How Jeff Bezos Smothered Pete Hegseth News because Hunter Biden Was Pardoned of Already Declined Charges

When I went to bed last night, the WaPo was feeding me the following stories at the top of its digital front page.

WaPo has since added a story about Biden’s attempt to surge weapons to Ukraine before Trump cuts them off.

There was not and is not any story dedicated to Kash Patel’s promises to target Trump’s enemies at FBI — a story that not only is more urgent than any of the seven Hunter Biden pardon stories, but is fundamentally tied to the how and why of the Hunter Biden pardon.

There was not and is not any story on Jane Mayer’s report about how Pete Hegseth,

was forced to step down by both of the two nonprofit advocacy groups that he ran—Veterans for Freedom and Concerned Veterans for America—in the face of serious allegations of financial mismanagement, sexual impropriety, and personal misconduct.

Even as Hegseth made visits with the Senators whose vote he would need to be confirmed (definitely watch this video), the rag owned by defense contractor Jeff Bezos chose to litter its front page with seven stories and columns about Hunter Biden’s pardon rather than report out that Hegseth has a history of failing to manage the budgets of even just two medium-sized non-profits.

And it’s not just that Bezos’ rag buried far more urgent news about Trump’s nominees.

It’s that (with the exception of this column explaining the risks and difficulty of seizing weapons from addicts) the Hunter Biden stories were not all that useful.

Will Lewis has again chosen to platform Matt Viser’s dick pic sniffing about Joe Biden, this time trying to drive the controversy about the pardon; as far as I’m aware, Viser still has not disclosed to WaPo’s readers that an error in his own reporting caused a false scandal about Hunter’s art sales.

Viser’s 1800-word post includes 22 words that address, with no specifics, Pam Bondi and Kash Patel’s promise to persecute Trump’s enemies: “His picks for attorney general, Pam Bondi, and for FBI director, Kash Patel, have urged retribution against Trump’s political adversaries and critics.” It does, however, float an inaccurate quote also included in this Aaron Blake piece (as well as these Betsy Woodruff and Ken Vogel stories), claiming that Hunter’s pardon is broader than any since Nixon’s pardon.

Former Pardon Attorney Margaret Love hates this pardon and she’s not afraid to mislead reporters to criticize it, as when she told Woodruff that Nixon was the only precedent.

“I have never seen language like this in a pardon document that purports to pardon offenses that have not apparently even been charged, with the exception of the Nixon pardon,” said Margaret Love, who served from 1990 to 1997 as the U.S. pardon attorney, a Justice Department position devoted to assisting the president on clemency issues.

“Even the broadest Trump pardons were specific as to what was being pardoned,” Love added.

Love’s claim conflicts with what she herself laid out to Politico, the very same outlet, when Mike Flynn was pardoned four years ago.

“Pardons are typically directed at specific convictions or at a minimum at specific charges,” said Margaret Love, former pardon attorney for Presidents George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton, who now leads the Collateral Consequences Resource Center. “I can think of only one other pardon as broad as this one, extending as it does to conduct that has not yet been charged, and that is the one that President Ford granted to Richard Nixon.”

“In fact, you might say that this pardon is even broader than the Nixon pardon, which was strictly cabined by his time as president,“ Love said. “In contrast, the pardon granted to Flynn appears to extend to conduct that took place prior to Trump‘s election to the presidency, and to bear no relationship to his service to the president, before or after the election.“ [my emphasis]

And I believe even then, Love misstated the intended scope of Flynn’s pardon.

Like Hunter’s pardon, Flynn’s pardon excused the crimes included in his charging documents (false statements, including false statements about being an unregistered agent of Turkey). While Hunter’s pardon specifically invoked the conduct in his Delaware and Los Angeles dockets, Flynn’s pardon excused conduct reviewed in two jurisdictions, DC and EDVA. Like Hunter’s pardon, which would cover the false statements referral from Congress, Flynn’s pardon would have covered the contradictory sworn statements he made as he tried to renege on his plea deal. But Flynn’s pardon also covered,

any and all possible offenses arising out of facts and circumstances known to, identified by, or in any manner related to the investigation of the Special Counsel,

This pardon attempted to excuse any crime based on a fact that once lived in Robert Mueller’s brain or case files.

