By Robert R. Raymond
http://www.rraymond.org/nyRpt.htm
March 26, 2004
Imagine: an American journalist using his cover for the most prominent paper
in the country to inform on and demonize select political critics of the
government! The Godfather had his "newspaper friends" on the payroll, and
the IRS has theirs: David Cay Johnston.
David Cay Johnston, a celebrated New York Times reporter, reveals in his
recent book, Perfectly Legal, his history of acting as a government
informant against political dissenters on behalf of his best government
sources. Criticized by many for his lack of journalistic integrity,
Johnston's revelations in his book still shock the conscience. Johnston's
informing and propaganda at the behest of favored insiders induced audits,
secret surveillance, and criminal prosecutions of select political targets...
Johnston details case after case where he used his cover as a New York Times
reporter to elicit information from political dissenters, then disclosed
that information to others. How many people would know this friendly
reporter was really there as a federal agent? Johnston gathered information
on the names of the people in protest movements, uncovered the locations of
their meetings, elicited the intentions of movement leaders, and even tried
to induce some of them to incriminate themselves. Johnston's informing has
now allowed the agency to blacklist select political targets.
Johnston's disclosures dovetail with his role as a public relations agent of
the government -- propagandizing from the front pages of the Times whenever
the hardliners need publicity to prosecute disfavored political groups. (Not
surprisingly, Johnston rose to fame during the Jayson Blair "see no evil,
hear no evil" editorial leadership at the Times, when the Times
licensed all kinds of licentious conduct.) Johnston goes even further in
his book than the Times could allow -- invading the privacy of taxpayers and
whispering confidential information about politically prominent critics in
his book, especially those who raised questions about governmental fraud in
the agency, even though this information is illegal for the government to
disclose.
The second startling revelation comes from Johnston's open propagandizing.
Johnston often cited mysterious "tax experts" in his past articles for legal
criticisms of political dissenters. We now know who those mysterious
"experts" are -- Johnston himself and the hardliners within the government.
Sort of like citing a CIA employee as an "international law expert," without
disclosing who he works for, to give an opinion on why it's okay for the
government to assassinate foreign leaders.
Masquerading as a muckraking journalist, Johnston masks his true
constituency: the hardliners within the tax police state who use him as
their personal spokesperson, unbeknownst to his editors at the Times.
Never known for his intellectual prowess, Johnston may be a cheap mouth
piece, but a mouth piece with a big speakerphone.
Johnston, who rode his coverage of the truth in taxation movement to a
Pulitzer Prize, never even mentions the millions of Americans questioning
the suspect status of many tax laws and the deliberate shroud of obscurity
covering those laws, the IRS banning the selling of books critical of the
agency, the IRS prohibiting web sites critical of them, or the Silence
Advocacy Project revealed in the recent prosecution of former whistleblower,
Joe Banister.
Instead, Johnston offers only one solution to the corrupt, abusive tax
police state -- more money and more power to that tax police state.
Johnston dips even lower, suggesting those who believe in financial privacy
are Al-Queda sympathizers with blood on their hands from 9/11. Those who
challenge imprisoning people for tax debts under the 13th Amendment secretly
support "white racist" organizations. Finally, anyone who questions the tax
police state is likely an anarchist bent on attacking the "commonwealth" of
society itself. Even McCarthy made more sense than Johnston.
In sum, Johnston's book discloses the depths of a tax police state worthy
only of Dante's Ninth circle of Hell -- the one reserved for those practiced
in the sedition of sacred principles. Do they give out any special
journalist prizes for the best government informant? (No IRS audits?) How
about acting as an in-house public relations specialist for the state? (The
Pravda award?) What about deceptive state propaganda? (The Goebbels prize?)
I can think of at least one worthy nominee.