Opportunity Missed: The Media Continues Failing As “Original Sin” Biden Book Becomes Dominant Topic

Mark Halperin:
The reason I spend so much time talking about this is because I care about the media. I want two strong political parties in America. Most people trying to hold the media accountable for what I call the biggest media scandal in American history—the coverage of Joe Biden’s cognitive decline—are on the right.

Jason Miller, who works for President Trump, tweets about this often, highlighting the lack of credibility on this issue. Byron York of the conservative Washington Examiner wrote this morning, “Understanding the press’s handling of then-President Joe Biden’s obvious physical and mental infirmity is probably more a matter for psychologists than media analysts.” There’s some truth there because understanding why the media continues to fail does involve human nature and psychology.

Erick Erickson, another conservative, wrote in his newsletter: “Now that Joe Biden has lost, the truth can be told, except for the press’s own complicity in the cover-up.” I couldn’t agree more. People in the media writing about this book now ignore the media’s own role, which is a vital part of what happened. Erickson also writes: “Had Biden somehow gotten reelected, the press would still deny his decline.” That’s an incredible statement—but true.

If Fox News had treated a Republican president’s decline like MSNBC, CNN, the New York Times, or the Washington Post treated Biden’s, Brian Stelter at CNN, Oliver Darcy, and other media critics would demand accountability. But the press gives MSNBC a pass because progressives protect progressives. That’s the view on the right, and it’s correct. The media still covers up their failures to expose what tens of millions of Americans saw clearly: Biden’s decline. Why? They wanted to protect Biden and prevent Trump from winning, they’re biased toward Democrats generally, and they were intimidated by Biden’s team not to report on it.

The press failed before, and it’s failing again. This week is a missed opportunity. Read the New York Times, Washington Post, or watch liberal cable news. They’re not holding themselves accountable for their failure.

What’s happening now isn’t just Jake Tapper’s failure. We’ll talk about him because he co-wrote the book, but he’s representative of my colleagues’ mindset, which is to blame Biden and other Democrats for not speaking out. A few Democrats, like Congressman Ro Khanna, have been honest enough to say, “I didn’t see Biden’s decline privately, but it was obvious publicly, and Democrats should have insisted he step down.” But that’s rare.

So, we have the media blaming Biden and other Democrats. Democratic officials blame Biden for running. Biden’s team blames the press and Democrats. It’s a circle of blame. I understand it’s human nature to blame others rather than admitting years of systemic failure. But blaming others prevents reflection. I’m asking Democrats, and especially my colleagues in the media, to reflect.

Let’s talk about Jake Tapper. Until recently, Tapper and his publisher claimed Jake was one of the hard-charging reporters trying to uncover Biden’s cognitive decline. We discussed previously how easily that could be disproven. He didn’t bring up the topic, clearly not aggressively. Ironically, his co-author Alex Thompson is one of the few reporters who actually did.

Tapper’s new strategy this week has two parts, neither about true accountability. First, he’s shifting from saying, “I was on the front lines,” to “Maybe I could have done better.” Here’s Jake Tapper on CNN Wednesday morning:

Jake Tapper (clip):
I think some of the criticism is fair, to be honest—of me. Certainly not speaking for anyone else. Knowing now what I know, looking back at my Biden coverage, I did cover some of these issues, but not enough. I look back with humility.

Mark Halperin:
The second part of Tapper’s strategy is to cling to those who actually did good work—like his co-author Alex Thompson. Also, he’s aligning himself with Wall Street Journal reporters who wrote one of the few articles about Biden’s cognitive decline during the campaign. I’m glad they wrote the story, but frankly, it was weak—mostly quoting Republicans, not Democrats, and with relatively mild examples compared to what we all saw publicly.

Here’s Tapper this week embracing those Wall Street Journal reporters, calling them heroes:

Jake Tapper (clip):
Joining me now are two heroic reporters who intensely covered this during the Biden years—Annie Linskey and Siobhan Hughes from the Wall Street Journal. They reported last June, quote: “Behind closed doors, Biden shows signs of slipping… The White House said Biden’s critics were playing partisan politics.” This isn’t the first time you’ve been here. Your journalism was vital, and the Democrats’ smear campaign against you two was disgraceful.

Mark Halperin:
Tapper’s right that Democrats attacked those reporters unfairly, denying what was clearly visible to everyone. Biden’s decline wasn’t a secret—you didn’t need private meetings to notice it. It was obvious, despite Biden’s limited schedule and avoidance of press conferences.

But here’s what’s incredible: when the Wall Street Journal published that story in June 2024, before the critical debate, Tapper didn’t celebrate their heroism. Instead, he brought Senator Chris Coons, a Biden ally, on CNN and allowed Coons to dismiss the story almost unchallenged.

Here’s Jake Tapper last June with Chris Coons:

Jake Tapper (clip):
The Journal interviewed 45 people who attended or were briefed on Biden meetings, noting criticism mostly from Republicans, but some Democrats anonymously expressed concern. Have you heard from anyone concerned Biden might be a little slower?

Sen. Chris Coons (clip):
No, none. Is President Biden up to the job? Absolutely. Have colleagues expressed concerns about the character difference between him and Trump? Absolutely. Concerns about Trump versus Biden? Absolutely. I don’t hear much coverage of Trump’s similar slips or mishaps. There’s relentless focus by some media on minor slips by Biden, typical for someone with a demanding 14-hour-a-day schedule.

Mark Halperin:
Again, you must allow guests to speak, but if Tapper truly believed those Journal reporters were heroic, he should’ve pushed back harder, challenged the Biden spin, and defended the reporters. But he didn’t. He didn’t invite Republicans or independent voters to support the Journal’s reporting. Instead, he let Biden’s strongest defender dismiss the story entirely.