As I laid out here, that certainly would have covered referrals from Mueller elsewhere (including to DOD), it might have attempted to pardon crimes in process, if (for example) Flynn’s relationship with Russia developed into something more in the future. Flynn’s pardon, unlike Hunter’s didn’t have an end date, and as a result, if Congress wants to continue to harass Hunter about stuff he just accepted a pardon for, he’ll have less protection than Trump intended Flynn to have.

And while Republicans might argue that Hunter’s allegedly false claim to Congress — regarding how he cut Tony Bobulinski out of a deal with CEFC to protect his family’s name — served to protect his father, even the most feverish Republican fantasies would amount to three Biden men profiting from a Chinese company after Biden left the Obama Administration and before he decided to run again. Flynn’s conflicting claims about whether “The Boss is aware” of his conversations with Sergey Kislyak, including regarding undermining sanctions, served to protect Trump’s actions as incoming President. (Another thing WaPo decided was less important than seven pieces about Hunter’s pardon was that Chinese national Justin Sun, who has been charged with fraud by the SEC, just sent Donald Trump $18 million.) That is, you can measure the pardon in terms of familial closeness to the President granting it (none of these stories mention Charles Kushner, much less his nomination to be Ambassador to France); you can also measure the pardon in terms of the silence or lies about the guy giving the pardon it buys. And any one of about ten pardons from Trump, including the Flynn one, were far more corrupt by that measure.

But here’s the other reason why Blake’s piece, one of the seven pieces littering the front page instead of stories about Kash Patel or Hegseth’s unfitness, is not useful. Here’s how Blake introduces the scope of Hunter’s pardon.

Biden didn’t just pardon his son for his convictions on tax and gun charges, but for any “offenses against the United States which he has committed or may have committed or taken part in during the period from January 1, 2014, through December 1, 2024.”

That’s a nearly 11-year period during which any federal crime Hunter Biden might have committed — and there are none we are aware of beyond what has already been adjudicated — can’t be prosecuted. It notably covers when he was appointed to the board of the Ukrainian energy company Burisma in 2014 all the way through Sunday, well after the crimes for which he was prosecuted.

Hunter Biden hasn’t been charged for his activities with regard to Burisma or anything beyond his convictions, and nothing in the public record suggests criminal charges could be around the bend. Congressional Republicans have probed the Burisma matter and Hunter Biden extensively and could seemingly have uncovered chargeable crimes if they existed, but haven’t done so.

Blake glosses over a great deal with his reference to things that have “already been adjudicated,” and in doing so, ignores the problem. Yes, both prosecutors and Republicans in Congress looked long and hard for something to hang a Burisma charge onto; yes, none of them found it. But — here’s the important bit — they still want to pursue one anyway.

The investigation into Hunter Biden started six years ago, based off a Suspicious Activity Report tied to a payment to a sex worker. Investigators tried to turn that into a criminal investigation based on the same Burisma focus that Rudy Giuliani was chasing; in fact, investigators first got data from Apple on the day Trump released the Perfect Phone Call, a transcript that may or may not have expunged a specific reference to Burisma. According to Joseph Ziegler, his supervisor at the time documented the problem of chasing a tax investigation that tracked Trump’s public demands for dirt on the Bidens related to Burisma.

You can actually trace how investigators cycled through one or another potential FARA violation — Burisma, Romania, CEFC — each time, with even the disgruntled IRS agents conceding they couldn’t substantiate those FARA cases (not least because Hunter was pretty diligent about not doing influence peddling himself, at bringing in others to do any of that kind of lobbying). Tips from Gal Luft — awaiting extradition on foreign agent charges — and Alexander Smirnov — awaiting trial on false statements — were key elements of that investigation.

But we know that in the precise period when someone was leaking to try to pressure prosecutors to bring certain charges, David Weiss had decided not to charge 2014 and 2015. Here’s how Gary Shapley wrote up the October 7, 2022 meeting that set him off.

In 2022, David Weiss told Shapley he would not charge 2014 and 2015, which is one thing that led Shapley to start reaching out to Congress to complain.

