Obama’s
Missing 18 Minutes of Tape
By
Leon H. Wolf
June
17th, 2014
In
order to properly analyze the media’s treatment of the revelation
that hundreds or perhaps thousands of emails sent or received by Lois
Lerner, the key figure in the IRS scandal, along with apparently six
other IRS employees, have been mysteriously lost and cannot be
recovered in response to a subpoena, it is necessary and instructive
to recall the media’s treatment of similar revelations in the
Watergate scandal, which brought down a sitting President.
Recall
that in Watergate, the subject of the scandal essentially boiled down
to dirty (and, as it turned out, completely unnecessary) political
tricks. That is not to suggest that the hotel break-in was not
illegal but rather that it wasn’t an abuse of government power of
any sort. Nor was there any credible suggestion that Nixon himself
was either involved in the break-in, ordered it, or had knowledge of
it at the time it occurred. The sole question upon which the entirety
of the Watergate scandal hinged (and upon which the media fixated for
the better part of two years) was whether Nixon participated in a
cover up of the events after the fact.
One
of the key revelations in the Watergate case was that Nixon had
installed a secret audiotaping system which recorded virtually
everything that occurred in the White House. When this fact was
discovered, the tapes were promptly subpoenaed by Special Prosecutor
Archibald Cox. After a lengthy legal battle which the Administration
ultimately lost, hundreds of hours of tapes were turned over and the
review process began. It was discovered in November 1973 that one of
these tapes contained a gap of approximately 18 1/2 minutes.
The
feeding frenzy created by this unexplained gap in what would
ultimately become over 5000 hours of recorded material is difficult
to explain or even credit in light of the media’s relative
incuriosity over what now appears to be a staggeringly large gap in
emails kept by employees at the center of a scandal that directly
implicates abuse of power of the most pernicious kind. Keep in mind
that Nixon was under no obligation to create or keep the White House
Tapes in the first place; by way of contrast the Lerner emails were
required to be kept and maintained by the Federal Records Act. In
light of the immediate political furor over the actions of the IRS
with respect to its actions in reviewing the 1024 applications of Tea
Party groups, there can be no innocent explanation for such a
systematic failure to maintain records explaining the IRS’s
decision and policy making processes...
Read
the rest of the article at Redstate
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