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Mark Halperin Breaks Down How the Corporate Media is Doubling Down on Double Standards

Mark Halperin:

This week, a few things happened that made me angry, annoyed, and frustrated. After 2016, when the press inadvertently helped Donald Trump win by covering him so unfairly, I urged people to think through the mistakes. The same happened in 2020, and again in 2024 when Trump won, ironically, aided by a liberal press determined to stop him.

Trump should be covered tough, aggressively—but fairly. Today, two prominent instances highlight the media’s clear anti-Trump, anti-MAGA bias. But what really prompted me was a conversation with someone outside the media—what journalists call a civilian. I was at a kid’s birthday party this weekend, talking with another dad who’s not involved in journalism or politics. He asked me what civilians often do: “Why is the media so biased? Do media people realize they’re biased?”

That’s hard to answer. When I talk to my colleagues, they make excuses, saying, “Well, we’re biased towards controversy,” and so forth. It’s true Trump sometimes isn’t scrutinized enough on certain issues. But if you don’t like Trump and think the press goes easy on him, you should want the dominant media’s credibility restored. That requires acknowledging past mistakes, thinking how to improve, and then actually changing. This week, I saw no soul-searching or acknowledgment.

A striking example happened over the weekend when Senator Cory Booker spoke to California Democrats. To acknowledge the crowd, Booker clutched his heart emotionally and then raised his right arm. Normally, I’d consider this gesture innocent enthusiasm. But last year, Elon Musk made exactly the same gesture—hand on heart, raised arm—and faced days of media outrage accusing him of a Nazi salute. Here’s the Vox headline at the time: “Elon Musk Doesn’t Deserve the Benefit of the Doubt—Nazi Trolling Exposes Collapse of America’s Guardrails.”

It was absurd then—ridiculous to suggest Musk sent secret Nazi signals—but because Musk supported Trump, he faced intense accusations. Yet this week, when Cory Booker did exactly the same thing, conservatives pointed out the hypocrisy on social media, but mainstream outlets ignored it completely.

Forbes asked Booker’s spokesperson why Booker’s identical gesture caused no controversy. She responded: “Booker was obviously just waving. Anyone comparing it to Musk is operating in bad faith. The differences are obvious to anyone without an agenda.”

That’s 17 Pinocchios. Watch the gestures side-by-side: Booker and Musk both clutch their hearts and raise their arms identically. Neither intended a Nazi salute. But one (Musk), associated with Trump, faced massive controversy; the other (Booker), a Democrat, nothing. It’s a perfect example of unfair media bias.

Another egregious media failure this week involves the man in Colorado accused of firebombing demonstrators rallying for the Israeli hostages in Gaza. Clearly, the anti-Semitic nature of the attack was heavily covered, as it should have been. But most media ignored a critical fact: the accused attacker was in the United States illegally.

You can debate whether Biden or Trump bears responsibility for his illegal status. Regardless, this is another case where media largely ignored the immigration angle. Listen to how it was covered:

News clips:

“Suspect faces attempted murder and hate crime charges for firebombing demonstrators.”

“Hate crime charges for using a makeshift flamethrower—an attack planned for over a year.”

“Our hearts go out to the victims of the targeted terror attack in Boulder. At least eight were injured.”

Mark Halperin:
All true—but nowhere highlighting that, for many Americans, the critical outrage is that the attacker was here illegally. Trump spotlighted crimes by illegal immigrants in 2015 and 2016, but the media ignored the victims’ families. They weren’t featured on “The View” or profiled sympathetically in the press. Yet, for tens of millions of Americans, crimes by illegal immigrants are the most devastating example of an open border.

Some claim illegal immigrants commit crimes at lower rates. Maybe, maybe not—but that’s irrelevant. Even one victim is too many. It’s not unfair or stigmatizing to highlight illegal status; what’s unfair is media coverage refusing to acknowledge this issue matters deeply to millions of Americans.

Yes, some coverage mentioned his illegal status, but not nearly enough. It should have been front and center alongside the anti-Semitic nature of the attack.

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CBS News Anchors Refuse to Acknowledge Past and Present Bias and Continue Asking the Wrong Question

Mark Halperin:
Another thing I talked about with the civilian was CBS News and 60 Minutes, which are front and center in the press’s failure to acknowledge past errors. It’s ironic now to hear people from CBS portray themselves as defenders of the First Amendment and journalism integrity. Recently, the president of CBS News and the head of 60 Minutes resigned in protest over CBS’s parent company possibly settling with Donald Trump, paying him to acknowledge wrongdoing over something that ironically wasn’t even wrong. CBS needs to settle to avoid interference from the Trump administration as they try to sell the company.

What Trump’s upset about, in this particular instance, wasn’t liberal bias—it was that CBS edited Kamala Harris’s answers in a 60 Minutes segment to make her sound clearer. That’s just standard TV editing, not bias. Still, CBS executives are right to protest the settlement but fail to acknowledge their own history of bias.

For instance, something most people probably forgot: in 2020, Trump did a 60 Minutes interview with Lesley Stahl, where Trump brought up Hunter Biden’s laptop. CBS didn’t highlight this exchange, but it was incredibly revealing. Stahl was indignant when Trump tried to discuss the laptop because at the time, as you recall, the media was collaborating with Democrats to label it as Russian disinformation. Listen to Trump’s exchange with Lesley Stahl:

Donald Trump (clip):
I think it’s one of the biggest scandals I’ve ever seen, and you don’t cover it.

Lesley Stahl (clip):
Well, because it can’t be verified.

