So what have we learned so far from the so called “Russian hacking” that “rigged the election for Trump.” So far we’ve gotten fake news stories like the Washington Post propaganda piece that claimed Vermont’s power grid was hacked by the Russians with their malware or something. (They didn’t). We’ve also been told by the corrupt media that the Russians hacked voting machines and changed voting totals in states that use machines instead of paper ballot. That didn’t happen either.
Still waiting for US government to provide evidence of “Russian hacking” |
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Then of course, you have Obama kicking out 35 Russian diplomats who were kicked out of New York and Washington D.C. for being “spies” or something. Two of those so called diplomats were on the FBI’s most wanted list for cyber-crimes. Basically, Obama had two suspects on the most wanted list leave the country, instead of face justice here. This is how crazy the left and #NeverTrump “Republicans” gotten.
Despite all of these crazy claims, there still hasn’t been any evidence provided by the U.S. government about the so called “Russian” hacking. Seth Rich, who provided Wikileaks with the DNC e-mails isn’t a Russian to my knowledge.
Bloomberg reported Thursday, “Prodded to produce evidence by Russia, which has denied a role in hacking — and by an openly skeptical President-elect Donald Trump — the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security did so Thursday.” Other outlets such as PC Magazine and the International Business Times also interpreted the Joint Analysis Report (JAR) issued by the DHS and FBI as evidence tying Russia to a hacking operation.
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The report, however, is devoid of evidence linking Russia to hackings of Democratic Party institutions and individuals. The report broadly describes how “two separate Russian espionage groups” were involved in the “the intrusion into a U.S. political party.” But there’s no specific details explaining the attribution of Russia as being behind the hacking. Eight pages of the 13-page report consist of information meant to help network administrators try and identify possible intrusions, prevent them, and what to do if they spot code the U.S. government has said belongs to Russian intelligence.