Site Header
16 Reasons to Join BillOReilly.com Today!
Your cart is currently empty.
Continue shopping
 
The John Adams Project
Bookmark and Share
Email This ArticleEmail This Article
Print This ArticlePrint This Article
Column ArchivesColumn Archives
By Bill O'Reilly for BillOReilly.com
Thursday, September 10, 2009
When I think of the terrorist atrocity that happened eight years ago, I feel deeply for people like Vic and Christine Colaio. These two fine Americans lost their sons Stephen and Mark who both worked in the World Trade Center. Along with their daughter Jean, the elderly couple suffers their loss on a daily basis. Time does not heal those kinds of wounds.

That is why I am so enraged by the John Adams Project, a group of subversive Americans affiliated with the ACLU who are sneaking around taking pictures of CIA agents who may have interrogated captured al-Qaeda guys in the wake of the 9/11 attack. This insidious outfit believes the CIA tortured casually and the USA is a "human rights violator."

After taking the surreptitious photos, the Adams Project then passes them on to lawyers representing incarcerated terrorists, hoping that an accused man will, in turn, accuse a CIA agent of torturing him. This nasty business is now being investigated by the Justice Department, but the Obama administration has kept very quiet about it and, strangely, so has the media.

Only two newspapers, the Wall Street Journal and the Washington Times, have reported on the John Adams Project and there is something very disturbing about that. Remember Valerie Plame? She was the CIA operative publicly exposed by columnist Robert Novak in an Iraq weapons of mass destruction controversy. After that happened, the left wing media went wild with indignation. How could anyone name a CIA person, thereby putting he or she in danger? The New York Times was on fire over the story. But when faced with the facts about the John Adams Project, the Times passed.

There comes a time when Americans get fed up with hypocrisy and simply walk away from the hypocrites. That is happening right now in the mainstream media. Newspapers are going out of business; network TV news is losing audience. Weekly news magazines like Time and Newsweek are barely surviving as Americans look elsewhere for their news.

Many media analysts blame this sad state of affairs on the internet, which can provide instant information free of charge. But I believe many news consumers understand that the fix is in and are furious about selective and distorted reporting. Thus, they are voting with their wallets.

By exposing CIA agents to accused terrorists and their lawyers, the John Adams Project is obviously putting lives in jeopardy. This is a thousand times worse than the Plame affair, which saw top Dick Cheney aide Scooter Libby convicted of a felony while the press largely celebrated.

But where is the coverage of the Adams story? Where is President Obama on the issue? Why are these people being allowed to terrorize the Central Intelligence Agency?

Relevant questions. We await the answers.
##
Column Feedback
Messages are displayed in reverse chronological order, with the most recent posts displayed first. Log in as a Premium Member to add a comment and share your thoughts with other BillOReilly.com Premium Members.
There are no comments yet. Be the first to comment on it!
Login as a Premium Member to see all comments, or buy a Premium Membership now
BOR.com Membership ad #4
Radio & TV Books & Print Site Features About Bill The O'Reilly Store Premium Members Help/Contact Us
O'Reilly Factor Flash
O'Reilly Factor Archive
Producer's Notebook
The Radio Factor Vault
Radio Talking Points Memos
A Bold Fresh Piece of Humanity
Kids Are Americans Too
Culture Warrior
O'Reilly Factor for Kids
Current Column
Column Archive
BillOReilly.com Blog
Stratfor.com Intelligence Briefing
O'Quiz
O'Reilly Crossword
Sanctuary Cities
Jessica's Law
Welcome Letter
Biography
Bill's Favorites
Upcoming Appearances
Bill's Charities
Store Home
Books
Memberships
Mugs
Mens Ts
Home & Office
Podcasting
Viewer Voting
Message Boards
Video Center
Backstage Video Conversation
Exclusive Video Archive
Photo Album
Customer Service
Contact Bill O'Reilly
Help Center
Site Map
Privacy Policy
Terms & Conditions

Copyright © 2002-2009 BillOReilly.com. All rights reserved.

Terms & Conditions | Privacy Policy | Acknowledgements