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Regime Propaganda, Ray Epps, and the New York Times
American Greatness ^ | 16 Jul, 2022 | Roger Kimball

Posted on 07/17/2022 5:02:03 AM PDT by MtnClimber

In order to understand what the Times is up to, one needs to approach its stories as one would approach those emitted by the Soviet Union or other totalitarian regimes.

Is the New York Times playing four-dimensional chess?

Or is it only tic-tac-toe with a three-year-old?

I ask because I cannot quite fathom the Times’ latest intervention into the January 6 miniseries, its aromatic aria bewailing the fate of Ray Epps.

Who is Ray Epps?

We don’t really know—not yet.

In the immediate aftermath of the January 6 jamboree, he was on the Stasi’s—er, the FBI’s—list of most wanted “domestic extremists,” “insurrectionists,” etc.

He was also a star of several videos, a right-out-of-central-casting, MAGA-hat-wearing Trump nut telling anyone who would listen on the evening of January 5 that the next day they had to go “into the Capitol, into the Capitol.”

Into the Capitol, not “to” the Capitol. You see the difference.

Back in January 2021, the entire regime propaganda machine was indiscriminately fanning the line that “Trump sparked an insurrection, an attempted coup, an effort to overturn the 2020 election.” Glenn Greenwald, no friend of Trump’s, was an early skeptic about that overblown hysteria. “Condemning that riot,” Greenwald noted, “does not allow, let alone require, echoing false claims in order to render the event more menacing and serious than it actually was.”

But that is precisely what the regime media did: twist, exaggerate, lie, and manufacture out of whole cloth a narrative whose sole purpose was to destroy Donald Trump and the populist movement he gave voice to.

The New York Times, of course, was Johnny-on-the-spot. It was the Times that early on circulated the made-up story that Brian Sicknick, a Capitol Police officer, had been bludgeoned to death by a crazed Trump supporter wielding a fire extinguisher. That was shouted from the rooftops for a few days by the same sort of people who screamed that Nick Sandmann, the so-called “Covington kid,” was guilty of taunting a noble Native American when he was doing nothing of the kind.

Sicknick, as it happens, died of a stroke at home the day after January 6. The Times eventually admitted its error, sotto voce, but only after the damage had been done.

Then, just a few days ago, the Times published another piece in which Ray Epps features prominently. The column, written by Alan Feuer, is titled “A Trump Backer’s Downfall as the Target of a Jan. 6 Conspiracy Theory.” It is the sort of column the Times fabricates when it enters damage-control mode and wants to salvage someone’s reputation in order to score political points. Back in January 2021, Epps was an enemy, a public face of a supposed “insurrection” that was going to overturn the 2020 election and install Donald Trump as dictator for life.

But in the succeeding months, the Narrative had changed. The preposterous show trials of the “select” January 6 committee, Loopy Liz Cheney presiding, is not getting the traction it was supposed to get. People who work for CNN, MSNBC, or kindred outlets are all behind Cheney in her mad vendetta against Trump. But the mass of people across the country do not care one whit about the “findings” of the committee. Most people can recognize a partisan witch hunt when they see one, and this Star Chamber performance has done more to engender disgust at Congress than it has to turn people against Trump.

Moreover, with every passing week, evidence that the entire January 6 protest was planned and abetted not by Donald Trump and his nefarious agents but rather by elements of the anti-Trump regime has been piling up. Julie Kelly here at American Greatness and Darren Beattie at Revolver News have been at the forefront of the effort to uncover the truth behind the Wizard-of-Oz-like spectacle of January 6. Now the regime seems to be panicking.

Hence the Times is willing to transform Ray Epps from perpetrator into victim in order to influence the Narrative. Their proximate goal is signaled in the subtitle to their maudlin valentine: “Ray Epps became the unwitting face of an attempt by pro-Trump forces to promote the baseless idea that the F.B.I. was behind the attack on the Capitol.”

Ah. The “baseless” idea, you see.

Yes, even in that video taken on January 5, 2021, when Epps tells the crowd that the next day they must go “into the Capitol, into the Capitol,” members of the crowd start chanting “Fed, Fed, Fed.” They knew.