Prosecutors included more detail in Hunter’s tax indictment.

a. The Defendant timely filed, after requesting an extension, his 2014 individual income tax return on IRS Form 1040 on October 9, 2015. The Defendant reported owing $239,076 in taxes, and having already paid $246,996 to the IRS, the Defendant claimed he was entitled to a refund of $7,920. The Defendant did not report his income from Burisma on his 2014 Form 1040. All the money the Defendant received from Burisma in 2014 went to a company, hereafter “ABC”, and was deposited into its bank account. ABC and its bank account were owned and controlled by a business partner of the Defendant’s, Business Associate 5. Business Associate 5 was also a member of Burisma’s Board of Directors. The Defendant received transfers of funds from the ABC bank account and funds from the ABC bank account were used to make investments on the Defendant’s behalf. Because he owned ABC, Business Associate 5 paid taxes on income that he and the Defendant received from Burisma. Starting in November 2015, the Defendant directed his Burisma Board fees to an Owasco, PC bank account that he controlled.

One reason Hunter wasn’t charged for 2014 and 2015 is because Devon Archer was paying taxes in that period.

But the point is (as reflected in Blake’s note this was all adjudicated), a prosecutor made that decision. And Republicans in Congress and, specifically, Kash Patel, squealed about the injustice of not charging Hunter because the evidence didn’t merit charges.

This decision and the backlash with those dissatisfied by it dictates the lengthy period of Hunter’s pardon. Not just because they want to charge Burisma whether or not there’s evidence of a crime. But because the five year statute of limitations for FARA and the six year SOL on tax crimes, to charge anything related to Burisma, they’d have to apply crimes — like Espionage or certain kinds of Wire Fraud — that have ten year statutes of limitation.

Kash Patel and Republicans in Congress have already said they want to charge Hunter Biden regardless of whether there’s evidence to do so. When David Weiss first offered a plea deal, Trump posted that Hunter should instead have gotten a death sentence.

These people have made it clear they want to prosecute Hunter regardless of what the evidence supports. They have said that over and over. That’s what dictates the pardon, not any corruption by Biden. And to flip that on its head — to flip Trump and Kash Patel’s demand for prosecutions regardless of evidence — on its head is to cooperate in Trump’s assault on rule of law.

This is a point reflected by experts quoted in Vogel’s piece (and expanded by Kim Wehle in her own post).

Mr. Morison, who worked for years in the Office of the Pardon Attorney before going into private practice, added that the Bidens may have seen risk in crafting the pardon grant more narrowly.

“I assume that Hunter’s lawyers were worried that an especially vindictive Trump DOJ would have looked for something to charge him with if they were too specific, so they asked for a blanket pardon, subject only to a fairly broad date range,” he wrote in an email.

Kimberly Wehle, a law professor at the University of Baltimore, predicted that if Mr. Trump’s Justice Department were to charge Hunter Biden, he would raise the pardon in a motion to dismiss the case.

Ms. Wehle, the author of a recent book detailing how the lack of constraints on presidential clemency powers invite abuse, said in an email that it was Mr. Trump — not President Biden — who initiated “the norm-violating behavior” by pledging to use the Justice Department to prosecute his enemies.

“This is not a corrupt pardon,” she said in an email. “It’s about taking care of a family member knowing what Trump will do otherwise.”

The reason you have to pardon broadly is because Trump has demanded an outcome divorced from evidence. And to get to his desired outcome, he would have to do something expansive, something that could not be foreseen by the scope of the existing investigation that (as Blake notes) has already been adjudicated.

You can tell this story about how broad the pardon is — structured very similarly to the Mike Flynn one.

But if you leave out the story of how this investigation from the start paralleled Trump’s extra-legal effort to gin up dirt on Joe Biden’s son, if you leave out the fact that even in his first term, Trump’s DOJ solicited information from at least one Russian spy and a Chinese agent to pursue dirt on Hunter Biden, then you are flipping the matter of justice on its head. That’s what Trump did already, in his desperation to find something to hang on Hunter Biden. And particularly given his picks of Bondi and Patel (the latter of whom played a role in extorting a foreign country for such dirt, too), there’s no telling what Trump will do in a second term.

That’s what dictates the terms of this pardon. A prosecutor issued a declination for charges related to 2014 and 2015, and almost the entire Republican party said, we’re going to find something anyway. And if you hide that detail, you’re burying the most crucial information, just like you’re burying detrimental information about Hegseth and Patel below a seventh post on Hunter Biden.

This is what a captive oligarch press looks like: Burying detrimental information on the guy who might oversee Jeff Bezos’ defense contracts, while hiding the reasons why the Hunter Biden pardon looks like it does.

