the statement âThere is a âdeep stateâ embedded in the government that operates in secret and without oversightâ is marked as false.
Also on rt.com Welcome to Yankeegrad! Trump was Putinâs cosy comrade & Americaâs turning into Russia, shock new White House insider tale allegesâFor much of the past four years, Republicans have speculated that a âdeep stateâ was working to undermine President Donald Trump,â the Post explained, adding: âWhile the FBI and CIA do conduct covert operations, thereâs little evidence for a separate Deep State.â
Yet this is untrue, according to the Washington Postâs own reporting. The Post revealed in 2013 that the Office of the Director of National Intelligence maintains a âblack budgetâ of $52.6 billion mapping âa bureaucratic and operational landscape that has never been subject to public scrutiny,â which spends these funds on spy operations and occasionally lethal action abroad. The public didnât know that the NSA spied on Americansâ communications for a long time, until the Post published Edward Snowdenâs leaks that same year, and the Post was instrumental in drawing attention to the CIAâs post-9/11 torture program.
The Washington Post conspiracy theory test is hilarious throughout, but this question about the "deep state" especially had me rolling, as it contradicts the Post's own reporting about secret budgets and the near-total lack of oversight of agencies like the NSA and CIA: pic.twitter.com/wumaSGNPOk
â" Matt Taibbi (@mtaibbi) October 8, 2021Even before Snowdenâs revelations, the Post in 2010 described the US national security and intelligence apparatus as âa hidden world, growing beyond control.â This leviathan, the paper described, is âhidden from public view and lacking in thorough oversight,â while âno one knows how much money it costs, how many people it employs, how many programs exist within it, or exactly how many agencies do the same work.â
Journalist Glenn Greenwald, who first reported Snowdenâs leaks, described the Postâs about-turn on the existence of the Deep State as an example of âhow the Trump era corrupted almost every mainstream institution in the US, especially media corporations.â
This is how the Trump era corrupted almost every mainstream institution in the US, especially media corporations. They were willing to do or say anything, no matter how divorced from the truth, to oppose him. Look at this rotted devolution: pic.twitter.com/oonXdCMBKX
â" Glenn Greenwald (@ggreenwald) October 8, 2021The CIAâs experiments with mind-control and psychological torture, which were carried out on Americans during multiple presidential administrations, are not the stuff of conspiracy theory. These experiments took place between 1953 and 1973, with some information on the program, known as MKUltra, only declassified in 2001. Another question in the Washington Postâs quiz even highlights this CIA program as an example of a conspiracy that actually took place.
The term âDeep Stateâ has been used in recent years to describe the bureaucrats and intelligence agency operatives who worked to frustrate and stymie former President Donald Trumpâs agenda. When invoked by Republicans and Trump supporters, the term is ridiculed as a conspiracy theory, but those involved openly admit to working against the former president from behind the scenes.
General Mark Milley, commander of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, went behind Trumpâs back to assure his Chinese counterpart that he and the national security establishment wouldnât let Trump do anything ârogueâ after his election loss last year. Milley admitted to consorting with Beijing, and with Democrat politicians, in a recent book by Washington Post reporters Robert Costa and Bob Woodward.
Time Magazine lionized the âwell-funded cabal of powerful peopleâ who worked to ensure that Trump lost his re-election bid. In the words of the magazine, âthey were not rigging the election; they were fortifying it.â
Also on rt.com Book describes General Milley as hero who saved US from Trump, but actually shows him colluding with CIA, NSA, Pelosi & ChinaNew Yorker author David Rohde, who has written a book on the Deep State and the conspiracies surrounding it, told Vox last year that the Deep State exists, and can be described as âa permanent government or an institutional governmentâ made up of âincredibly large and powerful organizations like the FBI and the CIA and the NSA.â Whether by the FBIâs âRussiagateâ investigation â" which was predicated on several lies â" or unnamed âintelligence sourcesâ planting false stories in the media to hamper Trumpâs planned withdrawal from Afghanistan, this âpermanent governmentâ did work against Trump before and during his four years in office.
Curiously, the Washington Postâs quiz now describes the claim that âDonald Trump colluded with Russians to steal the presidency in 2016â as false, after four years of articles pushing the notion that there was, in fact, âcollusionâ between the Trump campaign and Russia.
The difference between conspiracy theory and conspiracy fact, it seems, largely depends on whoâs in office.
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