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22 Aug 19:30

Paul Manafort Found Guilty On 8 Counts, Mistrial Declared On Other Ten

by Tyler Durden

Jurors in the trial of former Paul Manafort have reached a verdict on eight of the 18 counts against the former Trump aide. After a day of passing notes to the Judge, they said they were unable to reach a decision on the other 10. 

Manafort was found guilty on all five tax fraud counts, while the other three are related to his failure to disclose foreign bank accounts and bank fraud.

The verdict comes at the end of two and a half weeks of testimony, which included 27 witnesses and 88 documents submitted into evidence. Earlier, the jury asked Judge T.S. Ellis earlier in the day what would happen if they couldn't reach a verdict on a count, and Ellis told them to keep working on it. 

"If we cannot come to a consensus for a single count, how can we fill in the verdict sheet?" the jurors asked in the note. 

"It is your duty to agree upon a verdict if you can do so," said Ellis, who encouraged each juror to make their own decisions on each count. If some were in the minority on a decision, however, they could think about the other jurors' conclusions. 

Give "deference" to each other and "listen to each others' arguments," said Ellis, adding "You're the exclusive judges ... Take all the time which you feel is necessary."

Manafort stands accused of 18 counts of tax evasion, bank fraud and obfuscating foreign bank counts in the first trial brought against him by special counsel Robert Mueller as part of his investigation into Russian meddling in the 2016 election - despite the charges stemming from his work for the then-Ukrainian governing party. 

Prosecutors claim that Manafort raked in $65 million into foreign bank accounts between 2010 and 2014, while spending over $15 million on luxury purchases over the same time frame - including high-end clothing, real estate and other items such as this $15,000 ostrich jacket.

Manafort faced up to 305 years in prison if convicted on all charges. 

Commenting on the conviction, Trump's attorney Rudy Giuliani said "There is no allegation of any wrongdoing against the President in the government's charges against Mr. Cohen. It is clear that, as the prosecutor noted, Mr. Cohen's actions reflect a pattern of lies and dishonesty over a significant period of time.”

20 Aug 18:05

How bad is the West Nile Virus this year in Louisiana?

by Nick Wooten, Shreveport Times

Louisiana has had more recorded cases this year than in 2017, but the numbers are far lower than the peak in 2012.

      
20 Aug 18:05

Woman accused of stealing donations for family of slain child

by Robert Rhoden
Tammy Crews, 46, told authorities she used the money to support her drug addiction.
20 Aug 18:04

Manafort trial: Jury deliberates for third day without verdict as Trump hits out at Mueller probe

by Independent reporters
Former Trump campaign chairman faces 18 criminal charges
20 Aug 18:04

Facebook Apologizes for Removing Conservative Prager University’s Page

by Accuracy In Media

Facebook, which has been accused by conservatives of censoring or removing posts, apologized on Friday for doing exactly that to Prager University. According to PragerU’s tweet Friday, Facebook deleted at least two videos after labeling them “hate speech.” BREAKING: We're being heavily censored on @Facebook. Our last 9 posts are reaching 0 of our 3 […]

The post Facebook Apologizes for Removing Conservative Prager University’s Page appeared first on Accuracy in Media.

20 Aug 18:03

Four Killed, 54 Shot During Weekend in Chicago

by Infowars.com
3-year-old boy among the wounded as city's rampant violence continues
20 Aug 18:03

Va. governor calls special session to redraw districts

by Michael Burke
Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam (D) on Monday called a special session on Aug. 30 for the Virginia General Assembly to redraw House of Delegates districts that a court said were gerrymandered."It is in the public inter...
20 Aug 18:02

Louisiana college students start new year with fee hikes

by Melinda Deslatte, ASSOCIATED PRESS

BATON ROUGE – When thousands of Louisiana college students return to classes this week, many of them face another round of boosted costs, as the price tag for getting a degree creeps ever higher.