Trump:
Of course it can be verified.

Stahl:
It can’t be verified.

Trump:
What can’t be verified?

Stahl:
The laptop.

Trump:
Why do you say that?

Stahl:
Because even the family hasn’t—

Trump:
The family on the laptop—he’s gone into hiding for five days. He’s gone into hiding.

Stahl:
He’s preparing for your debate.

Trump:
Oh, it’s taken him five days to prepare? I doubt it. I doubt it.

Mark Halperin:
Trump can’t prove it, but many conservatives believe that if the laptop had been covered—not for Hunter’s embarrassing photos but for what it showed about Biden Inc.—without censorship from social media, mainstream media, and Democrats, Trump might have won. I don’t know if that’s provable, but many believe it.

Yet, here was Lesley Stahl, a senior correspondent for 60 Minutes, not investigating the laptop, but instead arguing like a DNC spokesperson, claiming, “You can’t verify it.” CBS has never, to my knowledge, acknowledged this professional failure, nor explained how this could happen. Unless the press acknowledges past failures, people won’t believe them when they hold Trump accountable now.

Here’s another 60 Minutes moment—Scott Pelley’s recent graduation speech, implicitly criticizing Trump. Listen closely: every single issue Pelley worries about under Trump, conservatives say occurred under Biden. Here’s Scott Pelley:

Scott Pelley (clip):
But in this moment, this morning, our sacred rule of law is under attack. Journalism is under attack. Universities are under attack. Freedom of speech is under attack. An insidious fear is reaching through our schools, businesses, homes, into our private thoughts—the fear to speak. The Wake Forest class of 1861 didn’t choose their time; the class of 1941 didn’t choose; the class of 1968 didn’t choose. History chose them. Now, history calls you, the class of 2025.

Mark Halperin:
To be clear, Scott Pelley’s concerns about Trump are legitimate and worth debating. But ignoring that all these concerns—free speech, the rule of law—also occurred under the Biden administration tells millions of Americans the press won’t hold Democrats accountable to the same standards. CBS correspondents would never give a commencement speech like that during a Democratic administration. They should reconsider how they covered the Hunter Biden laptop and Biden’s mental decline.

Yet, even now, with Jake Tapper’s and Alex Thompson’s book out, the media keeps asking Democrats the wrong question: “Did you privately see Biden’s cognitive decline?” Stop asking Democrats that question. They’re never going to confess. The right question is: “Since you saw Biden’s decline publicly, why didn’t you do anything about it?” And ask yourselves in the media: “What role did we play in covering it up?”

Here’s Bill Clinton interviewed by CBS News about Biden, again asked the wrong question:

CBS Interviewer (clip):
Did you ever have a moment where you thought maybe Biden was unfit to run?

Bill Clinton (clip):
No, I thought he was a good president. The only concern was could anybody do that job until they were 86. We’d had several talks; I never walked away thinking, “He can’t do this anymore.” He was always on top of his brief.

Mark Halperin:
Maybe privately Biden was sharp around Clinton, but Bill Clinton watches C-SPAN. He saw what everyone else saw. Again, stop asking Democrats if they saw decline privately—ask why they ignored what we all saw publicly.

If the media wants credibility back, stop trying to run out the clock, avoiding admitting your massive failure. They’re calling this the “biggest scandal in American media history,” yet the media blames only a few Biden aides and other Democrats, ignoring their own role.

This is why the civilian I spoke with is turning to programs like this one—something I appreciate. How can you trust a news organization to cover Trump tough but fairly when they covered the previous administration with their heads in the sand, simply to avoid helping Trump win, and were intimidated by Biden’s team? Unless they come clean about what went wrong, and explain how they’ll do better, it’s appalling.

People must demand explanations from news organizations if they want our attention, subscriptions, and business. Lesley Stahl never owned up to the laptop fiasco. Scott Pelley never addressed the abuses under Biden’s administration. And until they do, trust won’t return.

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Just People Having Fun Watching Cars Burn: Stunning Media Reports Blame Law Enforcement for CA Riots

Mark Halperin:
I’ve looked at a lot of news coverage since this started, and I want to show you two news reports that echo what we saw after George Floyd around the country, including cities like Portland, Oregon, where the media minimized violence, property destruction, and threats to law enforcement.

Here’s the first one:

Reporter (clip A1):
Demonstrations have been going on right outside the federal detention center. Most were very peaceful—chanting, shouting, honking horns, expressing anger about the detention of immigrants. Most of the evening, federal agents stayed inside the building. But at one point, demonstrators got very close, went onto the property, tagged the building, banged on fences. Shortly afterward, agents started firing tear gas, and then they came out.

Mark Halperin:
Again, the tone suggests it’s law enforcement’s fault for responding.

Here’s another report:

Reporter (clip A2):
With a large group of people, it could turn volatile if law enforcement moves in the wrong way and turns a bunch of people just having fun watching cars burn into a massive confrontation between officers and demonstrators.

Mark Halperin:
“A bunch of people having fun watching cars burn.” Putting the blame on federal officials, including ICE and the National Guard, for defending themselves.

Democrats, who should know better, hear this kind of left-wing media coverage and get a distorted impression. But the facts aren’t unclear. Is this operation something that should be scrutinized? Absolutely. There are people here illegally who contribute to their communities—they have jobs, care for children, clean houses. Immigration is a tough issue, a human issue, for America to grapple with.

But what isn’t complicated: If ICE says they’re deporting specific people, some of whom are violent criminals, and then violence is directed against ICE, the issue there is clear. That’s a breakdown of civic order. When the president says local officials can’t or won’t maintain order, and the National Guard or military is brought in, Democrats should say, “Thank you for helping our community.” They can still oppose the immigration policy. But how can a political party claim the violence is incited by federal officials?

