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Tonight: The single most bizarre aspect of the 2024 election is not that Kamala Harris somehow became the Democratic nominee without campaigning or receiving a single vote – although that is beyond bizarre. Instead, it is that her campaign has clearly decided on a strategy of saying absolutely nothing of substance, not expressing a single policy view beyond culture war tripe, and just completely refusing to sit with any journalist for an unscripted interview where she just answers basic questions, let alone do so with one who is minimally adversarial.
We've devoted several shows over the last month to examining the anti-democratic arrogance and utter contempt for the voter that drives that choice – just refuse to say what you believe while running for president. But if you want to debate what is actually the single most bizarre aspect of this election, it may no longer be that Kamala is choosing to remain a completely blank slate, refusing to express a single view about any policy position, including the pending crisis in the Middle East. Instead, many in the media not all, but many, and especially the so-called liberal or progressive media, are now actively and explicitly defending her refusal to speak to journalists or answer basic questions about little things like what she believes, what her policies would be, how she would handle domestic and foreign policy, little things like that. That takes some real devotion to partisanship to call yourself a journalist and then justify a presidential candidate's choice to take no questions. But that's exactly what we're witnessing.
Then: one of the most overtly corrupt things I've seen in American corporate journalism – and I know that's obviously saying a great deal since I've seen a lot of overtly corrupt things there – took place in the lead-up to the 2020 election. I'm not talking about how the media united with the CIA to spread the blatant lie that reporting based on the Hunter Biden laptop was Russian disinformation, although that indeed does rank very high on my list. Instead, it happened when media outlets led by The Washington Post and others who followed announced that they were going to change and even abandon one of the longest-standing and most central rules of journalism, namely, that you publish anything and everything that is one, authentic, and two, in the public interest. They said: from now on, even if the material that we get meets those criteria, even if we know it's authentic and it's in the public interest, we still won't publish those materials – even if they shed critical light on a presidential candidate – if we find out that the material came from a foreign source and was designed to influence our elections.
That remarkable and radical change was instituted needless to say, in 2020, to protect Joe Biden – the media wanted to avoid being forced to do their jobs as they sort of did in 2016 when they reported on the revelations about Hillary Clinton from the DNC emails that many people now say came from Russian hackers, and they wanted to say, oh, if this happens again, and even if we get a huge trove of documents, we know are authentic, we're still not going to publish them if they came from a foreign source trying to influence our election.
Now, by all reports, they have created a huge dilemma for themselves as they seem to have genuinely received massive amounts of hacked emails from the Trump campaign, which, you know, they're so eager to publish. Now they have to find a way to work around the rule they created in 2020 to protect Democrats. That was the most explicit radical departure I've seen from the most basic precepts of journalism. We'll tell you about that.
And finally, we have repeatedly reported on the authoritarian judge on the Supreme Court who oversees Brazil's censorship regime and harshly punishes dissent with criminal investigation and even prison. His name is Alexandre de Moraes and even The New York Times, before the 2022 election in Brazil, warned twice about how menacing this judge's behavior has become to basic democracy and core civil liberties. Yesterday, working with Brazil's largest newspaper Folha, of São Paulo, I began publishing what will be a very lengthy series of reports revealing much of what actually happened inside the chambers of that judge. That's because we obtained a huge archive of documents from his chambers, more than six gigabytes. I want to explain a little bit about what is happening there in terms of this reporting and the reaction. As we have said many times before, many countries in the West, including the U.S., use Brazil as a laboratory to see how far they can go with online censorship regimes and other forms of repression. That was one of the major reasons Elon Musk, a few months ago, so vocally denounced this judge and it's why this platform, Rumble, is not available in Brazil, because of the avalanche of censorship orders. And what is happening in Brazil is being seen by the EU and therefore the U.S., as an important laboratory for censorship. And we'll tell you all about that.