      
20 Aug 18:01

Sewerage & Water Board interim director replaced again

by Beau Evans
Jade-Brown Russell was only going to be on the job for another couple of weeks.
20 Aug 18:01

Oceana Grill sues Gordon Ramsay, says reality show was faked: report

by Todd A. Price
The episode of Kitchen Nightmares was filmed in 2011.
20 Aug 18:01

Tyson Foods to Acquire Keystone Foods for $2.5 Billion

Tyson Foods Inc.
20 Aug 18:00

Man sues over Google’s “Location History” fiasco, case could affect millions

by Cyrus Farivar

Enlarge (credit: Nasir Kachroo/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Google is facing new scrutiny in the wake of revelations that it stores users’ location data even when "Location History" is turned off.

Last Friday, Google quietly edited its description of the practice on its own website—while continuing said practice—to clarify that "some location data may be saved as part of your activity on other services, like Search and Maps."

As a result of the previously unknown practice, which was first exposed by the Associated Press last week, Google has now been sued by a man in San Diego. Simultaneously, activists in Washington, DC are urging the Federal Trade Commission to examine whether the company is in breach of its 2011 consent decree with the agency.

Read 7 remaining paragraphs | Comments

20 Aug 18:00

British woman survives 10 hours at sea after falling off cruise ship

A British woman fell off the back of a cruise ship and survived 10 hours at sea until she was rescued.
20 Aug 17:59

Sexual Assault Accusation Against #MeToo Hero Asia Argento Relies on Uncommon Age of Consent Law

by Robby Soave

ArgentoAsia Argento, an Italian actress and director who helped bring down Harvey Weinstein and launch the #MeToo movement, paid $380,000 to an underage actor with whom she had a sexual relationship in 2013.

That actor, Jimmy Bennett, was 17 at the time, and he viewed Argento as a mother figure. Years later, after she became a hero for going public with her sexual assault accusation against Weinstein, Bennett attempted to sue her for intention infliction of emotional distress, lost wages, assault, and battery.

That's according to The New York Times, which obtained documents detailing their agreed upon settlement of $380,000. The Times story claims the documents were sent via encrypted email by an unidentified third party—Bennett declined comment, and it's unclear whether he wanted this story leaked. (I'm somewhat baffled by the paper's decision to name him at all.)

Victims' advocates are reeling from this news. Rose McGowan, an actress and fellow Weinstein accuser, wrote on Twitter, "My heart is broken."

Needless to say, Argento's behavior in this case does not change her status with regard to Weinstein. There's no unwritten law that says you can't be both a perpetrator and a victim of sexual misconduct. People are complicated.

It sounds like at the time the Weinstein allegations were being made public, Argento didn't necessarily know Bennett was uncomfortable with what had happened between them. He didn't threaten to sue her until after she was named in the Weinstein news cycle, in part because "his feelings about [the incident] were brought to the forefront recently when Ms. Argento took the spotlight as one of the many victims of Harvey Weinstein," according to the legal documents.

Also of note: While Argento's alleged conduct does indeed meet the definition of sexual assault, this is only because the age of consent in California is 18. In most other states, it's 16 or 17. Since Bennett was 17 at the time of the encounter, it would have been legal for Argento to have sex with him in 39 of the 50 states. That doesn't make Argento's decision to have sex with this particular young man, with whom she had a quasi-maternal bond, any less creepy. But I'm a little uncomfortable using the word assault to refer to incidents between adults who are both clearly capable of consenting to sex, regardless of what the law says.

20 Aug 17:59

Trump says DOJ official should be fired over role in Russia probe

by Jordan Fabian
President Trump on Monday said Justice Department official Bruce Ohr should be fired for his involvement in the Russia investigati...
20 Aug 17:59

More on “The Real #RussiaGate” – #Khodorkovsky, #Browder & McFaul… | Guest: @antiputinismus

by Shane Stranahan
20 Aug 17:59

The History of the CIA… w/ @JohnKiriakou

by Shane Stranahan
20 Aug 17:58

Papadopoulos Told Feds He Received $10,000 From Foreign National He Believed Was A Spy

by Chuck Ross
Payment was made during meeting at Israeli hotel
20 Aug 17:58

Report: South Africa Expropriates First Farms Without Compensation

by Joel B. Pollak
South African news sources reported Sunday that the government had begun taking farmland without compensation with the attempted expropriation of two game farms in Limpopo, the country's northernmost province, home to Kruger National Park.
20 Aug 17:57

Watch MSNBC Host Al Sharpton Botch Spelling of Hit Aretha Franklin Song On-Air: ‘R-E-S-P-I-C-T’

by Caleb Ecarma

MSNBC host Al Sharpton, who is known for struggling to pronounce words properly while on-air, botched the spelling of iconic soul singer Aretha Franklin’s hit song “Respect,” spelling it “R-E-S-P-I-C-T” during Sunday’s taping of his show PoliticsNation.