The Democratic response is equally confusing. Vice President Kamala Harris, who lives in Southern California and has rarely weighed in since leaving office, called the people being deported “our immigrant neighbors.” Technically true—they’re immigrants, illegal immigrants, living nearby—but that phrase reflects the Democrats’ desire to blame Donald Trump. They want to suggest this violence is Trump’s fault. It’s not.

Trump openly promised this action as a candidate, clearly, in speeches like one he gave in Iowa. There was no ambiguity. Now he’s enforcing that promise, going into blue areas—possibly being provocative or changing the subject. He even sent ICE agents into Martha’s Vineyard and Nantucket. Locals there were shocked, saying things like, “That woman cares for my kids,” or “That guy sells me papaya in the park.” It’s tragic to see these lives upended, but these are people who chose to enter illegally.

My heart breaks for them on a human level, but tens of millions of Americans voted for Trump precisely to restore order, to bring sanity back to our immigration system—for security, criminal justice, and because our healthcare and education systems simply can’t afford unchecked illegal immigration.

I don’t understand why Democrats think attacking law enforcement, either verbally or politically, is the right approach. Oppose Trump’s immigration policies politically if you disagree. But as ICE officials are being attacked, how can anyone justify criticizing law enforcement for enforcing the law?

California Democratic officials keep repeating that Trump is evil, doesn’t care about immigrants, wants to destroy communities, uses aggressive law enforcement, rubber bullets against reporters, tear gas against babies. This rhetoric results directly in attacks on law enforcement. Enforcing the law is not breaking the law. You can disagree with the policy, but this is one of the clearest examples of Trump Derangement Syndrome I’ve ever seen.

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Remembering How the Left Blamed TRUMP After Surviving His Own Assassination Attempt

Mark Halperin:
I continue to be struck by how Americans view the attempted assassination of President Trump about a year ago. It feels longer because so much has happened, but it remains an incredible prism through which to understand how red and blue America view Donald Trump and his role in our lives.

What an extraordinary event—not just a former president, but the front-runner for the presidency, nearly killed on the eve of his convention. Donald Trump has dominated American life politically, culturally, symbolically, and emotionally like no one else in our lifetime. On that day, others were grievously wounded; Cory Comper lost his life, and Donald Trump himself almost died.

Nearly a year later, it’s clear that those on the left—who dislike Trump, disagree with him, and wish he weren’t president—didn’t treat this assassination attempt the way they would have if it had been Barack Obama, Joe Biden, Kamala Harris, or Bill Clinton. They tried to dismiss it. Understanding their reaction helps us grasp the ongoing divide in America between those glad Trump was president and those deeply unhappy about it.

The shooting happened at a busy political time, shortly before Trump’s convention, his selection of running mate J.D. Vance, and Joe Biden dropping out of the race just eight days later. But even today, the shooter’s motive—Thomas Krooks, whose name you might barely recognize due to minimal scrutiny—remains unknown. Imagine: someone attempts to assassinate a former president and leading candidate, yet between the government and media, the motive is still an absolute mystery.

However, two critical aspects are clear. First, many Americans, particularly MAGA supporters, rallied dramatically around Trump after the attack. Notably, Elon Musk went from leaning Democrat to full-on supporting Trump due to Trump’s display of grit and heroism that day in Butler. Trump himself believes divine intervention saved him. Many supporters share this belief, citing how unusual it was that Trump happened to turn and pick up his famous immigration chart at precisely that moment, possibly saving his life. Millions viewed this as a rallying, divine moment.

Second, something far less uplifting is also clear: how this event exposed hostility towards Trump from certain individuals and institutions that oppose him and his movement. The corporate media’s response at the time—and ever since—highlights their deep-seated hostility and loss of credibility among Americans, even some who don’t support Trump. Major liberal institutions—corporate media, universities, nonprofits—lost credibility by failing to treat the assassination attempt with the seriousness they would have for a Democrat.

As with Biden’s mental acuity and the Russiagate investigation, there’s been no retraction, no accountability, and no self-reflection. Instead, media figures almost immediately blamed Trump’s rhetoric for provoking the attack—without knowing the shooter’s motive, which we still don’t know.

For instance, here’s Martha Raddatz of ABC News shortly after the attack, placing blame on Trump himself:

Martha Raddatz (ABC News):
President Trump and his supporters have contributed to this violent rhetoric. We looked at some of the things former President Trump has said—he warned last March of potential death and destruction if he were charged. He said, “If I don’t get elected, it’s going to be a bloodbath for the country.” He later claimed he was joking, but those were indeed his words.

Mark Halperin:
Now, the “bloodbath” comment was about the auto industry, often taken out of context by the press. Regardless, Trump has said many divisive things, but to blame him in the immediate aftermath of his own near-murder is incredible.

Similarly, here’s Margaret Brennan from CBS News taking the same line:

Margaret Brennan (CBS News):
The language around this campaign has been us-versus-the-system. Trump claims all legal cases against him are politically motivated. By alleging a connection to this attempt on his life, that would escalate tensions further.

Mark Halperin:
Again, rather than waiting to learn the shooter’s motive—which remains unknown—they immediately blamed Trump himself. After events like this, people often jump to conclusions about motive. After the Oklahoma City bombing, many wrongly speculated foreign terrorists were involved; it turned out to be homegrown terrorism. In this case, with no clear motive, media immediately blamed Trump’s own words.

