Resurfaced footage fromLarry King Live, appears to show the mother of Tara Reade, who has accused Joe Biden of sexual assault, ask the host for advice about inappropriate behaviour in Washington. In the clip, which is from 1993, the same year that Ms Reade
claims that Mr Biden assaulted her, an unnamed woman asked for advice to
give her daughter.
“I’m wondering what a staffer would do besides go to the press in Washington?” the woman asked, in the clip resurfaced by The Intercept.
This isn't going away.
Joe Biden assaulted Tara Reade. People are getting it. People are also getting that the US corporate media is covering for Joe -- covering for a rapist. You are crazy if you think that, come November, most Democrats are going to vote for Joe. We know he's a rapist and we weren't that crazy about him before we knew he was a rapist.
So was the lack of strong laughter from either episode Thursday. The
big belly laugh that WILL & GRACE should have delivered came
Saturday on, you guessed it, CNN. That's when CNN finally discovered
the Tara Reade story and uttered the words "Tara Reade" on camera for
the first time. It was NEWSROOM and Anna Cabrera was tossing to MJ Lee
to discuss a video segment that bolsters Tara's allegations. "And,
first off, MJ, can you bring us up to speed on the allegation itself."
March 24th, Ryan Grim reported on the allegation for THE INTERCEPT,
March 25th found Katie Halper posting her interview with Tara Reade.
One month later, CNN finally discovers the story and before they can
cite themselves -- that's probably the only reason, the segment aired --
Anna has to offer, 'And, first off, MJ, can you bring us up to speed on
the allegation itself." You know, the one that they never previously
reported on.
Better late than never.
But some honesty would have been appreciated. The segment was about how
Tara's mother had called into CNN's LARRY KING LIVE in 1993 and talked
about her daughter's problem with a US senator. Tara had already said
that happened. But no one wanted to do the work to find the clip --
including CNN. They reported on the clip Saturday . . . one day after
Ryan Grimm had reported on it. Ryan was not mentioned in the CNN
segment.
Monday, April 27, 2020. Support for Tara Reade builds, calls for Joe
Biden to drop out continue, one of the fallen is remembered in
California, protests continue in Iraq, and much more.
Ryan Grim has a scoop at THE INTERCEPT: In interviews with The Intercept, Reade also mentioned that her
mother had made a phone call to “Larry King Live” on CNN, during which
she made reference to her daughter’s experience on Capitol Hill. Reade
told The Intercept that her mother called in asking for advice after
Reade, then in her 20s, left Biden’s office. “I remember it being an
anonymous call and her saying my daughter was sexually harassed and
retaliated against and fired, where can she go for help? I was
mortified,” Reade told me. Reade couldn’t remember the date or the year of the phone call, and
King didn’t include the names of callers on his show. I was unable to
find the call, but mentioned it in an interview with Katie Halper,
the podcast host who first aired Reade’s allegation. After the podcast
aired, a listener managed to find the call and sent it to The Intercept. On August 11, 1993, King aired a program titled, “Washington: The
Cruelest City on Earth?” Toward the end of the program, he introduces a
caller dialing in from San Luis Obispo, California. Congressional
records list August 1993 as Reade’s last month of employment with
Biden’s Senate office, and, according to property records, Reade’s
mother, Jeanette Altimus, was living in San Luis Obispo County. Here is
the transcript of the beginning of the call:
KING: San Luis Obispo, California, hello. CALLER: Yes, hello. I’m wondering what a staffer would do besides go
to the press in Washington? My daughter has just left there, after
working for a prominent senator, and could not get through with her
problems at all, and the only thing she could have done was go to the
press, and she chose not to do it out of respect for him. KING: In other words, she had a story to tell but, out of respect for the person she worked for, she didn’t tell it? CALLER: That’s true.
King’s panel of guests offered no suggestions, and instead the
conversation veered into a discussion of whether any of the men on set
would leak damaging personal information about a rival to the press.
Tara Reade has accused Joe Biden of assault. Along with telling her
brother and a friend in real time (both have verified they were told in
1993 when the assault happened), Tara had stated she told her mother who
has since passed away. Now we have the above.
The allegations are not going away and Tara's case is only getting stronger.
Daniel Ponti (SLATE) explains: A video that has recently come to light from 1993 appears to show the
mother of Tara Reade, who has accused former Vice President Joe Biden of
sexual assault, calling the Larry King Show to discuss problems her daughter experienced while working for “a prominent senator.” The Intercept was first to report on the video and the conservative Media Research Group later quickly published the relevant clip. Reade then confirmed
that it was her mother’s voice on the call. “I’ve been crying because I
haven’t heard my mom’s voice in a few years. So it’s been a little
emotional,” Reade told CNN. “I miss her. I miss her voice.” Reade’s mother died in 2016.
Liz Peek is a name familiar to the community when wowOwow was an active
website (Women On the Web, was what the site was known on). She weighed in on Tara Reade this morning: The liberal media has naturally tried to minimize coverage of the
Reade accusation; she leveled the charge on March 25, but most major
news outlets ignored it until April 12, fully 19 days later. Criticized
over the delay, the New York Times’ editor Dean Baquet explained that
the paper wanted to have enough information about the charge that
readers could “understand” the story. But the Times even
edited its own story about Reade. It originally reported that, “The
Times found no pattern of sexual misconduct by Mr. Biden, beyond the
hugs, kisses and touching that women previously said made them
uncomfortable.” In later editions it dropped the last (and
most damaging) part of the sentence. Baquet explained, “The
campaign thought that the phrasing was awkward and made it look like
there were other instances in which he had been accused of sexual
misconduct.” Since when do newspapers run a story by a “campaign” for
approval? Nonetheless, the new video has given Reade’s
allegations new legs. In part, that is because Joe Biden has a troubling
history of inappropriately touching women – a record his backers
ascribe to his “folksy” manner and old-fashioned “tactile” politics. But,
one also wonders whether Democrats are beginning to face up to what
many have seen for months: Biden is not a strong candidate.