Sharpton made the error while addressing President Donald Trump calling former White House Omarosa Manigault-Newman a “dog” in a much talked about tweet.

“I think you might’ve learned the lesson this week, sometimes the dog bites back with a book deal,” Sharpton said of Trump’s beef with Omarosa.

“So in the words of my late friend Aretha Franklin, show some R-E-S-P-I-C-T, and the next time you get a black woman and a beagle confused, remember this: I got you,” Sharpton said — clearly misspelling the lyrics to Franklin’s song.

Despite the error, Sharpton had a close relationship with Franklin, who passed away last week.

“What most do not realize is that the Queen of Soul dedicated much of her time and money to advancing civil rights and human rights,” Sharpton wrote in a piece for Billboard on the legacy of Franklin. “There are superstars, and then there are humanitarians — Aretha somehow encapsulated both.”

Watch above, via MSNBC.

[image via screengrab]

Follow the author on Twitter (@calebecarma).

20 Aug 17:57

The Questions Brett Kavanaugh Came Up with During Bill Clinton Investigation Were Released, and They Are GRAPHIC

by Aaron Keller
20 Aug 17:56

Stop Hounding Actors Out Of Roles And Just Let Them Act

by David Marcus

For as long as there have been actors, there have been forces trying to determine how people should act. In the Elizabethan period, it was illegal for women to appear on stage in a play. Through much of the nineteenth and even twentieth centuries, the races could not mingle onstage. Later, there were efforts to ban communist actors from work lest they use their platform to turn the country red.

These rules all have two things in common. They were promulgated to serve a perceived societal good; and they were bad not only for art, but also for society. Today a new set of rules are emerging regarding who should act in certain roles. Recently, Scarlett Johansson was hounded out of a role as a trans man, and more recently the casting of Jake Whitehall as Disney’s first openly gay character was criticized because he isn’t gay. There are many more examples.

It is useful to look at today’s prohibitions on acting in the context of historical examples. In all cases, the prohibitionists attempt to establish the dominance of their worldview by making popular entertainment reflect it.

William Shakespeare said the actor holds a mirror up to nature. Centuries later, James Joyce would describe his mirror as the cracked looking glass of a servant. The point was that the mirror reflects what the people controlling it make it reflect. Turn the mirror a bit to the left or right, and the image changes.

Acting Is Pretend

Funny things have happened to acting in the last century or so. Until about 50 years ago, hardly anybody went to college to study acting. Until about 50 years before that, hardly anybody went to acting school to study acting. For most of its history, acting has been a craft, not a profession, and usually mastered by apprenticeship, not scholarship. Once mastered, the goal was to entertain people whose lives, by today’s standards, were absolutely grueling.

Acting’s basic meaning changed when it became a profession for which one can get a graduate degree. It was no longer just pretending to be something you aren’t for the enjoyment of others, it was a tool for social justice, among other things. In the last 20 years, identity issues have become the new shibboleths of censorship, the arbiter of who gets to pretend to be what.

The basic rule of thumb is that everyone gets to pretend to be straight white men, and who gets to pretend to be anything else depends on where they fall in the hierarchy of marginalization. Here’s a neat and clean example. A Broadway version of David Mamet’s “Glengarry Glen Ross” with an all-woman cast is now being produced. Outstanding!

If ScarJo were cast as Ricky Roma, there would be gushing over this, maybe justifiably. But if that same ScarJo were to play a trans male character, who is below her in the oppression food chain, well, it’s just awful. So that’s how it works.