At Trump’s convention speech, media largely mocked his visible bandage and questioned whether he was actually shot. Here’s Michael Steele, former Republican National Committee chairman turned anti-Trump commentator, speculating openly on MSNBC:

Michael Steele (MSNBC):
It’s been several days since this horrific event occurred. Yet, we’ve not received a medical report detailing Trump’s injuries. If he was shot by a high-caliber bullet, there should be very little ear left. Was there cosmetic surgery involved? Were stitches needed? Was the damage from glass shards, as some reporters on the scene suggested, instead of the bullet? There are a lot of questions around that ear.

Mark Halperin:
Conspiracy theories exist on both left and right. But this skepticism came a week after doctors explained clearly what happened, after forensic evidence confirmed the shooting, after the weapon was recovered. Yet, the hostility persisted, underscoring again how profoundly this event demonstrates why so many Americans have lost faith in our institutions and media.

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Tapper’s New Biden Cover-Up Spin Blames Trump, NBC Autopen Flop, and Talking Politics with Brit Hume

Mark Halperin:
Next up, my reported monologue—hopefully entertaining to you, but also breaking through to anybody from the media who’s watching. It’s amazing to me how the conspiracy continues to deny what happened, pretending something else happened, and the long-running effort by Democrats colluding with the media attempting to cover up Joe Biden’s loss of mental acuity. There’s now a battle to define Biden’s legacy, hold Democrats accountable, and to ask people running for president in 2028 or considering it what they knew. That’s important, but as a professional journalist, my focus is to get people to admit what happened, figure out how it happened, and ensure it doesn’t happen again.

This Hugh Hewitt interview is unfortunately a perfect example of that ongoing cover-up of the media’s role. Then later, my privilege and delight to have Brit Hume here to discuss all manner of things.

Why am I returning to the media’s role in attempting to cover up Joe Biden’s mental acuity loss? Because there’s been a long-running cover-up where media and Democrats suppressed the truth. Now, they’re trying to suppress their role in it. The media hasn’t admitted their part, first creating a fiction that Biden was fine, and now pretending the Biden circle hid Biden’s decline from them.

Jake Tapper and Alex Thompson claim their book revealed the truth—that Democrats privately saw Biden’s decline as early as 2023 but didn’t speak up, and the media couldn’t know because it was secret. That’s fiction. Everyone saw it publicly for years; the media ignored it due to bias against Trump and pressure from the Biden White House.

Hugh Hewitt interviewed Tapper and Thompson about their book. Hugh’s usually great, but in this case, he allowed them to continue this false narrative uninterrupted. Hugh said hundreds of people saw Biden’s infirmity privately—no, millions saw it publicly. When Biden talked to a dead congresswoman in 2022, everyone saw it, yet the media said nothing meaningful.

Hugh Hewitt (to Jake Tapper):
At a September 20th, 2023 event, what happened? Michael Shear from the New York Times was there. Hundreds knew Biden had fallen into infirmity. Is that fair?

Jake Tapper:
It’s fair. In late 2023 and early 2024, hundreds saw moments causing concern. But your larger point—that hundreds saw what we saw debate night behind the scenes and didn’t speak out—is true.

Mark Halperin:
That makes me crazy. Millions saw it publicly. The media, including Tapper, saw it publicly but remained silent. Special counsel Robert Hur described Biden as elderly with poor memory, declining to indict him. Tapper and CNN criticized Hur at the time but now pretend no one could have known.

Hugh Hewitt:
Hundreds knew but didn’t defend Hur’s assessment.

Mark Halperin:
Again, millions saw it. Yet Hugh helped the myth that no one knew.

Alex Thompson:
Democrats had incentives not to speak out. Donors didn’t want Biden’s backlash. Democratic leaders feared they’d be driven out like Dean Phillips. Democrats believe Trump is an existential threat, rationalizing putting someone they know isn’t capable into office.

Mark Halperin:
That’s exactly true about the media, too. Yet the authors refuse to hold the media accountable.

Jake Tapper:
Our reporting suggests Biden’s infirmity was visible as early as 2015 after Beau’s death, initially mistaken for grief but later seen as cognitive decline that worsened significantly by 2023.

Mark Halperin:
This contradiction—claiming it started years ago but simultaneously saying nobody could know—is outrageous. Hugh admits conservatives saw Biden’s decline publicly early on, yet still says it’s astonishing nobody knew until the debate. It doesn’t add up.

Hugh Hewitt:
My father-in-law had Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s, so I recognized Biden’s decline early. I’m astonished we didn’t find out until the debate.

Mark Halperin:
Again, Hugh knew well before. He contradicts himself. Hugh also asks why conservatives like him, who pointed out Biden’s decline publicly, weren’t quoted in the book.

Alex Thompson:
Mainly, the book got too long. Also, we aimed to show behind-the-scenes events, not public observations.

Mark Halperin:
Excluding public evidence is exactly the problem—pretending Biden’s decline was a secret. Everyone saw it publicly. The book ignores liberal media bias. Tapper knows bias exists but argues Trump uniquely drove media bias.

Jake Tapper:
Trump adds extra motivation. There is a difference between factual reporting and observation-based commentary. We focused on proof, not commentary.

Mark Halperin:
Nonsense. They relied on Democrats who weren’t doctors, making observational judgments, same as conservatives did publicly. Hugh and the authors call it a conspiracy of silence among Democrats but omit the media’s identical complicity.

Jake Tapper:
There was an unbelievable conspiracy of silence among Democrats who saw Biden’s decline and said nothing.