53 replies
  1. klynn says:

    Your last two paragraphs are so important. But your last paragraph is a vital “truth to power” insight.

    “This is what a captive oligarch press looks like: Burying detrimental information on the guy who might oversee Jeff Bezos’ defense contracts, while hiding the reasons why the Hunter Biden pardon looks like it does.”

    Thank you.

  2. Peterr says:

    Proclamation 6518 – Grant of Executive Clemency, The White House, December 24, 1992:

    . . . Now, Therefore, I, George Bush, President of the United States of America, pursuant to my powers under Article II, Section 2, of the Constitution, do hereby grant a full, complete, and unconditional pardon to Elliott Abrams, Duane R. Clarridge, Alan Fiers, Clair George, Robert C. McFarlane, and Caspar W. Weinberger for all offenses charged or prosecuted by Independent Counsel Lawrence E. Walsh or other member of his office, or committed by these individuals and within the jurisdiction of that office.

    For those too young to remember the heady days of the Iran-Contra Arms-for-Hostages affair, the positions held by people named in this pardon were, in order:

    Assistant Secretary of State
    Senior CIA Operations officer with supervisory experience in Central America
    Chief of the CIA’s Central American Task Force
    Deputy Director of the CIA for Operations
    National Security Advisor
    Secretary of Defense

    Note, too, the scope of the pardon:
    all offenses charged by the Independent Counsel
    all offenses prosecuted by the Independent Counsel
    all offenses that the Independent Counsel could possibly imagine prosecuting in the future.

    There’s no “start date” here. There’s no limit to offenses actually charged. This was a full, complete, and unconditional castration of the pursuit of justice as it applied to high-ranking administration officials.

    This pardon was granted by the former VP who became president, George Herbert Walker Bush, at the behest of Bill Barr, and it’s not as if Bush’s hands were clean here either. From Wiki:

    Although Bush publicly insisted that he knew little about the operation, his statements were contradicted by excerpts of his diary released by the White House in January 1993. An entry dated 5 November 1986 stated: “On the news at this time is the question of the hostages… I’m one of the few people that know fully the details, and there is a lot of flak and misinformation out there. It is not a subject we can talk about.”

    Yeah, he didn’t talk about it, and he certainly didn’t want the six folks he pardoned talking about it either.

    Don’t tell me the Hunter Biden pardon was somehow extraordinarily broad and sweeping.

    • Theodora30 says:

      This is a clear example of the double standard Dems are held to by the mainstream “liberal” media. Bush lied over and over when he claimed to have been “out of the loop” on Iran Contra. When Dan Rather had the nerve to ask him about it Bush, coached by Roger Ailes, deflected the question by attacking Rather rather than admit his bald-faced lies. The media was impressed by Bush’s clever tactics and never demanded he admit he was involved in that blatantly unconstitutional conspiracy. This is the same media who crucified Bill Clinton for cheating on his wife.
      Bush’s diary of all those Iran Contra meetings Bush said he never attended was almost certainly going to be used as evidence in SecDef Weinberger’s trial which not only would have exposed Bush’s lies but may have put Bush himself in legal jeopardy.
      There is good evidence that Bush’s national security adviser and good friend from Bush’s CIA Director days, Donald Gregg, was deeply involved in (running?) the illegal supplying of arms to the Contras. The man in charge, Felix Rodriguez, was well known to Gregg who had been Rodriguez’s CIA handler. Rodriguez had contacts with Gregg during the Contra operation.
      Iran Contra was a blatantly illegal and unconstitutional secret operation yet the media has cared far less about Bush’s shutting down the investigation and trials with his pardons. The Independent Counsel, Republican Lawrence Walsh, was so outraged he accused Bush of “completing the coverup”.
      As for Barr’s role the pardons weren’t his idea. Bush wanted to pardon at least Weinberger. Barr supported that but urged Bush to pardon everyone. Bush was never “the man of great principles” the media makes him out to be.

    • MsJennyMD says:

      Thank you Peterr for the laundry list of pardoned participants. History is helpful.

      “A few months ago I told the American people I did not trade arms for hostages. My heart and my best intentions tell me that’s true, but the facts and evidence tell me it is not.”
      ― Ronald Reagan

      • earlofhuntingdon says:

        That “old grandpa” framing was brilliant. I lied, but my heart told me otherwise, so I went with my heart. Road apples.