Granted, there is no evidence—not yet, anyway—that Epps was working for the FBI. But that agency is only one of the dozens of deep state, anti-Trump agencies in Washington, D.C. Eventually, I’d wager, it will emerge that Epps was in the employ of one or another anti-Trump government organization. How else can we explain that he went from being on the FBI’s most wanted list to victim-of-the-week for the New York Times? More to the point, how else can we explain why he has not been indicted and tossed into jail with the hundreds upon hundreds of poor slobs who had the misfortune to find themselves in or around the Capitol that fateful day?

Darren Beattie speculates that the “hidden agenda” behind the Times’ earlobe-licking puff piece on Epps is an effort to “make any unsanctioned ideas about Epps too toxic and dangerous to print.” He may be right. In the course of Feuer’s piece, the idea that Epps might sue Revolver News, Tucker Carlson, and others is floated. Epps’ family is “searching for a lawyer to help them file a defamation lawsuit,” the Times reports. “Regime janitors like Feuer,” Beattie writes, “specialize in mopping up Fed dirty work.” They will now “go into overdrive as more embarrassing information about Ray Epps and the initial breach comes out.”

Unfortunately for those foot soldiers for Leviathan, it is too late. There are too many people onto their game.

Feuer’s embarrassing piece in the Times at first seemed inexplicable. Why would the Times seek to exonerate, or at least to drum up sympathy for, someone who was caught on video urging the crowd to break into the Capitol? The whole thing seemed like a higher-order hermeneutical conundrum. Until, that is, one recognizes that Epps might just be a sort of double agent, an agent provocateur, laboring not on behalf of Trump’s supporters but his enemies. Then it all begins to make sense.

To understand what the Times is up to, one needs to approach its stories as one would approach those emitted by the Soviet Union or other totalitarian regimes. One needs to engage in what Powerline’s Scott Johnson, taking a page from Matt Taibbi, calls a “Kremlinological reading” of the story. Feuer and other Times apparatchiks like Adam Goldman, Johnson suggests, are really part of the “public relations arm of the national security establishment.” Indeed.

The Kremlinological reading is breathtaking. Anyone standing behind such a reading will surely be dismissed as a “conspiracy theorist” or worse. To all such accusations, however, I adduce both Delmore Schwartz, who pointed out that even paranoids have enemies, and William of Occam, whose famous tip for epistemological tidiness comes in handy on occasions such as this. Entia non sunt multiplicanda praeter necessitatem, Occam wrote, which we might translate as “If it smells like a rat, looks like a rat, and behaves like a rat, it is overwhelmingly likely that it is a rat.”


TOPICS: Society
KEYWORDS: 200101; 20210105; 20210106; 20210107; agentprovocateur; capitolriot; communism; epps; fed; guyreffitt; incitement; j6; mediabias; nytimes; palmer; rayepps; reffitt; robertpalmer
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To: AndyTheBear
What you're talking about with a vast government conspiracy to entrap and frame Trump protesters doesn't make sense if you follow it through logically.

Think of it this way - either (1) the riot was the actions of a few unhinged protesters, as well as some fellow travellers like the Proud Boys or (2) restrained Maga patriots were entrapped by the government to frame and tar the whole MAGA movement.

Let's follow thread #2. Either (A) Trump is aware of this dastardly plot, or (B) he is unaware.

As ex-President, it's inconceiveable that Trump has less intelligence than your average social media user, where the Ray Epps theory is common. So it has to be (A).

Since Trump is aware of the theory, he either (i) Believes it, and has spent $0 of his $100M raised since the riot on the defense of these patriots since he only cares about himself and sees the rest of MAGA as pawns. This is the leftist thinking about Trump. Or (ii) Doesn't believe it, and hasn't spent money defending the rioters because he thinks they are guilty, or (iii) Believes it, but is too scared to assist them.

(i) and (iii) don't sound like Trump to me.
21 posted on 07/17/2022 10:56:00 AM PDT by Observator
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To: Observator
What you're talking about with a vast government conspiracy to entrap and frame Trump protesters...

Who said there was a vast conspiracy? My words were: "There is more than Ray Epps that suggests that it was in part a setup."