Mark Halperin:
Exactly. But also among the press, whose silence aimed at preventing Trump’s victory. The media acted just like Democrats, ignoring obvious evidence to serve political purposes. Hugh aiding this fiction deeply frustrates me. The press betrayed public trust through a massive institutional failure. I urge you to reflect on this honestly—it’s outrageous they deny bias when their bias led to dangerous decisions affecting our democracy.

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Alan Dershowitz: An insider view of Epstein conspiracy theories

A friend says: “It looks like a hoax, and Republicans look like idiots. It looks like they played up bs.”

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FIDF Leaders Panic As Leaked Memo Exposes Deception, Waste

The two main characters in this scandal met at the Beverly Hills Orthodox synagogue Beth Jacob — Morey Levovitz and Rabbi Steven Weil.

My sources say these two haven’t changed. They were ruthless in LA, they were ruthless with Beth Jacob and Harkham Hillel Hebrew Academy, and they’ve ruthlessly advanced their own interests at FIDF.

Rabbi Weil was detested in LA by his fellow Modern Orthodox congregational rabbis.

Terms used in FIDF for Morey and Steven’s FIDF behavior — “cutthroat,” “poisonous,” “bullying” and “mafia-like” — echo the language used about them in LA.

After the Levovitz-Weil experience, Beth Jacob went in the opposite direction by choosing Rabbi Kalman Topp.

Judah Ari Gross writes for eJewishPhilanthropy:

The Friends of the Israel Defense Forces has gone into crisis management mode following the leak of an internal investigative report to the Israeli news outlet Ynet last week that detailed serious allegations against the organization’s top leadership, particularly its board chair, Morey Levovitz, of mismanagement, wasteful spending and creating a toxic work environment….

In response to the leak, the organization has hired a crisis communications outfit — on top of its existing public relations firm — and brought on additional legal assistance. It has also issued strict orders to employees and lay leaders not to speak publicly about the situation….

Multiple sources told eJP that after a significant rise in donations to the organization in the wake of the Oct. 7 terror attacks, contributions have decreased sharply in the past year, with multiple donors explicitly telling FIDF that they were withholding funds because of the situation with upper management.

“They are substantially below their target [for 2025],” one donor source told eJP. “We know of many donors who are holding donations and explaining that it’s until actions are taken to address the problems,” the source said, adding “many, many donors.”

In the Bay Area FIDF chapter, for instance, donations dropped from more than $7 million annually to well below $1 million this year after its popular executive director was fired following a disagreement between her and Levovitz, according to two sources connected to the chapter.

The report, which remains closely guarded by the organization, was prepared this spring by an investigative committee led by board members Garry Sobel, Fred Distenfeld and the organization’s counsel, Steve Rubin. The committee spoke to more than 30 people, the majority of whom were current and former employees.

The committee found that for roughly the past two years — particularly since the Oct. 7 terror attacks — Levovitz has served as the de facto CEO of FIDF, while Weil, the organization’s actual CEO, has served in a lesser administrative capacity, while still drawing one of the highest chief executive salaries in the Jewish world.

According to multiple sources, Levovitz has repeatedly declared to FIDF staff and lay leadership that he is the true head of the organization, including in meetings where Weil was present. Weil has also regularly stated that Levovitz was helping run the organization.

“It has just been accepted that that’s the way it is,” one source said. “He was never elected officially [to serve as CEO].”

The investigative committee detailed a number of irregularities in its report, which was presented to select board members last month, including a highly irregular exclusive agreement between FIDF and the Israeli travel company Ortra, which is run by a close acquaintance of Levovitz, requiring that all of the organization’s missions and other travel be purchased through the firm. This arrangement was allegedly reached unilaterally by Levovitz, without going through a standard tender process. A former senior FIDF employee, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told eJP that when individual FIDF chapters tried to use cheaper alternatives for their missions to Israel, Levovitz intervened and canceled their visits to military bases as a form of punishment for not using Ortra.

The report also found that Levovitz has demanded reimbursement for his travel expenses to Israel, which often include business and first-class seats, amounting to more than $53,000 — in contrast to previous chairs who paid for their own travel and accommodations, in addition to making six-figure donations to the organization, which Levovitz has also reportedly not made…

“I’m afraid they will destroy my donor base,” said one former employee, who has since become CEO of another Jewish nonprofit. “These are dangerous, dangerous people.”

Two former employees, from different FIDF regions, told eJP that they had seen cases of the organization “double-selling” projects to donors. “Steve double-sold an amphitheater to another donor,” said the former employee who now leads another nonprofit, whose family also donates to FIDF. “A Florida donor bought the same amphitheater for the same base as us. They told us that we can get a garden instead.”

All of the sources — coming from three different regions of the United States and Israel, most of whom had been involved with FIDF for many years, some for more than 20 — described a severe deterioration in the work environment at the organization in recent years, using terms like “cutthroat,” “poisonous,” “bullying” and “mafia-like.”

Multiple sources tied the current turmoil in the organization to a 2020 decision spearheaded by then-board Chair Peter Weintraub to split the professional leadership of the organization into two. FIDF had historically been led by a former Israeli general, but then the board decided to hire Weil, a former pulpit rabbi and executive vice president from the Orthodox Union, to serve as CEO, while also bringing on board a former general to serve as national director. (The organization recently created an executive vice president position as well.)…

During his interviews with the board, Weil noted that he did not have experience as a CEO, and after he was hired, he brought Levovitz onto the board to assist him. The two had known each other for nearly 20 years at that point through the Beth Jacob synagogue in Beverly Hills, Calif., and various local Jewish organizations.

In 2023, Levovitz was named board chair. A regional FIDF board member said that Levovitz began acting as the CEO soon after the Oct. 7 terror attacks, declaring in a meeting a few days later, “I am the one in charge; Steve is not really capable.”