In a recent interview with Vice President Biden, CNN’s Anderson Cooper
discussed a wide array of topics, but one issue that was not addressed
is the allegations aimed against him, This, Tara Reade says, made her
lose respect for the journalist. Speaking to Fox News,
Reade expressed that “it’s shocking that this much time has passed and
that he is an actual nominee for president and they’re not asking the
questions.” Reade added that Biden has “been on ‘Anderson Cooper’ at least twice where he was not asked.” She further questioned, “if this were Donald Trump, would they treat it the same way? If this were Brett Kavanaugh, did they treat it the same way?”
Reade concluded that “it’s politics and political agenda playing a role in objective reporting and asking the question.”
CNN? They finally mentioned Tara on air Saturday. As Ava and I explained in "TV: Journalism isn't supposed to be melodramatic or provoke belly laughs,"
they did so because Ryan Grim reported Friday on the clip from the 1993
episode of CNN's LARRY KING LIVE where Tara's mother called in. But
they forgot to note that Ryan Grim had reported on the clip and instead
acted as though CNN had just suddenly discovered the clip all on their
own.
The Charmed actress may perhaps not feel like a heavyweight
who could inflict injury on a big political vocation. But because
previous Biden staffer Tara Reade alleged that the prospect sexually
assaulted her almost 3 decades ago, McGowan has turn into a 1-woman
military contacting out the hypocrisy of Hollywood and media elites, in
particular Alyssa Milano, who have backed the #MeToo and #TimesUp
actions but are nevertheless supporting the presumptive Democrat
nominee. The actress has now added her voice to the #DropOutBiden groundswell,
demanding this weekend in an excoriating community statement that the
applicant stop the race. “Fellow citizens, use your electric power, use
your social media voice,” McGowan tweeted late Saturday. “Tweet at Joe
Biden to close his marketing campaign efficient right away.” In her assertion, McGowan called out the mainstream media, women’s
groups, LGBTQ information retailers, Oprah Winfrey, and even feminists
like Gloria Steinem for their continued backing of Biden’s marketing
campaign.
As support builds for Tara, the people notice not just the silence of
the media and various celebrities but also the silence of Joe Biden
himself. March 24th is when Katie Halper's interview aired with Tara.
It's now April 27th and Joe Biden has refused to make any statement to
the American people on this topic. He has hid behind campaign staff --
hid behind female campaign staff.
Joe hides a lot. He's got a lot to evade -- that includes the
destruction of Iraq and the many dead. 34-year-old Diego Pongo was
killed in Iraq March 8th. Pongo was a Gunnery Sergeant in the Marines.
WTHR reports: Due to coronavirus restrictions on large gatherings, his family couldn't honor his life with a formal funeral or memorial. After
Diego’s brother Andres and his wife Andrea posted online asking for
support from the community, the city showed up in a big way. Thousands of people drove past the family's home to pay their respects to the fallen hero. Numerous emergency vehicles cruised by the home to honor Sergeant Pongo's life, too.
The Iraq protests are not a flash in the
pan. Rather, they represent a historical turning point for a new
generation that has tired of government ineptitude, politicized
sectarianism, corruption, and an unequal society. As long as these
symptoms persist in Iraqi society, so will the protests. The movement
has been impacted by the Covid-19 pandemic however, though its spirit
continues in smaller sit-ins in Tahrir Square in Baghdad and smaller
gatherings in Nasiriyya and Basra. Those still holding the fort are
helping to sanitize public spaces and distribute provisions to those in
need. The message from these camps remains resolute: Once the threat
from the coronavirus is contained the revolution will be back bigger and
stronger.
Yet two threats represent the greatest
impediments to the movement’s survival. First, repression by the state
and militias continues, including the targeting of activists and
assassinations. Only recently a female activist was killed in Nasiriyya.
Second, the unknown longevity of the coronavirus will test the ability
of the movement to maintain its momentum. For now at least the protests
have certainly been stalled, but they most certainly have not been
silenced.
Meanwhile the third prime minister-designate this year, Mustafa al-Kadhimi, struggles as much as the previous two. MIDDLE EAST MONITOR ONLINE reports:
Shia parties in Iraq have rejected the ministerial nominations of Prime Minister-Designate Mustafa Al-Kadhimi, Al-Araby Al-Jadeed
reported on Sunday. The London-based website said that Al-Kadhimi had
agreed to at least 12 ministerial nominees proposed by the Shia party
officials.
According to one anonymous
Iraqi MP, the leaders of the Shia parties met on Saturday night at the
home of former Prime Minister Nouri Al-Maliki, and then told the
PM-designate that they rejected a lot of his nominees. The MP said that
they would nominate new candidates for each ministry from which
Al-Kadhimi can choose.
The same source
claimed that Al-Maliki, the leader of the State of Law Coalition, and
Hadi Al-Ameri, the head of Al-Fatah Coalition, are the “prominent
obstacles” in the efforts to form a new government in Iraq.