Sep 26, 2024
EXCLUSIVE: Ken Klippenstein Explains Why He Published JD Vance Dossier
Independent journalist Ken Klippenstein discusses his decision to publish the Iran-hacked JD Vance dossier when nobody else would.
- 22 minutes
Well, today, Twitter decided
to suspend journalist Ken Klippenstein
over the fact that he posted
about a leaked JD Vance dossier.
Now we want to understand more about this,
especially since this took place
on a platform that Elon Musk purchased
to the tune of $41 billion
[00:00:20]
in order to protect free speech to,
you know, basically ensure
that what happened with the Hunter Biden
laptop story never happens again.
And so joining us now is the journalist
in question, Ken Klippenstein.
Thank you for joining us, Ken.
[00:00:35]
Hey, guys. Good to be back with you.
Yeah. Good to have you.
Let me let me start with the first
question, because I'm dying to know
what reasoning were you given
for your ban on Twitter.
I got an email citing two tweets.
One was the link to the JD Vance Research
dossier story that I published,
[00:00:53]
and the second one was more interesting.
I also, I also just reposted a story I'd
done talking about how overblown I think
foreign influence operations are
not just by the press,
but by the Intelligence Committee,
maybe even the culture at large.
Not that they don't exist,
not that they're, you know, not real,
not that the government shouldn't respond
to them, but to treat them like,
[00:01:11]
you know, some dumb Russian memes
or Iranian memes or whatever are going to,
you know, decisively swing an election.
There's no evidence for that.
And, you know, in the story I explore
that, you know, I look at a report by the
Rand Corporation, their scholarship that
suggests that, yes, these things happen.
Yes, they they have goals.
[00:01:27]
But when it gets to that question of could
it change, you know, not just a senatorial
election but a presidential election?
No, there's no evidence for that.
There's no evidence that's happened.
And so for all those reasons,
I thought that this was crazy to not talk
about this, you know, largely open,
containing largely open source information
relevant to the American electorate
[00:01:44]
in an election season that,
you know, multiple news outlets knew
existed and which contains
information about not just the candidate,
but about what the Republican Party
thinks about that candidate and gives
you insight into, What the party thinks.
[00:02:00]
I mean, that perception.
That's what was so interesting to me,
especially in an election
where it's it's a vibes election.
They're not talking about policy.
I mean, look at the convention,
not just Trump's,
but, Harris's the Democrats as well.
How much do they actually give you
in terms of specifics?
So little.
So something like this tells you
what the party thinks of.
[00:02:17]
It was kind of interesting because if you
go through it, the things that they
point out are that, you know, oh,
Vance has a, you know, unorthodox
position on this or that that is
actually pretty popular with their base.
And it's clear that the party isn't
excited about having to litigate
that in a, in a general election.
[00:02:33]
And so for that reason, I thought
it was worth, for those two reasons.
The, the, you know, unseriousness
of foreign influence efforts
and the importance of that information.
I thought it was important to report,
but evidently Twitter thought
that those two things
and I don't know what the second one is,
because that was just an analysis
piece about foreign influence,
[00:02:49]
but it said that I, what was it violated
by posting personal information?
Which again, in the second post,
there was no personal information.
You could say that in the first
one there was because in the dossier
it includes things like his
current and past addresses.
So I mean, I get I disagree with that
because first of all,
[00:03:06]
I'm not posting the addresses to Twitter.
I'm posting them to the site
which is linked to it.
And in addition to that,
that's all public information.
I, as a reporter,
can go on Nexus in two minutes
and find out a public officials address.
That's just that's how
and these news organizations do it too.
[00:03:21]
Corporations do it.
All of this information is sold
because it's public.
There's no law barring it.
And they're trying to cast that, I think,
as a pretext to take down what is a story
which clearly, Elon Musk is the one
who's donated billions of dollars to
Republican causes, doesn't want out there.
And so they have to create a pretext
to say, hey, look, it's not actually I
[00:03:39]
mean, of course they're not going to say,
oh, sorry, we don't want to have,
you know,
something that makes advance look bad.
They have to come up with a pretext.
And that's what I think this is.
So, Ken, I want to get back to you
being banned in just a moment.
But just a quick sidebar
because I think this is important.
So you mentioned how other journalists
have kind of shied away
[00:03:55]
from reporting on this.
JD Vance dossier because they're worried
about being accused of, helping with
foreign interference into our elections.
Is there any evidence or any indication
that this JD Vance dossier was leaked
[00:04:11]
by a foreign government like Iran?
Like I'm hearing about that,
but is there any substance to that claim?
That's a very interesting question,
because if you look closely at what
the intelligence community has put out,
they haven't said specifically
which stories were hacked.
Now, I don't doubt for a second
that the Iranians are hacking things
[00:04:26]
and trying to hurt Trump.
Trump has a very hard line policy on Iran.
It makes sense
that they would want to do that.
And I take the intelligence community
when they make a conclusive
statement like that at its word
that they're seeing something.
But if you go through those statements,
they say malign cyber actors are,
[00:04:41]
you know, targeting the Trump campaign.
Okay. All make sense.