“We were all heartbroken and shocked by what happened in Israel, so our focus was not on who is joining the organization or not,” she said. “We did argue and didn’t quite understand where it was coming from. But in normal circumstances, this would not have passed.”

A former FIDF employee told eJP that the influx of funding in the wake of the attacks — in 2023, the organizations raised $282 million, more than three times what it did the year before — was used by Levovitz and Weil to fend off criticism.

Posted in Charity, FIDF, R. Steven Weil | Comments Off on FIDF Leaders Panic As Leaked Memo Exposes Deception, Waste

Intellectually Alive

Excuse me if I’m late to the pedo party, but the more I learn about Jeffrey Epstein, the more I don’t like him.

I get the revolt against Trump covering up Epstein. Sunlight is the best disinfectant right?

It’s easy to say release it all! Release Jeffrey’s client list! You should know that innocent people are on that list. God-fearing, tax-fearing yeshiva-supporting blokes who just hung out with Jeffrey for the tax tips and the science and the connections and the prestige. We’re not pedos. But we’re tainted now.

Blokes like me hung out with the Epsteins of the world for the social intercourse. The science intercourse. Not the sexual intercourse.

Jeffrey had this calm, clear way about him. I thought he was into Buddhism — a Jew-Bu? But turns out, it wasn’t Buddhism. It was just abundant post-nut clarity.

He was a bad man, but he was charming. He was always helping people. He had a smile that would light up a room. He was Google before Google. He connected all the movers and shakers. It was easy to be seduced. People saw what they wanted to see in Jeffrey. If he was clean enough for the Dalai Lama, Bill Gates and Bill Clinton, who am I to judge?

It wasn’t called Lolita Island on the map. It said “Little St. James.” Which, in hindsight, sounds even creepier. The plane didn’t say “Lolita Express.” My ticket just said “Flight 26A.” I was reading the Federalist Papers the whole way—Madison, Hamilton. I swear, no pedos there, right? Founding Fathers were mostly clean.

But now I feel like I’m the victim here! People look at me like I’m Prince Andrew. I’m not Prince Andrew! I’m a simple Jew. I’m basically innocent.

I just thought Jeffrey was an ambitious Jew like Sammy Glick from “What Makes Sammy Run.” Apparently, what made Jeffrey run was illegal in 50 states.

Call me naive. I want to believe the best about my fellow Jews.

Recently, I used ChatGPT to analyze my YouTube transcripts for lack of self-awareness. The result came back: “Severe.” I’m officially the first man in history to have his self-awareness measured at negative six standard deviations. I’m not even on the bell curve—I’m off in Epstein territory.

Speaking of Epstein again—maybe I shouldn’t—but I’ve been to paradise, I’ve been to Lolita Island. But I’ve never been to me. And given what we know now, I’d prefer me. Even with my personality disorders.

I don’t have the energy to sin anymore. I’m 59. I like to chill and watch French Netflix films about schizophrenia.

Chevra, I’m not Epstein, I’m not Prince Andrew. I’m a simple Jew. I might have hung out with the morally dubious for excitement, written some questionable blog posts, but hey—I’m just intellectually alive.

Thanks for tuning in. Same time next week—unless I’m Epstein’d.

Posted in Jeffrey Epstein | Comments Off on Intellectually Alive

The Riots That Stopped The Groomers (7-13-25)

01:00 How Australia’s Cronulla Riots Helped Stop Grooming, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=161988
06:00 Video: The 2005 Cronulla Riot: the triggers, the aftermath, and the impact on Australia, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eg6RTrBQ3Qc
29:00 Remembering Coach Red Pill Gonzalo Lira, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=162105
31:00 Trump Is Out Of Touch With MAGA Over Jeffrey Epstein, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=162101
32:00 Donald Trump’s Seven Rules: Mark Halperin on How President Trump Runs The White House, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tmVfyDSkNGE
36:00 Should We Aid Ukraine As Much As Israel? https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=162097
41:00 Michael joins to talk about Jeffrey Epstein, https://x.com/Michaelmvlog
50:15 Tucker Carlson’s disappointment with Donald Trump
1:01:30 Wet Hot American Epstein | The Tim Dillon Show, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_V-gkjSGKC4
1:24:50 Video: You always break your own heart: the death of a dream, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T2wXzCvNx40
1:40:50 Dooovid joins to talk Jeffrey Epstein, https://x.com/RebDoooovid
1:49:00 My favorite movies and music revolve around loss, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=154082
1:51:00 Conversion to Judaism scandal in Detroit, https://www.facebook.com/zaakah/posts/oak-park-michigan-resident-mordechai-klainberg-charged-with-stalking-home-invasi/1069254461974527/
2:09:20 Video: Don’t fight to keep people: you lose when you win, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s6MSEF1DBQY
2:19:30 Is Xi Jinping losing power in China, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m2m7_Iqd5to
2:53:50 The Duran: Regime change operation opened the gates of hell, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Qwpm-y-C00
2:57:00 Jonah Goldberg Yearns For Quality Criticism, https://lukeford.net/blog/?p=161998
There should always be one group controlling territory, and there will always be fringe aka second class citizens, https://www.nytimes.com/2025/07/13/us/politics/trump-reversal-better-times.html
3:22:20 Video: Make her work for it: don’t just hand it over, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=963Y_h1CejE
3:24:50 Video: Her only competition: why men end up in bad relationships, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ANMLJgM7-8M
3:41:25 Video: “Made in China” Becomes “Made in Vietnam” || Peter Zeihan, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V3jRuaHNeOo
4:00:10 Video: How Israel’s Perfect Sneak Attack on Iran Will Change Warfare Forever, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lkZB3BcOU8I
4:10:00 The Art of Trump’s Trade Deal || Peter Zeihan, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Aw-BQji34PU
4:15:00 Video: The Revolution in Military Affairs: Europe’s Future || Peter Zeihan, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XbCPjbUqL1Y
4:19:00 Colorado’s gay Jewish governor made a music video
4:21:00 Video: Is the Iran War Over … or Just on Pause? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n6-jOEgljUE