Acting Is Empathy

The problem with this double standard is that, at its root, acting is empathy. When I studied acting in the early 1990s, a question that often came up was, “Could you play Hitler?” The question this meant to get at was how you could play a morally depraved character. The going wisdom then, and I suspect now, is that you had to find a way to understand that this character thought he or she was doing the right thing and you had to think so too while playing that character. It’s an extreme example, but an important one.

How far can an actor go from his or her own experience and worldview and still present a compelling and believable figure? This is always the greatest challenge. You play a character that makes a stupid decision thinking it’s a good one. You know it’s stupid. How do you convince yourself in that moment that it is good? How do you portray something you find abhorrent as if you deeply believe it?

A less extreme example, in some ways, is playing a character of a marginalized group. How could ScarJo possibly play a trans man? The same way she might play Eva Braun or Mother Theresa, by being empathetic, by seriously thinking about what this person feels and has been through. Let’s remember, going back to acting as a craft, not a profession, that actors have no control over the words, the direction, or the editing.

The only question for the actor is: Can you pretend to be this person? Can you really empathize with him, and portray what he feels?

Empathy and the Dominant Culture

The one-way ratchet rigmarole that has been established for actors makes no sense. If an actor can’t play a person who isn’t exactly like himself, then there is no acting. If it is a question of opportunity, then should every movie have a racial distribution of actors that matches America’s demographics? That’s 65 percent white, 13 percent black, and the remainder made up of Hispanics and Latinos. Should the industry as a whole reflect this balance? Should every artist stay in his own lane and produce or appear in only productions meant for his identity politics cohort?

As a producer and an actor, I can scarcely imagine a more terrible way for the performing and film arts to operate. If a talented chubby white kid in Kansas wants to do a one-man show as Biggie Smalls, great. If a 50-year-old black man in Brooklyn wants to do a one-man show as Shakespeare, fantastic. If a disabled Asian woman in Los Angeles wants to do a one-woman show as Harriet Tubman, I’m all for it.

The whole point is to pretend to be something you are not, and in so doing not only learn that you are human and vulnerable and similar to the subject, but show that to your audience as well. Maybe this is something our society is dearly lacking right now: the sincere belief that we are all equally capable of empathy.

Throughout history, those who would place restrictions on actors have always done so because actors, plays, novels, and movies scare them. Artists cast doubts on the established sanctities of every time. It is an important role. The good news is that today’s prohibitionists will fail, just as all of their predecessors have, because the human need to understand each other is stronger than any political or social ideology.

20 Aug 17:56

Special counsel 'thugs' are 'looking for trouble'... https://t.co/zqrln50kts

by DRUDGE REPORT
Special counsel 'thugs' are 'looking for trouble'... https://nyp.st/2N2RFc9

(RSS generated with FetchRss)
20 Aug 04:02

#MeToo leader paid off her own accuser

by -NO AUTHOR-

(NEW YORK TIMES) — Italian actress and director Asia Argento was among the first women in the movie business to accuse producer Harvey Weinstein publicly of sexual assault. She became a leading figure in the #MeToo movement. Her boyfriend, culinary television star Anthony Bourdain, eagerly joined the fight.

But in the months that followed her revelations about Weinstein last October, Argento quietly arranged to pay $380,000 to her own accuser: Jimmy Bennett, a young actor and rock musician who said she had sexually assaulted him in a California hotel room years earlier, when he was only two months past his 17th birthday. She was 37. The age of consent in California is 18.

That claim and the subsequent arrangement for payments are laid out in documents between lawyers for Argento and Bennett, a former child actor who once played her son in a movie.

20 Aug 04:02

Actress Asia Argento Reportedly Paid Off Sexual Assault Accuser

by Aidan McLaughlin

Actress Asia Argento, one of the most prominent accusers of Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein, secretly paid off a 17-year-old actor who had accused her of sexual assault, per the New York Times.

A new Times report details the allegations leveled against Argento — who dated Anthony Bourdain before his death — by former child actor Jimmy Bennett.

Bennett claimed that in 2013, the 37-year-old actress sexually assaulted him in a California hotel room. He was 17 at the time, and the age of consent in California is 18.

The actor made his allegations in legal documents in November 2017, a month after Argento’s allegations against Harvey Weinstein were revealed in a New Yorker report by Ronan Farrow.

