TruthArchive.ai - Related Video Feed

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
A Substack article claims USAID and the CIA helped orchestrate Trump's impeachment. According to the article, the House of Representatives impeached President Trump in December 2019 based on a memo written by a CIA analyst held over from the Obama White House. The memo relied heavily on a report by the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP), an organization funded by USAID. The article claims OCCRP was created as an extension of the State Department and USAID. The author asserts that USAID is about regime change abroad, a public-facing version of CIA operations. The author concludes that USAID was involved in regime change both abroad and at home, creating a predicate for Trump's impeachment.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
We received unverified narratives from Ukraine, passed them to John Solomon, who then appeared on Fox News with Sean Hannity. Giuliani started collaborating with Russian agents in May or June 2019, spreading lies for Putin. Mainstream media doubted us, but Fox News and some right-wing outlets promoted the false claims. Politicians like Ron Johnson and Pete Sessions also helped push the Russian agenda against Joe Biden.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
A USAID-funded organization, OCCRP, created key evidence that led to President Trump's impeachment. This same organization also participated in the Russiagate hoax. USAID has a broad strategy for information control that includes censorship and control of investigative journalism worldwide. Organizations that participated in violations of the First Amendment should face consequences. Weaponizing organizations like DHS, FBI, and CISA constitutes treasonous regime change activities redirected against the American people and our representatives.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 1 states that a CIA analyst's whistleblower complaint, which led to President Trump's impeachment, relied on evidence from the USAID-funded OCCRP. Speaker 1 claims OCCRP also participated in the Russiagate hoax, and that USAID has a broad strategy for information control, including censorship and control of investigative journalism worldwide. Speaker 1 believes organizations like CISA that participated in First Amendment violations should be shut down, even if they perform valuable functions. Speaker 0 suggests government funding of foreign regime change is known, but questions if it's "borderline treason" when organizations protecting the U.S. undermine the government. Speaker 1 agrees, stating that weaponizing DHS, FBI, and CISA for regime change activities against the American people is "treasonous" and remains unresolved.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
After the war on terror, counterterrorism and counterinsurgency tactics were turned against the American people following the 2016 populist revolutions. We saw the Russiagate conspiracy and efforts to censor conflicting opinions, mirroring tactics used abroad for regime change. The Hunter Biden laptop situation exemplifies proactive influence operations and the intelligence community's mobilization. USAID has been taking over independent investigative journalism in Europe and worldwide to control information. A CIA analyst's whistleblower complaint, which led to the Trump impeachment, relied on evidence from the USAID-funded OCCRP. USAID views information control holistically. The FBI weaponized the Aspen Institute to manipulate the perception of the Hunter Biden laptop. USAID is also training NGOs to demand censorship.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
After the War on Terror, the US and UK military's counterterrorism and counterinsurgency tactics were turned against the American people after the populist revolutions of 2016. This included efforts such as Russiagate and elaborate schemes to control the truth through censorship. The Hunter Biden laptop situation demonstrated proactive influence operations and the mobilization of the intelligence community. USAID has been overseeing a takeover of independent investigative journalism in Europe and worldwide to control information. A CIA analyst's whistleblower complaint that led to President Trump's impeachment used evidence from a USAID-funded organization, OCCRP. USAID's broader strategy includes censorship and controlling investigative journalism. USAID also uses the Aspen Institute to manipulate the media's perception, exemplified by the Hunter Biden laptop case. They train NGOs to flag misinformation secretly, and strategically leak intelligence to control news publications.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The whistleblower revealed that the CIA intervened to stop the Justice Department from investigating a major funder of Hunter Biden. This suggests Hunter Biden's ties to a sensitive CIA operation in Ukraine may be the reason for his protection. Various key players, including politicians like Joe Biden and Mitt Romney, along with organizations like the National Democratic Institute and the Atlantic Council, are linked to this complex web of interests aimed at shifting the European gas market away from Russia towards NATO. The involvement of CIA-affiliated individuals and organizations indicates a broader agenda at play in shielding Hunter Biden from scrutiny.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
