President Peace Prize’s Push to Control the Media is ‘Most Aggressive Since Nixon’

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
October 11, 2013

When alerted of the report's findings, Obama made this face again.
When alerted of the report’s findings, Obama made this face again, and made everyone feel better about things.

A report released Thursday by the Committee to Protect Journalists, a non-profit established to protect the freedom of the press, states that the Barack Obama administration has “chilled the flow of information on issues of great public interest,” stating that Obama’s attempts to silence government officials and the media itself are the “most aggressive” since Nixon’s presidency.

Obama’s policy of systematically attempting to control all information is simply an aspect of his larger position as the dictatorial enforcer of Jewish rule over the American nation.  White Guilt plays a huge role in this, as the masses are afraid to question the black man that they placed in this position for the specific purpose of feeling good about themselves.

White Man's Town, Black Man's Law: The film adaptation of the Obama presidency, starring Fred Williamson, is to be released later this year.
White Man’s Town, Black Man’s Law: The film adaptation of the Obama presidency, starring Fred Williamson, is to be released later this year.

But at least he’s not George Bush, right guys? I mean, right? That Bush guy was so bad, the really important thing here is that Obama isn’t him – am I right?

From Wired:

“Six government employees, plus two contractors including Edward Snowden, have been subjects of felony criminal prosecutions since 2009 under the 1917 Espionage Act, accused of leaking classified information to the press—compared with a total of three such prosecutions in all previous U.S. administrations,” said the committee’s report, prepared by Leonard Downie Jr., the former executive editor of The Washington Post.

In a 2008 campaign speech, however, Obama said: “I’ll make our government open and transparent so that anyone can ensure that our business is the people’s business. No more secrecy.”

Downie wrote that, because of the revelations of the NSA’s surveillance efforts by Snowden, government officials are “reluctant to even discuss unclassified” information amid fears that “leak investigations and government surveillance make it more difficult for reporters to protect them as sources.”

[…]

Among other conclusions, the report found that the White House:

*Employs the internet to “dispense” favorable information while hindering efforts of a “probing press.”

*Often calls reporters and editors complaining about news stories.

*Spokesmen are “often hostile or unresponsive to press inquiries.”

*Has secretly seized telephone records from The Associated Press and Fox News.

*Declared in an affidavit for telephone records that a Fox News reporter may have breached the Espionage Act in reporting about the United States’ monitoring of North Korea’s nuclear program.