Per the Times:

Mr. Bennett’s notice of intent asked for $3.5 million in damages for the intentional infliction of emotional distress, lost wages, assault and battery. Mr. Bennett made more than $2.7 million in the five years before the 2013 meeting with Ms. Argento, but his income has since dropped to an average of $60,000 a year, which he attributes to the trauma that followed the sexual encounter with Ms. Argento, his lawyer wrote.

Argento eventually agreed to a payment of $380,000 to Bennett.

Read the Times report here.

[image via screengrab]

20 Aug 04:01

New Study Finds Explosion In Concealed Carry Permits, Especially Among Women

by Tyler Durden

New research from economist and author John Lott of the Crime Prevention Research Center reveals that Americans have been applying for permits to carry concealed weapons (CCW) in record numbers, especially among women.

According to Lott, there were 890,000 CCW permits issued in 2017, while 4.6 million have been issued between 2007 and 2018, according to official state records - meaning 2017 saw a jump of nearly 24% in one year. 

"We have seen an increase from 4.6 million permits in 2007 to 17.25 million now, with the number increasing every year," Lott - the author of the highly cited book More Guns, Less Crime told Fox News.

There were 2.7 million concealed handgun permit holders in 1999, 4.6 million in 2007, 8 million in 2011, 11.1 million in 2014, and now 17.25 million in 2017. The growth in permits has been continuous. -Crime Prevention Research Center

"The states that we have seen a slowing of permits have primarily been these Constitutional Carry states where a permit is no longer required, indeed some of those states have even seen a drop in the number of permits even though the number of people carrying in those places has undoubtedly gone up," added Lott.

The report also notes that despite the common assumption that CCW applications would drop off after the 2016 election, quite the opposite has happened. 

Conventional wisdom held that the sharp rise in gun sales during Obama’s presidency was driven, at least in part, by the threat of guns control,” the study says. “That’s why everyone expected gun sales to decline after Trump’s victory.”

Other highlights: 

The number of women and minorities with CCW permits has continued to rise, with Black and Asian women leading the pack. 

Interest in CCW permits has corresponded to various mass shootings, as Lott illustrates on page 40. 

After 2014, the murder rate began to climb with the rate of CCW holders, however an increase in violent crimes was comparatively muted: 

Read the full report below:

20 Aug 04:01

NYPD Searching For Pair Wanted In Bronx Robberies

by CBS New York

The NYPD is on the hunt for two men it says robbed a pair of businesses in the Bronx on Aug. 17, 2018.
20 Aug 04:00

China Unleashes Economic War On LA Coffee Shop...For Serving Taiwan President

by Tyler Durden

China unleashed economic warfare against a bakery-and-coffee chain that served the President of Taiwan coffee during her trip to the United States.

Gourmet Master Co Ltd., a Taiwan-based coffee shop mainly involved in the provision of western-style desserts with stores in China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, the United States, and Australia, saw their stock collapse last week as the company was caught in the middle of tensions with China over Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen’s visit to a store in Los Angeles, California.

On August 12, during her layover in Los Angeles, the Taiwan President visited an 85C Cafe location, where social media pictures reportedly show her receiving gifts and coffee.

“The light of Taiwan. Taiwanese chain coffee shop opened a branch in Los Angeles at 85 °C, and the visiting team stopped. President Xiaoying and the legislators ordered a few cups of coffee, thank you # 萧美琴 , this cup is her request,” said Keelung Cai, a Taiwanese Democratic Progressive Party official, who posted a series of images of the visit on Facebook.

Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen receives gifts from the shop.

And here it is. The one cup of coffee that led to the company’s stock collapsing.

Surprisingly, Tsai’s visit went viral in mainland China which triggered a severe backlash.

According to Bloomberg, shares tumbled in the Taipei trading session, wiping out over $310 million from its market capitalization, after several Chinese nationalistic media outlets published articles calling for a boycott of the company. Some even said Tsai’s stop at the chain, makes 85C Cafe a “supporter of Tsai Ing-wen and Taiwan’s independence.”