Do you consider the FBI Whitmore informant fiasco a "vast government conspiracy"? Hardly. It does not take a vast conspiracy to do a political setup.

Your dichotomy of:

(1) the riot was the actions of a few unhinged protesters, as well as some fellow travellers like the Proud Boys.

(2) restrained Maga patriots were entrapped by the government to frame and tar the whole MAGA movement.

Is a false one. There were protesters that were not self constrained. There was also evidence of some amount of setup. Why on Earth do you not see that both things could be true at the same time? They are not even close to a contradiction.

22 posted on 07/17/2022 11:41:50 AM PDT by AndyTheBear
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To: Sicon

Okay. Who opened the heavy magnet controlled doors to the Capital? Who gave those orders? Why were Capital Police waving people inside? My guess is that the center to all this is Nancy Pelousy who used this event to go after Trump again.


23 posted on 07/17/2022 11:50:22 AM PDT by Metrobank
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To: Sicon
Everyone else just walked in like tourists.

No, that is simply not true. EVERYONE that goes into the Capital for tours, etc is security screened at checkpoints.

Did it occur to ANY of these people that they should not be there? Did ANYONE ask the Capital Police AND record doing so if it was okay to enter the Capital? Anyone? If so, where’s that video? People exercised incredibly bad judgement entering the Capital under those circumstances.

24 posted on 07/17/2022 12:07:29 PM PDT by Fury
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To: Metrobank
Why were Capital Police waving people inside

Who would be utterly stupid enough to enter given the circumstances? To be utterly clueless to not ask a Capital Police officer AND record doing so “Hey, is it okay if we go in?”

People exhibited very little common sense that day when they entered the Capital. They were there because they thought in part that the “Deep State” had stolen the election from President Trump. And then blindly trust the police officers that managed access for Pelosi (it’s pretty much her building)?

Utter stupidity.

25 posted on 07/17/2022 12:13:44 PM PDT by Fury
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To: Observator

Just because they wore MAGA hats, etc. doesn’t mean they were Trump supporters.


26 posted on 07/17/2022 12:17:30 PM PDT by Fledermaus (With Trans Republicans like McCarthy and McConnell do we really want them to win Congress in 2022?)
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To: MtnClimber

We don’t know who his boss actually is but we know his function at the demo. He was an Agent Provacateur converting a demonstration into a riot and Government operation to create a situation whereby a major strike and everyday conservatives to b a warning that wrongthink is now punishable by long jail terms and concomitant isolation and abuse without benefit of judge and jury.


27 posted on 07/17/2022 1:02:40 PM PDT by arthurus ( covfefe >|3|<)
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To: Observator

He is special because it seems obvious that he is a government agent. He promoted things that other people were sentenced by the DoJ without judge or jury to long terms in jail. He is untouchable.


28 posted on 07/17/2022 1:05:31 PM PDT by arthurus ( covfefe >|||<)
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To: Observator

LOL - just goes to show how different reality is from person to person. I have to say that the vast majority of people who are even semi-informed would think that trying to pin the Capitol riot on some low-level guy named Ray Epps is the one who should be receiving pay for propaganda.

xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

so if you know Ray Epps is “some low-level guy....

so what organization is he low level in?

are you above or below his pay grade?


29 posted on 07/17/2022 1:09:37 PM PDT by thinden (buckle up.....)
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To: arthurus
He is special because it seems obvious that he is a government agent. He promoted things that other people were sentenced by the DoJ without judge or jury to long terms in jail. He is untouchable.

That's one explanation, but it's the more outlandish. A simpler explanation is that 800 people have already been charged and convicted, and they are prioritizing people. He's on video encouraging people to go in, but so are dozens of others. And he didn't go in himself. He probably should be in jail if others aren't, from what's publicly known. But to make the leap to him being some government mastermind of chaos is a big stretch based on the little that is known. Compared to some of the groups whose coordination is public, he's not high profile.
30 posted on 07/17/2022 2:33:20 PM PDT by Observator
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To: Observator

Not a “mastermind,” an agent provacateur with the emphasis on “agent.”


31 posted on 07/17/2022 3:00:10 PM PDT by arthurus ( covfefe hhh)
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