A former NPR senior business editor worked at NPR for over 25 years. A congressmen questioned whether NPR is biased. The witness stated she has never seen political bias determine editorial decisions. The congressman cited the former editor's claim of 87 registered Democrats and zero Republicans in DC editorial positions at NPR. The witness said they don't track voter registration but found the claim concerning if accurate. The congressman referenced the former editor's claim that NPR "hitched their wagon" to Adam Schiff on the Trump-Russia story, interviewing him 25 times, and that Russiagate faded after the Mueller report. The witness couldn't confirm this. Regarding the Hunter Biden laptop story, the congressman quoted an editor who dismissed it. The witness stated current editorial leadership believes that was a mistake. The congressman then stated that NPR became fervent members of the team natural origin even declaring that the lab leak was debunked by scientists. The congressman concluded NPR was "0 for 3" on big stories but the witness maintained NPR is nonpartisan.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Biden and the media claimed that Shokin was corrupt and had to be dismissed, but no charges of corruption have been proven against him. Shokin believes the truth lies in the transcripts of Biden's conversations with Poroshenko. He alleges that Biden illegally influenced foreign officials to protect his son and engage in illegal money laundering. One American News verified Shokin's claims with a sworn affidavit to an Austrian court, accusing Biden of interfering with ongoing investigations. To learn more, watch part 3 of One America News investigates debunking the Adam Schiff case for impeachment. I'm Chanel Bian reporting from Washington.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
This is USAID's Strengthening Transparency and Accountability Through Investigative Reporting program for Europe and Eurasia. USAID funding is $20,000,000. They don't report on kittens being saved, but rather corruption. This is all built under capacity building, meaning pumping up the blob's assets. With this $20,000,000 investment, at least $4,500,000,000 in fines were levied against targets. The head of the OCCRP said it's now over $10,000,000,000, a 20000% return on investment because all these dollars were returned to government coffers. Additionally, there were 548 policy changes by the government or actions by civil society and the private sector. They proudly sponsored hit piece journalism to ruin people's lives and go after political targets in order to change the policies of foreign governments from the inside.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Svetlana Lokova recounts a years-spanning, shadowy influence operation that she says began long before the public Russiagate narrative took hold and continued to unfold through high-level intelligence and political circles in the United States and the United Kingdom. She argues that a coordinated conspiracy, involving American and British intelligence figures, political operatives, and foreign partners, was designed to undermine Donald Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign, demonize him in the public sphere, and ultimately reshape U.S. politics in ways that persist to today. She explains that the conspiracy starts with the idea of weaponizing Russia as a pretext to derail Trump. In September 2015, Hillary Clinton’s circle tied to Strobe Talbott and to London-based figures including Richard Dearlove and Christopher Andrew decides to dust off “the old Russian handbook” and pursue a plan to run with Russia as the central smokescreen. Svetlana notes that General Michael Flynn, then head of the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) under Obama, was already engaging with Russia on matters of security and terrorism, and that Flynn’s Moscow trip in December 2015, arranged through the DIA, became a focal point of later accusations. She emphasizes that the trip was conducted under normal security procedures, with defensive briefings and debriefings required for someone of Flynn’s level of clearance. A key tie-in is the Cambridge operation she herself experienced. In 2015 she was an academic at Cambridge University, where she formed connections with MI6’s Richard Dearlove, Cambridge-based MI6-linked figures, and CIA asset Stefan Halper, who had Cambridge cover as a professor. She describes what she calls “bump” encounters—unexpected introductions that later produced routine reports. One such meeting introduced her to John McLaughlin, then acting CIA director, who allegedly expressed admiration for Russia and who later became a conduit for information within the FBI and CIA. Alan Collar, a London-based FBI liaison (Ligat) and a contact to Cambridge, also emerges as a pivotal figure; Svetlana recalls that Collar later sought to have Halper’s help in various capacities, including a potential PhD placement at Cambridge. Svetlana underscores how the operation leveraged a web of relationships: Christopher Steele in Britain, Halper in the U.S., McLaughlin, and MI6 heads like Dearlove, all part of what she describes as a “newsroom-to-FBI-to-CIA” loop. She explains that Steele and Halper acted as confidential informants for the FBI and CIA, with Steele’s dossier and Halper’s reports forming the backbone of what would become the Crossfire Hurricane investigation. She contends that the plan was not simply to accuse Trump