One delicious cup of coffee collapsed the stock down 20 percent in a few trading sessions. The company has declined more than 42 percent since the top in December 2017.

The Global Times, a state-run newspaper that has been known to distort information to incite nationalism, was the most active agitators this time, said The Diplomat. The Communist newspaper published a series of articles claiming that 85C Cafe - “such a Taiwanese company which is making big money in mainland China” - supports Tsai’s policy of pro-independence of Taiwan. It was even mentioned that 85C Cafe’s official website categorized its China branch under its “overseas operations,” a mistake that could cost the business of many Chinese nationalists.

Mainland China accounted for 64 percent of Gourmet Master’s revenue, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. In comparison, Taiwan, the company’s home base, and the United States each generated only 17 percent of the total revenue. As it seems a boycott in mainland China could be devastating for the company.

The market has become a big “uncertainty,” where the government could punish it with measures including hygiene inspections, Reliance Securities Investment Consultant Co. Vice President Richard Lin said by phone to Bloomberg.

On Wednesday, the company issued a press release, emphasizing that the company “has never changed its position of upholding the 1992 Consensus (or One China Consensus).”

The company also said: “keep contributing to the peaceful development of cross-strait relations and opposing any behavior and words that split cross-strait compatriots,” the announcement said.

However, the Global Times intensified its attacks on 85C Cafe after the press release, claiming that the company’s slow response is just a mean to ease criticism, because the announcement was not published on social media.

“To make matters worse, several of China’s most popular platforms that offer online food delivery service, including ELEME Inc., Meituan, and Dianping, have deleted 85C Cafe from their apps. This collective move — against the logic of the market — implied that authorities in Beijing are likely standing behind the anti-85C Cafe campaign, although Beijing so far hasn’t publicly expressed its attitude on the incident,” said The Diplomat.

Tsai’s spokesman Alex Huang condemned the need for the coffee operator to issue a “humiliating” statement. “It shouldn’t have happened in a civilized society,” Huang said in a text message to Bloomberg.

Bloomberg also noted the company’s Taiwan website was hacked last week, per a report via Taipei-based Central News Agency. The website earlier had “many photos” of Tsai, CNA reported. Bloomberg failed to get a response from the company spokesman Chris Lee.

While this is not the first time that overseas brands have suffered in China due to strong political action, the risks of more incidents like this are almost inevitable amid a worsening trade war environment between China and the United States. Which company is next?

20 Aug 04:00

Pelosi mocks McCarthy for tweet complaining of censorship

by Morgan Gstalter
House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) mocked her Republican counterpart on Sunday for perpetuating an "outrageous conspiracy theory" on Twitter, saying he doesn't know who to use the platform....
20 Aug 03:59

What If Russiagate Is The New WMDs?

by Tyler Durden

Authored by Jack Hunter via The American Conservative,

Democrats, certain in their accusations of guilt, sound a lot like Republicans in 2002...

“The evidence against Trump and Russia is huge and mounting every day,” declared liberal celebrity activist Rosie O’Donnell at a protest in front of the White House last week.

“We see it, he can’t lie about it,” she added. “He is going down and so will all of his administration.”

“The charge is treason,” O’Donnell declared. Protesters held held large letters that spelled it out: T-R-E-A-S-O-N.”

O’Donnell is by no means alone in her sentiments. Trump’s guilt in “Russiagate” is now assumed by much of the American left, and reaches greater levels of fervor with every passing day.

This kind of partisan religiosity is not new.

In the wake of the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq, conservative pundit Ann Coulter accused war opponents of “treason” and insisted of Saddam Hussein, “We know he had weapons of mass destruction.”

Coulter was confident and she wasn’t alone. Virtually the entire mainstream American right—from pundits like Coulter and Sean Hannity to President George W. Bush and the Republican Congress—was deeply invested in the notion that Hussein possessed WMDs and that the Iraq war was justified based on that unshakeable premise. This belief was so ingrained for so long that many excitedly rushed to pretend that chemical weapons discovered in Iraq as reported by the New York Times in 2014 were somehow the same thing as the “mushroom cloud” the Bush administration said Saddam was capable of.