    • John Paul Jones says:

      For those who have the time, and would like an overview, try Theodore Draper, A Very Thin Line: The Iran-Contra Affair. I found it very difficult to follow the affair in real time, thus, I used Draper’s book as a guide to what actually happened. NB: No entry for Barr in the index, I suspect because from Draper’s point of view, he was a bit player who came in at the end to turn off the lights.

      • LaMissy! says:

        For those with far less time (about 3 minutes or so), this episode of “American Dad” explains everything, with the tag line that what Bush and Reagan did “was technically high treason.” I used to cover the topic in my high school Latin American studies class. The kids were never quite certain whether it was fake news or not.

        https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xzy3deMOpjM

    • Eichhörnchen says:

      Yes. I’ve been thinking about the Iran-Contra pardons as I read breathless accounts of Biden’s unprecedented pardon of his son. Since no one else was mentioning Iran-Contra, I was beginning to think I had misremembered what happened.

      I’m starting to think we gaslight ourselves when we rely at all on mainstream media.

  3. dimmsdale says:

    Thank you, Marcy. “Defense Contractor Buys Newspaper, Turns it into Pravda on the Potomac” is a hell of an epitaph for a once-proud news organization. And it doesn’t speak well of how he intends to handle the maggots’ hauling his reporters before congressional committees to demand sources, as they almost certainly will. If WaPo reporters aren’t already feeling the chill breeze of “You’re on your Own, Jack,” they may soon be.

    • John B.*^ says:

      excellent point…meanwhile TCF is demanding that Congress scuttle the protect journalists legislation…

  4. RitaRita says:

    Even without the damning history of Republican mischief that Dr. Wheeler has laid out in this and previous posts, given Trump’s campaign rhetoric about vengeance and retribution and his nominees for the DOJ and for the FBI, President Biden would have been foolish not to pardon his son. In fact, he should be preparing pardons for the likely targets of Trump’s wrath.

    In retrospect, Biden should have promised not to pardon Hunter unless Trump won because Trump was promising to turn the DOJ and FBI into a tool for political vengeance.

  5. Trevanion says:

    Great piece.

    It has me wondering if it is possible to assess if not further parse out how much of this blatant mob behavior by today’s ‘captive oligarch press’ — aiming to establish and steer particular narratives while being so startlingly averse to accurately setting out facts — is due to overt editorial guidance versus the propensity of today’s well-heeled DC ‘reporters’ to behave like Labradors. Or it works hand in hand?

    • Error Prone says:

      You train a Labador in any event, and if that dog don’t hunt, you train another. Ownership is the eye atop the Triangle, editors next, reporters and support staff fungible. It’s Jeff’s dog pack, mixing metaphors.

      What about a rename: The Blue Origin Post?

  6. Old Rapier says:

    Winding back to the pardon itself the timing seemed odd to me. Common sense said wait till a week before the inauguration. I would not be surprised to learn someday he did it now to preempt Trump pardoning Hunter, but not the blanket pardon so leaving the door open for the new DOJ returning to 2014-15 as has been discussed here I think.

    It’s amazing this dog and pony show has gone on for 8 years and the kids from the press room still sit in their party hats, enthralled by the show. as the pony circles with the puppy on his back for the ten millionth time.

  7. Error Prone says:

    Salon, today: “Pete Hegseth’s mother begged him to “get some help” — he joined a misogynist church instead” = https://www.salon.com/2024/12/03/pete-hegseths-mother-begged-him-to-get-some-help—he-joined-a-misogynist-church-instead/

    Salon, yesterday: “Deeply concerned” Democrats ask Biden to prevent Trump from using the military on US soil — Democratic Sens. Elizabeth Warren and Richard Blumenthal warned against Trump’s intended use of military force — https://www.salon.com/2024/12/02/deeply-concerned-democrats-ask-biden-to-prevent-from-using-military-on-us-soil/

    The latter concern of Warren and Bluenthal (and myself), how did Jeff do on that one?

    The two Salon items overlap with your cited New Yorker item of Hegseth deficiencies, in that Hegseth, if confirmed, would be military head, with expectations being he would adhere to whatever policy Trump favors.

  8. Error Prone says:

    Does Bezos’ editors report on the DEA nominee, pardoned DeBartelo’s son-in-law multi milionaire sheriff of the same Tampa Bay county Pam Bondi came from?

    He seems more solid a choice than Kash Patel at FBI, but, low bar.

