Is it possible that the Senate Unintelligence Committee hired an investigator to investigate himself? In my mind it’s possible, but I don’t know if it happened, but there are some coincidental parallels between the alleged Russian interference and the red flag Russian interference in Alabama.
The chief executive of cybersecurity firm New Knowledge, Jonathan Morgan, was hired by the Senate Lack of Intelligence Committee, chaired by RINO Richard Burr operated a false flag campaign in Alabama that worked exactly like the one that supposedly took place during the 2016 presidential election.
Not only that but an identical amount of money was spent on both, $100,000.
The chief executive of cybersecurity firm New Knowledge, Jonathan Morgan, was one of the operatives on a self-described “false flag” operation meant to link Republican Senate candidate Roy Moore to Russian bots in order to boost his Democratic opponent, now-Sen. Doug Jones. The project sought to spread misinformation about foreign interference in an American election.
Morgan’s firm also recently authored a report on that very topic for the Senate Intelligence Committee.
The New Knowledge report — which is posted in full at the bottom of this article — stated that Americans’ hesitance to embrace censorship puts the U.S. at a “disadvantage” in dealing with Russian influence campaigns.
Had they never been caught using the false flag method in Alabama, how many of these would have been used in 2020? And were they the real culprits in 2016?
The exact same methods were used, but of course, that isn’t proof but it does supply enough evidence to warrant an investigation.