of wrongdoing but to create a narrative of foreign interference—Russian involvement used to undermine Trump’s legitimacy and to give cover for the political takes of the Clinton-Soros alliance. The narrative continues with the infamous 2016 timeline. Svetlana recounts how the Hillary Clinton campaign, with Soros backing and with John Podesta’s circle, leveraged a “two-pronged” approach: demonize Trump through a public narrative of Russian interference and simultaneously seed a parallel set of claims about Trump campaign contacts with Russian intelligence. The plan, she says, was documented in internal emails circulated through Soros-linked channels and high-level Clinton aides. An August 2016 Oval Office meeting reportedly included Barack Obama, Susan Rice, James Comey, and John Brennan; Brennan allegedly noted that Hillary’s plan to distract from her email scandal involved tying Trump to Russia and ordered or supported steps to surface contacts between Trump advisers and Russian intelligence. This, she says, culminated in the opening of Crossfire Hurricane, justified by Downer’s May 2016 meeting with George Papadopoulos in London, which fed the FBI’s launch of an overarching inquiry into the Trump campaign. Svetlana emphasizes the mechanics of the operation: a cascade of “two-source” corroboration that failed to exist in reality but was manufactured through coordinated reporting. Stefan Halper and Christopher Steele allegedly provided separate but harmonized lines to the FBI and to journalists (for example, Washington Post and New York Times), with Fusion GPS coordinating research and payments, and with journalists feeding stories into the media while the FBI used those articles as cover to justify surveillance. She notes that the Steele dossier and Halper reports described contacts with Russian figures and asserted Kremlin orders, even while evidence mountains suggested the opposite or were non-existent. The operation allegedly relied on “ambiguous” or “dual-source” reporting to maintain plausible deniability and to keep multiple actors downstream of a single fabrication. Svetlana also describes internal institutional dynamics. She recounts that the Cambridge network included Gina Haspel (then head of the London CIA station) and Mike Morell (a senior CIA official) who allegedly used Cambridge as a front to pursue operations with university cover. The effort, she says, involved the use of “color revolutions” metaphors and methods—funding, organizing demonstrations, and controlling media narratives—through a transatlantic network that included British intelligence (MI6), American agencies (CIA, FBI, DHS), and at times Ukrainian actors. She asserts that the aim was not merely to affect the 2016 election but to create a “fog of war” (as she calls it) to obscure the truth, with the ultimate objective of removing Trump from power or preventing his influence in foreign policy. Two focal consequences are highlighted. First, the emergence of the Russia-collusion frame itself, built on forged or misrepresented evidence about Trump’s alleged ties to Russia and to Russian elites. Second, the use of this frame to drive real-world investigations, media coverage, and political pressure—culminating in the Mueller investigation and attempts to impeach or remove Trump from office. She contends that the Crossfire Hurricane investigation, and later the intelligence community assessment that purported Russian interference and Trump’s supposed collaboration, were built on manipulated or false premises, with the principal architects’ fingerprints on the evidence and the dissemination of the narrative across intelligence and media channels. In her discussion of the Mar-a-Lago documents and the Florida case surrounding John Brennan and other co-conspirators, Svetlana asserts that declassification by President Trump of Crossfire Hurricane documents demonstrated both the existence of the conspiracy and government overreach. She repeats a central point: the documents show a plan written down by Brennan and other aides to tie Trump to Russia, demonize him, and justify an ongoing investigation to undermine his presidency. She notes that the same players who orchestrated the scheme—Halper, Steele, Downer, Brennan, Clapper, Comey, and others—were allegedly involved in a broader pattern of off-the-books operations, funding, and information leaks designed to influence U.S. politics and foreign policy outcomes, with foreign allies in Britain and elsewhere participating in the broader maneuver. Svetlana’s overarching message is that accountability is possible but contingent on public attention and political will. She points to subpoenas and grand jury activity around Brennan and others as indications that the origins of the Russia investigation are formally being examined. She stresses that, despite the persistence of the conspiracy narrative, documents and testimony could reveal the truth behind the orchestrated campaign to disrupt the Trump presidency. She calls on the American public to demand accountability and to remain vigilant about the institutions and actors involved in what she describes as a continuing conspiracy, from Crossfire Hurricane to the later narratives surrounding Mueller and impeachment efforts, and into current political disputes. The dialogue closes with a personal appeal from Svetlana to the audience and to Lara Logan: the need to push for transparency and for due process, to scrutinize the roles of the people who allegedly manufactured and propagated the Russia collusion claims, and to insist on accountability for those who oversaw or participated in actions she frames as treasonous or seditious. She credits Lara Logan for ongoing coverage and expresses gratitude for the support of viewers and readers who seek an unflinching account of events, urging continued public scrutiny and a demand for principled governance.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