    Seriously, what did you expect? Your getting what you expected is not surprising.

    Trump 47 will not be subdued. The nominees are just the start. JD having to go to the Senate to sell Gaetz and Hegseth was either an act of extreme trust, or a decision to send JD on a fool’s errand just to see how he’d handle things.

    Or mixing JD with dreck, on a mission to lessen JD’s own press status relative to his own. But the nominations are his. JD was only in sales and marketing.

    • Dark Phoenix says:

      Apparently, the suggestions for nominations across the board are coming from Elmo; he’s all but moved in to Mar-A-Lago so he can attach himself to Donald like a remora and tell him what to think.

      I said that the whole point of the stupid DOGE department bullshit was to turn Elmo into a shadow President, but it appears that Elmo wants to be more direct and simply make sure that Trump constantly hears from him and him alone.

      Also, from the same report, the #1 requirement Elmo has for a candidate is how “mean” they are.

  9. Frank Anon says:

    I so appreciate the hard work of taking the Post to task, but think of the motivations. Bezos is only interested in money, and the Post as a standalone is a huge money-loser. So Bezos sees the Post as, at the very least, a way to curry favor from the corruptionists ready to dole out my tax dollars to those on their team. So it would seem improbable that Bezos would be at all susceptible to persuasion at this point. That leaves the journalists, themselves shattered by the collapse of their industry, with limited job prospects – certainly none at the pay, and access to the world of books and appearances that translate to even more cash that the Post or Times offer. Russian journalists get to stay and get paid well if they sell their journalistic reputations, the honest ones flee the country to report – is that our future, and how do we fight it? I always revert to thinking we need a liberal rich guy, but rich guys are the playing the role of the entire problem. Me, I’m going to just keep screaming until somebody listens or they take me away. But what can we really do to counteract the information war that’s coming?

    • Peterr says:

      Bezos didn’t buy the Post to make money. He bought it as (a) a vanity project, like a big yacht, and (b) to be a political player in DC, to advance his other affairs, like minimal regulations on Amazon or obtain defense contracts.

      Neither (a) nor (b) have anything to do with upholding journalistic standards.

      • Rayne says:

        Similar approach taken by “Neutron Jack” Welch when he was CEO of General Electric. Upon Karl Rove’s advice, GE bought NBC in order to use it to promote tax and other policies favorable to GE.

        GE for quite a number of years paid almost nothing in corporate taxes — that’s the “profit” GE made from NBC.

        • earlofhuntingdon says:

          GE also paid Ronald Reagan for years to give zealously pro-capitalist, anti-govt program pep talks.

          It was Reagan’s Apprentice. It paid well and kept him in the limelight, when his acting career was flagging, and put him in front of thousands of men’s service clubs across the country. It paved the way for his governorship of California and the presidency.

  10. bgThenNow says:

    I saw a YouTube yesterday, not in my history, so I will have to track it back somehow. But it did lay out the extreme focus of Patel on HBiden for years and made it clear, as you have done here, Marcy, that this was the exact reason the pardon was granted and why so worded. Patel has it in for Hunter. I hope there are sufficient Rs to stand up for the Constitution with all of these. Somewhere else I read that there has NEVER been a Democrat heading the FBI. When I find the link I will post it.

  11. Matt Foley says:

    Shucks, where’s that MAGA Christian forgiveness and mercy? I thought this nation was built on Christian principles?

    “I sense a very upbeat spirit with President Trump,”
    –Trump’s faith adviser Robert Jeffress

    If you say so, Bob.

  12. The ProgLib says:

    “Not useful.” Too dry by half, dear doctor. The hell of it is, these misrepresentations you so doggedly drag into light ARE useful to those who want us to live in the darkness they fill with false lights.

    Thanks, as ever, for the lamps you ignite. I would feel so alone if it were not for you and the fine folks who frequent your site.

  13. The Old Redneck says:

    It is hopelessly naive to think Bondi and Patel wouldn’t pursue Hunter relentlessly. Look at what Durham did recently – and during Biden’s administration to boot. His charges were flimsy as hell and resulted in acquittals. But they still cost an enormous amount of time and money and inflicted vast reputational damage. Let’s face it: getting acquitted is just the least bad form of losing.

    The same is true with the destruction of Hunter’s plea deal. The people on the prosecution side are not good faith actors, and Biden was left with having to fight fire with fire.