Unfortunately for the right (and America, and the world), that premise turned out to be false. There were no WMDs. Today, only a minority of delusional, face-saving hawks and unreconstructed neoconservatives still parrot that lie.

And far from being “traitors,” Iraq war opponents today are considered to have been on the right side of history.

Now, “Russian collusion” could be becoming the new WMDs.

The post-2016 left’s most dominant narrative is arguably their deeply held belief—with all the ferocity and piety of yesterday’s pro-war conservatives—that Russia colluded with Trump’s campaign to undermine the presidential election. Many believe that the president and anyone who supports his diplomatic efforts like Senator Rand Paul are in the pocket of Russian President Vladimir Putin.

“I will meet not just with our friends, but with our enemies,” said Barack Obama in 2008, and he did just that with Putin, as has every other president in recent times.

But Trump-Russia relations have been spun into far-fetched conspiracy theories on the left. New York Magazine’s Jonathan Chait recently went so far as to speculate that Trump has been a Russian agent since 1987, a cockamamie idea on par with the Weekly Standard’s Stephen Hayes’ discredited conspiracy theory that Saddam and Osama bin Laden were in cahoots.

It really was plausible that Iraq had WMDs in 2003 based on what our intelligence agencies knew, or purported to know. Today, it is feasible that American democracy really has Putin’s fingerprints on it based on things revealed by U.S. intelligence.

But isn’t it also possible that the left is reading far too much into Russiagate?

The Nation’s Aaron Maté believes liberals are overreaching, and that’s putting it mildly:

From the outset, Russiagate proponents have exhibited a blind faith in the unverified claims of US government officials and other sources, most of them unnamed. The reaction to special counsel Robert Mueller’s recent indictment of 12 Russian military-intelligence officers for hacking of Democratic party servers and voter databases is no exception. Mueller’s indictment is certainly detailed. Most significantly, it marks the first time anyone has been charged for offenses related to Russiagate’s underlying crime.

But while it is a major step forward in the investigation, we have yet to see the basis for the allegations that Mueller has lodged. As with any criminal case, from a petty offense to a cybercrime charge against a foreign government, a verdict cannot be formed in the absence of this evidence.

Then the irony kicks in. Maté continues, “The record of US intelligence, replete with lies and errors, underscores the need for caution. Mueller was a player in one of this century’s most disastrous follies when, in congressional testimony, he endorsed claims about Iraqi WMDs and warned that Saddam Hussein ‘may supply’ chemical and biological material to ‘terrorists.’”

Noting Mueller’s 2003 WMD testimony is not an attempt to undermine him or his investigation, something Maté also makes clear. But it does serve as an important reminder that “intelligence” can be flat-out wrong. It reminds us how these scenarios, which so much of Washington and the elite class fully endorse, can be looked back on as lapses of reason years later.

Mass psychology is real. Political classes and parties are not immune.

“Suppose, however, that all of the claims about Russian meddling turn out to be true,” Maté asks. “Hacking e-mails and voter databases is certainly a crime, and seeking to influence another country’s election can never be justified.”

He continues, “But the procession of elite voices falling over themselves to declare that stealing e-mails and running juvenile social-media ads amount to an ‘attack,’ even an ‘act of war,’ are escalating a panic when a sober assessment is what is most needed.”

The U.S. could have certainly used less hyperbole and more sobriety in 2002 and 2003.

And there’s good chance that when the history books are written about American politics circa 2018, much of Russiagate will be dismissed as more Red Scare than Red Dawn.

With Russia, as with WMDs, left and right have elevated slivers of legitimate security concerns to the level of existential threat based mostly on their own partisanship. That kind of thinking has already proven to be dangerous.

We don’t know what evidence of collusion between the Trump camp and Russia might yet come forth, but it’s easy to see how, even if this narrative eventually falls flat, 15 years from now some liberals will still be clinging to Russiagate not as a matter of fact, but political identity. Russia-obsessed liberals, too, could end up on the wrong side of history.

No one can know the future. Republicans would be wise to prepare for new, potentially damaging information about Trump and Russia that may yet emerge.

Democrats should consider that Russiagate may be just as imaginary as Republicans’ Iraq fantasy.