This is a wild story about the impeachment of President Trump. A CIA analyst, leftover from the Obama White House, wrote the memo that initiated the impeachment proceedings. This memo relied heavily on a report from the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP), an organization initially funded by USAID. USAID's role is significant because, while often associated with regime change abroad, this situation reveals a similar action domestically. This mirrors the blowback seen from censorship tools used abroad and then implemented domestically. The involvement of USAID and the CIA in Trump's impeachment is a serious revelation, and it's just one of many expected to come to light soon. For more details, check out my Substack after the show.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
As a White House whistleblower revealed, I was impeached in December 2019 for allegedly abusing presidential power. I was accused of withholding military aid to Ukraine, pressuring them to investigate Joe and Hunter Biden. The whistleblower's complaint relied on a report by the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP). The OCCRP report was crucial to the Democrats' impeachment claim, alleging I dispatched Giuliani to pressure Ukraine to interfere in the 2020 election. The OCCRP has close ties to the US government, taking direction from USAID. USAID approved OCCRP's annual work plan and new hires. OCCRP admitted to influencing regime changes in other countries. The agency received $20 million from USAID to support investigative journalism in Europe and Eurasia.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
In 2018, I got involved in digging up dirt on Joe Biden in Ukraine through Rudy Giuliani. Despite efforts, no evidence against Biden was found, only Russian disinformation. Biden was part of an anti-corruption campaign. The focus shifted to spreading lies about Biden when valid information ran out. John Solomon and Rudy Giuliani pushed unverified narratives on Fox News.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 1 claims that most past presidents for the last 20 years have been aware of corruption within USAID but chose not to act, alleging that many were complicit. Joe Biden, as head of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, oversaw USAID, which allegedly funded Burisma. Barack Obama's mother worked for USAID, and the Bush family also has connections. Speaker 1 suggests the Trump revolution challenged this system, which is why there was such a strong reaction against him. Speaker 1 further alleges that USAID funded the OCCRP, providing $20 million to journalists who then found damaging information on Rudy Giuliani. This information was purportedly used as the basis for the impeachment of President Donald Trump in 2019.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
A Substack piece alleges USAID and the CIA helped orchestrate Trump's impeachment. According to the speaker, a CIA analyst leftover from the Obama White House wrote the memo that led to the impeachment based on hearsay. This memo relied heavily on a report by the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP), an organization funded by USAID. The OCCRP was allegedly created as an extension of the State Department and USAID. The speaker claims USAID was about regime change abroad, a public-facing version of covert CIA operations. The speaker suggests that, similar to censorship tools used abroad being brought home, the predicate for Trump's impeachment was created abroad. The speaker believes this is one of many revelations to come.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
A former NPR senior business editor worked there for over 25 years. A Congressman questioned a witness about bias at NPR, citing the editor's story claiming 87 registered Democrats and zero Republicans in DC editorial positions. The witness said they don't track voter registration but found the claim concerning if accurate. The Congressman referenced the editor's claim that NPR "hitched its wagon" to Adam Schiff on the Trump-Russia story, interviewing him 25 times, and that Russiagate faded after the Mueller report. The witness couldn't confirm this. The Congressman mentioned an NPR editor dismissing the Hunter Biden laptop story as a distraction, which the witness agreed was a mistake. He also cited the editor's claim that NPR became fervent members of the "natural origin" team regarding COVID's origin, declaring the lab leak theory debunked. The Congressman stated NPR was "0 for 3" on big stories but the witness maintained NPR is not politically biased and is a nonpartisan organization.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