    This is all pretty straightforward, but you won’t see this perspective in media owned by Bezos.

  14. Matt Foley says:

    Off topic: Dinesh D’Souza finally admits 2000 Mules was a lie.

    I’m sure it was a total coincidence that he waited until after Trump won the election.

  15. ToldainDarkwater says:

    I see this as an aspect of the overall destruction of the newsgathering function that the creation of the internet brought about.

    News in and of itself was never a big seller. Newpapers were sold based more on columns, comics, and classified ads. The internet crushed this form of aggregation, mostly because internet operations don’t have to print things and deliver them.

    And so now we have news organizations – which are not really viable as news-only entities – fighting for clicks, and being owned as sort of “hobby businesses” for billionaires.

    And we have thousands of online outlets relying on advertising and thus clickbait for revenue. This clearly has an influence on what they cover and how they cover it.

  16. Error Prone says:

    Have a look at MSN current listings, Politics, and Top Stories. Using a Hegseth barometer, a self-censorship storm front might be coming there too.

    Microsoft has its billions put into OpenAI, with both Musk and Bezos being competitors, Musk with xAI and Bezos with AWS (vs Azure) and aiming at or having started an AI project. With AI a federal cautionary/regulatory issue, Microsoft has to tread lightly. M$ and Bezos are watching each other, and both watch Musk.

    Bezos has his communication satellite entry in competition with Musk’s Star-Link. And the FCC is set to be headed by a Project 2025 insider, already on FCC and not needing Consent of Congress to be promoted to Chair.

    With Google currently facing break-up litigation, M$ has to have its ears and eyes tuned and focused with its promoting CoPilot AI into Windows Operating System.

    Musk being now close to Trump seems to have others quelled.

    Or am I wrong about MSN not covering Hegseth in a suitable fashion?

  17. Error Prone says:

    Musk is buying his share of Nvidia chips, has his own AI company, is tight with Trump, and is suing Sam Altman, OpenAI and Microsoft including Sherman Act claims, so how Trump’s FTC, SEC and FCC treat Musk’s ventures might be worth EW keeping current on that front.

    See, e.g., Reutrers linking to the online complaint: https://www.reuters.com/technology/musk-expands-lawsuit-against-openai-adding-microsoft-antitrust-claims-2024-11-15/
    https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/legaldocs/mopawwlwypa/Musk%20v%20Altman%20-%20amended%20-%2020241114.pdf

    As a bet, I believe Musk will be allocated a fair share of Nvidia chips rather than being frozen out in any fashion. Musk and Trump mutual back-scratching is expected. Musk has paid his dues.

    How Elon’s DOGE parings fit his ongoing interests will be observable.

    The ultimate self driving solution will be some uniform industry wide individualized vehicle systems, and communicating vehicles with on road immediate neighbors; and Musk is acting accordingly. And if AI is the next big thing, Elon knows it and is there. OpenAI had its origin with Musk and Altman both onboard, things changed.

    It’s not standard EW web food, but worth attention if the future of AI reaches anywhere near projections. LLMs now are fleshed out to where other avenues may be pursued, or some LLM innovation may arise. OT in part, but the theme of Musk and Trumps as bros has multiple dimensions.

  18. Cicero101 says:

    I cancelled my WaPo subscription the day Bezos killed democracy in daylight. But I check their front page each day to keep track of their ongoing corruption. I saw the array of headlines well captured by you. It confirmed my view. There must be thousands like me. More and more will come to see the sly lies the WaPo now tells.

  19. P J Evans says:

    More or less OT:
    Donnie’s nominee for DEA head has withdrawn his name. (Sheriff of HIllsborough county, Florida.)

    • Matt___B says:

      And for all the wrong reasons, due to extreme right-wing pressure on him. He apparently had arrested a church pastor who was holding services at his church at the beginning of the pandemic and that reveals his lack of anti-vax cred that seems to be required by GOP crazies these days…

  20. dopefish says:

    Judge Mark Scarsi, who was presiding over the tax case against Hunter Biden, seems to think President Biden’s statement about Hunter being treated differently from similarly-situated offenders, was bunk.

    The LA Times has a story, as does The Hill and various other outlets.

  21. billtheXVIII says:

    will this pardon have any effect on trumped up charges being brought in state court ? Does H still have any jeopardy there or is he in the clear ?

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