Who wrote the Roy Moore dossier?



November 15, 2017

By Cliff Kincaid The so-called Trump Dossier, financed by the Hillary campaign and provided by the KGB through a former British intelligence agent, has fizzled out. It has been supplanted by the Moore Dossier, concocted by Washington Post reporters working for their billionaire owner, P.T. Barnum-like Jeff Bezos. This variation of the ploy, with a new target, seems to have legs. Many Republicans and conservatives are falling for it.But is there really any reason to believe the Moore Dossier has any more validity than the Trump Dossier?A big red flag appeared when feminist attorney Gloria Allred raised her head in the Roy Moore case. Suddenly another accuser surfaces, under suspicious circumstances, and even "conservative" Republicans are running for the hills. It stinks.Why do the liberals need the Southern Poverty Law Center when Republicans will pin "guilty as charged" labels on conservatives?Look at Colorado Republican Senator Cory Gardner and the rest. Senate Republicans are so scared of being charged with a "war on women" that they have decided to wage war, with no moral or legal basis, on the GOP Senate candidate in Alabama. They deny him due process and have accepted unverified claims of sexual harassment against him. Some are threatening to expel him from the Senate if he wins.No wonder these Senators can't get anything done. They are too busy posing for the cameras and looking politically correct. Why don't they just put on dresses and pretend to be feminists? Perhaps this will win them the transgender vote.The Washington Post, the source of the charges, is a partisan Democratic paper which thinks billionaire hedge fund operator and Democratic Party money bags George Soros is a blessing for America. It said so in an editorial. Yet this paper is dictating what Republicans should be saying and doing in the Moore case.The Post hates morality and traditional values. Its religion columnist, Washington insider and party-giver Sally Quinn, believed in the occult and admits casting hexes on her enemies.The Washington Post once published a Pulitzer Prize-winning story about a child heroin addict that turned out to be a total lie. Google the name "Janet Cooke." Her editor was Watergate reporter Bob Woodward. Perhaps she used a Ouija board to write her stories.Referring to the Post's initial story on Judge Moore, legal expert and commentator Gualberto Garcia Jones says, "The obvious question is who informed The Washington Post of the allegations? And who located the women and put them in touch with Washington Post reporters?" He adds, "It is simply impossible to believe that their simultaneous allegations happened organically after nearly 40 years of silence."The follow-up accusations, fed to the media by Gloria Allred, make the whole thing even more questionable.Garcia Jones writes , "The Washington Post's political motivations to destroy the reputation of Judge Roy Moore are evident and the tactics used against him uncannily resemble those used against President Donald Trump. A month before the presidential election of 2016, The Washington Post published accusations of sexual misconduct against candidate Donald Trump while endorsing his Democratic opponent, Hillary Clinton."Yes, indeed, why not probe the motives of the paper that helped usher Barack Hussein Obama into the presidency and has been working to destroy the Trump presidency? The Post had endorsed Moore's opponent while working on the hit piece against Moore. The same modus operandi was evident in the Trump case.It didn't work with Trump, but it looks like it could work with Moore. Which means that if they destroy Moore, they will return to undermining Trump, probably with new sex charges. Or perhaps they will try something else. The new Janet Cookes at the paper are probably working on that right now.We're heard the mantra about frightened women scared to take on a powerful man with sex charges. But Moore has been powerful for decades in Alabama. Only now they decide to come forward, when Moore is leading in the polls and about to become a Senator on the national stage?What's surprising is the reaction of Texas Republican Senator Ted Cruz, whose father was charged with being involved in the assassination of President Kennedy. Cruz says, in the case of Roy Moore, that "as long as these allegations remain unrefuted," Cruz is "not able to urge the people of Alabama to support his candidacy." How does one refute charges from decades ago, for which there is no evidence in the first place? You would think Cruz would have more sympathy for Moore, considering that Cruz's father was unfairly targeted with the JFK allegations. How is Moore supposed to "refute" the charges against him? Go back in time in a time machine to take pictures?Cruz, a lawyer, says Moore "needs to come forward with strong, persuasive rebuttal demonstrating" that the charges are untrue. I am not a lawyer, but since when does the accused have to prove his innocence about charges from decades ago concerning his dating habits? I thought the burden of proof was on the accusers.Do Moore's accusers have anything other than a signature on a high school yearbook? So far, they rely on claims, accusations, and charges. These are easy to make. Tears can be faked. All of this is supposed to carry more weight than his decades of service to the cause of traditional values and God-given rights?Garcia Jones says, "It should come as no surprise that people like the editors of National Review and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell would publicly convict Judge Roy Moore in less than 12 hours solely on one article published by a politically partisan publication."True. It's no surprise. These are cowardly "conservatives" and Republicans. In McConnell's case, he's actually an enemy of Moore, having supported one of his Republican opponents in the primary race.Why does McConnell fear Moore? As Garcia Jones told me in a phone interview, Moore is a doer, not just a talker. Moore actually gets things done. Because of that, he has made real enemies, such as those in the Southern Poverty Law Center. Moore can be expected to actually force conservatives in the Senate to do something about the issues we face as a nation. He will embarrass McConnell & Company.Moore would be more than justified, if he wins the Senate seat in the face of this bipartisan assault, to go to Washington and fight to get his reputation back. Let Moore challenge his accusers, in and out of the liberal media and the Republican Party, to produce the evidence against him. Let's get to the bottom of this.© Cliff Kincaid