As a CIA analyst, the so-called whistleblower in the White House used evidence created by the USAID-funded OCCRP, for the impeachment of President Trump. USAID has a broad strategy for information control that includes censorship and controlling investigative journalism worldwide. Agencies that participated in violations of the First Amendment, like CISA, should face consequences. Cybersecurity is important, but shouldn't be undermined by censorship. It is borderline treason when organizations meant to protect our country undermine our own government. Weaponizing DHS, FBI, and CISA is treasonous if used for regime change activities against the American people. We developed these tactics abroad, and now they're being used against us, which is shocking and unresolved.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
It turns out the federal government might be more corrupt than we thought. Politico, known for dismissing the Hunter Biden laptop story, apparently had a "technical error" that prevented paychecks from going out. Some joked it was due to Trump freezing USAID funding. But, digging deeper, it seems Politico received millions from USAID and the government, making it a taxpayer-funded propaganda outlet. Roughly $30 million was traced to Politico, with estimates suggesting 90% of political subscriptions are fake or taxpayer-funded. The investigation uncovered $473 million from USAID to over 4,000 left-wing media outlets, including the New York Times and BBC. This money also funded boycotts against non-left media, like Elon Musk's X. The concern is what the government gets for these millions, election interference, state-funded propaganda, and a censorship industrial complex. This allows the left to censor alternative voices as misinformation, covering everything from COVID to war in Ukraine, and the radical left's corruption.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The discussion centers on OCCRP (the Corruption Reporting Project), its funding, and how it operates as “mercenary media” for state interests, particularly the U.S. State Department and USAID. The speakers argue that OCCRP is not independent journalism but a State Department–funded operation that produces hit pieces to seize assets, indict officials, and press regime change across multiple countries. Key findings and claims discussed - OCCRP’s funding and control: The group is described as receiving substantial funding from the United States government through USAID and the State Department, with other sources including Open Society (Soros), Microsoft, and NED. A recurring claim is that half of OCCRP’s funding comes from the U.S. government, that USAID and the State Department actually control hiring and firing decisions of top personnel, and that a “cooperative agreement” structure channels editorial direction through government-approved annual work plans and key personnel (including the editor‑in‑chief or chief of party). - Financial returns and impact: It is claimed that USAID boasted in internal documents that paying $20 million to independent journalists yielded $4.5 billion in fines and assets seized, and that mercenary reporting led to 548 policy changes, 21 resignations or removals (including a president and a prime minister), 456 arrests or indictments, and roughly $10 billion in assets returned to government coffers across various countries (Central Europe, Eastern Partnership, Western Balkans, etc.). A related claim is that total spending over OCCRP’s history amounts to about $50 million, with returns rising from $4.5 billion in 2022 to about $10 billion by 2024. - Geographic scope and targets: The reporting funded or influenced by the State Department covered broad regions—Germany, Poland, Slovakia, the Czech Republic, Ukraine, Moldova, Georgia, Armenia, Belarus, and the Western Balkans—extending to the Eastern Partnership and beyond. The pieces are described as having led to investigations and asset seizures that targeted political enemies of state authorities. - The role of “mercenary media” and independence claims: The speakers repeatedly contrast the claimed editorial independence of OCCRP with the reality of donor influence. They describe OCCRP as “mercenary media for the state,” funded to generate narratives and political outcomes favorable to U.S. foreign policy. They challenge the notion of independent journalism by noting the requirement that key personnel and annual work plans be approved or vetoed by USAID, and that there are “strings attached” to cooperative agreements that go beyond simple gifts. - Editorial process and donor influence: The conversation scrutinizes how the annual work plan, subgrants, and editor-level appointments are subject to USAID oversight. It is noted that, even when OCCRP claims editorial independence, the top editors must navigate donor influence, and in practice, the content may be shaped to align with funders’ interests. The argument is that without donor influence, OCCRP would not exist or would not continue to receive large sums of money. - The rhetoric of independence: Several speakers underscore the paradox of insisting on “independent media” while acknowledging that funding, governance, and personnel decisions are shaped by U.S. government agencies, with additional support from Soros/Open Society and corporate donors like Microsoft. They juxtapose “independence” rhetoric with admissions of entanglement with government and intelligence entities, and their discussions touch on the historical context of U.S. public diplomacy, the U.S. Information Agency, and the evolution of state-driven media influence. - Historical funding trajectory and organizations: The first funds reportedly came from sources such as the United Nations Democracy Fund, with later support from INL (the U.S. Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement) and a transition to USAID administration. The participants discuss the possibility that multiple U.S. government agencies (State Department, USAID, NED, INL) and private sponsors (Open Society, Microsoft) contribute to OCCRP’s budget, with the U.S. government described as the largest donor at various points, though not always claimed as the single dominating donor. - “Capacity building” and the machinery of influence: The conversation highlights “capacity building” as a common label for donor-driven expansion of media assets, civil society groups, and investigative journalism networks. They connect these efforts to broader U.S. democracy promotion programs and to the use of investigative reporting as a tool for law enforcement and political leverage—where journalists may gather information and feed it to prosecutors and foreign policy objectives. - Individual positions and disclosures: Several speakers identify named individuals (e.g., Drew Sullivan, Shannon McGuire) and discuss their roles, funding pathways, and concerns about editorial control. The dialogue reveals tensions between the journalists’ professional aims and the political-economic machinery enabling their work. Cumulative impression - The transcript presents a frontal, highly confrontational critique of OCCRP as a state-funded, state-influenced enterprise that positions itself as independent journalism while enabling significant political and legal actions abroad. The speakers claim conspicuously high returns on investment for government funding (billions of dollars in assets seized and numerous political changes) and describe the cooperative funding structure as funneling editorial output toward U.S. foreign policy objectives. They argue that independence is a veneer masking a structured, donor-driven process with formal approval channels for personnel and plans, and with direct implications for how narratives are shaped and which targets are pursued. They also connect OCCRP’s practices to broader historical patterns of U.S. public diplomacy, intelligence collaboration, and the global propaganda ecosystem.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Since my arrest in 2019, I've tried to share the truth that Trump, Giuliani, and others lied about the Bidens to help Trump win in 2020. Despite a year of searching, I found no evidence of Biden corruption in Ukraine. Even Ukrainian officials deny wrongdoing. The only false info came from Russia. The impeachment is based on lies spread by Trump and his allies.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker claims that USAID and the CIA helped orchestrate Trump's impeachment. According to the speaker, the House of Representatives impeached President Trump in December 2019 based on a memo written by a CIA analyst held over from the Obama administration. The memo relied heavily on a report by the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP), an organization initially funded by USAID. The speaker alleges that USAID was involved in regime change abroad and, like censorship tools used abroad, helped create a predicate for Trump's impeachment. The speaker suggests this is one of many revelations to come.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The FBI's politicized hacks aimed to bring down Donald Trump, with the help of Hillary Clinton's campaign. The report revealed that Trump's political opponents provided leads for the investigation, relying on a fabricated dossier. While we reported on this, other media outlets downplayed it. Unfortunately, there were no consequences for those involved in the Crossfire Hurricane operation. In fact, they were emboldened and repeated their actions in 2022, this time protecting Hunter Biden.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
A Substack article claims USAID and the CIA helped orchestrate Trump's impeachment. According to the article, the House of Representatives impeached President Trump in December 2019 based on a memo written by a CIA analyst held over from the Obama White House. The memo relied on a report by the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP), an organization initially funded by USAID as an extension of the State Department. The article asserts that USAID is about regime change abroad, a public-facing version of covert CIA operations. The speaker suggests that just as censorship tools used abroad were brought back home, these organizations created a predicate for Trump's impeachment.

Breaking Points

DEEP STATE MEDIA: News Outlet OVER 50% Funded By US Gov
reSee.it Podcast Summary
The Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP) is a major investigative journalism organization behind significant projects like the Panama Papers and Pandora Papers, involving over 200 journalists in 60 countries. A recent investigation revealed that over 50% of OCCRP's funding comes from the U.S. government, primarily through USAID. OCCRP argues that this funding has no serious strings attached, promoting freedom and democracy. However, critics point out that government funding can influence journalism, including the ability to veto top hires. The discussion highlights the implications of U.S. funding on investigative reporting, particularly regarding foreign adversaries, and contrasts OCCRP's approach with that of WikiLeaks, which faced severe U.S. government backlash.
View Full Interactive Feed