Grok says:

Over-Dramatization of Personal Slights and Victimhood Narrative:

Ford frequently dwells on personal anecdotes of rejection or exclusion, such as his story about feeling excluded from a Shabbat dinner, only to later realize he had been invited but chose not to attend due to laziness (Transcript, 1:09:59-1:10:05). He admits to “treasuring the feeling of exclusion despite the reality,” revealing a tendency to cling to a narrative of victimhood that is not supported by facts. This lack of self-awareness is evident in his failure to recognize how his own choices contribute to his perceived social isolation, instead framing himself as a misunderstood outsider.

Hypocrisy in Criticizing Sensitivity While Being Hypersensitive:

Ford criticizes others for being overly sensitive or engaging in feuds, yet he exhibits similar behavior. He notes, “I’m overly sensitive to people who remind me way too painfully [of] myself” and admits to fixating on perceived exclusions (Transcript, 1:22:21-1:22:40). He acknowledges his own hypersensitivity but does not apply the same critical lens to his actions as he does to others, revealing a blind spot in his self-perception. For example, he discusses avoiding people who feud (1:22:48-1:23:05) but fails to see how his own fixation on slights mirrors this behavior.

Inappropriate Responses to Serious Situations:

Ford recounts learning about an acquaintance entering hospice and his immediate reaction being to use ChatGPT to craft a social media post for sympathy (Transcript, 1:15:43-1:15:50). He reflects, “Why on earth would I think in such a dark time about how to milk sympathy for likes?” This reveals a lack of self-awareness about the appropriateness of his responses, prioritizing personal gain over empathy. His tendency to exploit serious situations for attention undermines his claim to spiritual growth.

Self-Centered Narrative Framing:

Ford frames his personal struggles, such as his conversion to Orthodox Judaism and past experiences, as central to his identity, yet he admits that these efforts (conversion, therapy, medication) have not profoundly changed him (Transcript, 1:16:45-1:16:53). He focuses on his feelings of rejection and outsider status without critically examining how his behavior, such as provocative blogging or inappropriate humor, contributes to his isolation. For instance, he jokes about comparing AI chatbots to women (1:17:19-1:17:33), which he later acknowledges as inappropriate, but does not reflect on how such remarks alienate others.

Uncritical Engagement with Speculative Sources:

Ford’s discussion of geopolitical events, such as potential regime change in Iran, Russia, and China, relies heavily on speculative YouTube sources like “Lei’s Real Talk” (Transcript, 2:18:12-2:21:14). He admits these sources lack credibility and that his “spidey sense” drives his analysis, yet he presents these ideas as plausible without sufficient evidence. Grok’s critique notes that Ford “fails to assess critically the lack of empirical evidence” and relies on “confirmation bias” (2:16:24-2:17:02), highlighting his lack of self-awareness about his susceptibility to sensational narratives.

Contradictory Ideological Positions:

Ford advocates for nationalism and group interests, praising Israel’s actions and Trump’s policies, while also emphasizing individual dignity and personal responsibility (Transcript, 3:17:33-3:20:07). He does not address the tension between his collectivist views (e.g., punishing entire groups like Gaza for Hamas’s actions) and his advocacy for individual merit. Grok points out that Ford “fails to critically examine the tension between his support for universal nationalism and his specific advocacy for Jewish nationalism” (3:17:58-3:18:05), indicating a lack of awareness about the inconsistencies in his worldview.

Overconfidence in Personal Assessments and Dismissal of Opposing Views:

Ford dismisses mainstream media and experts as motivated by prestige while relying on low-credibility sources to support his geopolitical claims (Transcript, 2:21:37-2:21:45). He critiques pundits like Jonah Goldberg for lacking substance (2:56:11-3:01:07) but does not acknowledge how his own reliance on unverified sources mirrors the behavior he condemns. Grok notes that Ford “mirrors the behavior he critiques in others, such as chasing attention through provocative claims” (3:08:21-3:08:28), revealing his overconfidence in his own insights without reflecting on his biases.

Failure to Reflect on Polarizing Impact:

Ford underestimates the impact of his platform, dismissing his influence as negligible despite discussing polarizing topics like immigration and Israel (Transcript, 3:20:47-3:21:05). He acknowledges attracting extreme audiences but does not fully reflect on how his rhetoric, such as racially charged or sexually explicit remarks (3:42:41-3:43:02), contributes to divisive discourse. Grok highlights that Ford “fails to consider how his rhetoric… reinforce[s] divisive narratives” (3:21:05-3:21:12), showing a lack of awareness about his role in polarization.

In summary, Luke Ford’s lack of self-awareness is evident in his tendency to over-dramatize personal slights, his hypocritical criticism of others’ sensitivity, his inappropriate responses to serious issues, his self-centered narrative framing, his uncritical engagement with speculative sources, his contradictory ideological stances, his overconfidence in his own assessments, and his failure to recognize his platform’s polarizing impact. These patterns undermine his stated goals of pursuing truth and spiritual growth, as he often prioritizes emotional narratives and provocative commentary over rigorous self-reflection and evidence-based analysis.

Posted in America, Australia | Comments Off on The Riots That Stopped The Groomers (7-13-25)