Kremlin Moscow Russia
© REUTERS/Maxim ShemetovThe Kremlin, Moscow, Russia (file photo)
In response to a statement during the Democratic primary debates by presidential candidate Andrew Yang that both Russia and the United States have engaged in election interference, liberal pundit Molly McKew tweeted, "I now retract any vaguely nice thing I ever said about Yang knowing technology things because he answered the question on Putin with moral equivalency and a Kremlin talking point."

If you're in the mood for some depressing amusement, just type the words "Kremlin talking point" without quotation marks into Twitter's search engine and scroll through all the results which come up. Just keep on scrolling and observe how this label, "Kremlin talking point", gets bleated by mainstream empire loyalists to dismiss subjects ranging from the rigging of Democratic primaries to criticism of US regime change wars to endless US warmongering to concerns about new cold war escalations to disliking John McCain to criticism of Nancy Pelosi. Any criticism of the status quo which cannot be labeled false or misleading gets labeled a "talking point" of Russia/Putin/the Kremlin by those who support and defend the status quo of US-centralized imperialist world hegemony.

Yang's statement about US intervention in foreign elections is indisputably true, of course. Both alternative and mainstream media outlets have thoroughly documented the fact that the US government's own data shows them to have interfered in scores of foreign elections, far more than any other nation on earth. This includes an interference in Russia's elections in the nineties that was so brazen they made a Hollywood movie about it. Former CIA Director James Woolsey openly admitted on Fox News last year that the US still interferes in foreign elections to this very day.

Caitlin Johnstone
These are not conspiracy theories. These are not even secrets. These are facts. But because they are inconvenient facts, they get labeled "Kremlin talking points" by those whose job it is to defend the status quo.


Hawaii Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard was also branded with the accusation of voicing "Kremlin talking points" for remarks she made during last night's debate. In her case those "talking points" consisted of the indisputable fact that the bloodshed in Syria can be blamed on US politicians from both parties, and the indisputable fact that the US has armed extremist militias in that nation with the goal of effecting regime change.

"Literally a Kremlin talking point, but whatever," tweeted #Resistance pundit Leah McElrath in response to Gabbard's debate comments.

"It is a fact that the Russian talking point for years has been that the United States arms al-Qaeda in Syria. Tulsi Gabbard just said it on national television," tweeted journalist Scott Stedman.

"How odd to listen to Tulsi Gabbard mouthing Syrian and Russian talking points on the Democratic debate stage...sorry but no one thinks US troops withdrawn by Trump were there as part of a 'regime change war' by the US," tweeted Susan Glasser of CNN and The New Yorker.


So the establishment narrative managers now have an official three-word debunk of any criticism of the establishment which employs them, which applies even when that criticism is fully based in facts and reality. Facts are a Kremlin talking point, and anyone who believes them is Russian. Facts are Russian. Truth is Russian. Skepticism is Russian. Asking questions is Russian. Dissent is Russian. Revolution is Russian.

So let's all get Russian then, baby. Let's all fill our heads with objectively true Kremlin talking points and Cossack dance our way to a fact-based relationship with reality. Get as Russian as possible. Get aggressively Russian. Get offensively Russian. Get so Russian it hurts. Get so Russian it curls Louise Mensch's hair. If they are going to start telling us that truth is Russian, then the only appropriate thing to say in response is dasvidaniya.
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