But they don't say
where and which stories.
And so I wish that the media
would interrogate that and say
and press them and say,
are you specifically referring to this?
And the reason I want them to ask that
is not because I'm trying
to defend the Iranians,
but because if you look back at 2016,
[00:04:57]
for example, there was a hacker
that went by the handle Guccifer or
something like that, and he hacked into,
I think it was the Democrat.
I think it was the Hillary Clinton emails.
And contemporaneous with that, the
Russians were directing foreign influence
operations, targeting, targeting Clinton.
[00:05:14]
And so both were true at the same time.
There was both a foreign nexus
to these things.
And there was a private individual who,
they ended up concluding was just acting.
It was just a hacker
acting of his own accord.
But when the media talked about it, they
lumped it all into one basket and said,
oh, this is all foreign influence.
And the world isn't always that simple.
[00:05:31]
So, I mean, if you were to ask me
my frank opinion because I'm not trying to
dodge here, I would say yes, I would guess
that the Iranians had a role in it.
But the truth is, we don't know, because
nobody has pressed the intelligence
community to say what specific stories or
what specific hacks are you talking about.
They just say hacks.
And then the media runs with this.
[00:05:48]
Yeah.
So I want to come back
to different countries
messing with our elections in a second.
But first,
thank you for joining us in exile.
- Oh my God.
- You really like that joke, don't you?
It's not the first time
he said it tonight.
Okay, so in all seriousness.
Well, not in all seriousness.
[00:06:05]
Did you consider, saying that you got the
JD Vance files from Hunter Biden's laptop?
Because then I would have worked. Yeah.
I mean, like,
one of the reasons Elon Musk.
Now, in all seriousness,
Elon Musk said that he bought Twitter
[00:06:21]
was because of free speech.
And my God, they didn't put
Hunter Biden's laptop on on Twitter
right before the election.
And how dare they do that decision?
And how dare they take their cues
from the U.S.
Government?
Who's telling them, oh, I have secret
information on why you should do this.
[00:06:37]
Isn't this story kind of identical?
Hold on.
To be fair, the Hunter Biden laptop
didn't include any personal information.
Nothing like, you know,
literal nude photos.
And anyway. But go ahead.
Ken. I didn't even think of that.
[00:06:52]
Yeah, but, yeah, I mean,
you're seeing conservatives
are getting mad at him for this.
I saw Nick Fuentes, of all people,
which don't agree with him
on literally anything, but credit to him,
he had the consistency to point out
that this is not consistent with their
position on the Hunter Biden laptop.
I think Tim Pool did too.
[00:07:08]
A whole cast of people
that I agree with on virtually nothing.
And that shows you how egregious it is,
because people can see
through this nonsense about, oh,
there was a public this is
this is what the campaign is pushing
to try to get people not to talk about it
and talk about something else,
not to talk about the contents
and the contents show that,
[00:07:25]
the party and Vance are at odds on
a number of different issues and suggest
that there's a fight between them
about it, which is really interesting.
Right? That's.
And if you look at the. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I wonder like if we put this interview
up on X, is that going to get banned
[00:07:42]
is what else is going to get banned.
Is does anything that's Ken
Klippenstein adjacent get banned.
Because you apparently
are embarrassing the wrong party
and you know, so I mean, this feels
like a tipping point for Elon Musk.
[00:07:59]
No one in their right mind can believe
that he cares about free speech anymore.
He just wants speech that's on his side,
including a lot of the things
that he's allowed on Twitter.
Racist. ET cetera.
Holocaust denial.
All of those things are okay on Twitter,
but embarrassing Donald Trump
[00:08:16]
or JD Vance is definitely not okay.
And again, the Biden laptop is so relevant
because it was like, oh, how do you
trust the American government telling you
that that's a foreign influence operation?
This is literally the American government
saying this is a foreign influence
[00:08:31]
operation and hence Twitter.
Take it off, presumably.
And Twitter is like, oh, great,
I'd love to censor speech for you.
So let me play devil's advocate, okay?
Because I want to bring up this argument
because I do think
there's some merit behind it.
And I want to give you a chance
to obviously respond to this.
[00:08:48]
So, Ken, you made the decision
to avoid redacting like the address
for JD Vance in the dossier
that you posted on your Substack.
Right.
And so some are saying that is the reason
why Ken Klippenstein was banned.
[00:09:05]
You know, there are guidelines
in the toes for X indicating
that you're not supposed to dox people.
And this is doxing.
And they further claim that, you know,
considering the fact that there were
two attempts on Donald Trump's life
with these would be assassins, you know,
[00:09:20]
this was irresponsible of you to do.
You do write in your Substack
about why you made the decision
to avoid redacting it.
So what do you say to those
who have that argument
in favor of you getting banned on Twitter?
Well, I would say, first of all, all
of that information is publicly available.
[00:09:36]
It was what I was saying
at the beginning of the interview.
It's stuff you can buy online,
and data brokers are selling it
on such a massive scale.
Companies have it.
Media has it. The campaign has it.
The campaign that's complaining about this
had that information circulated it
in in the in the report.
[00:09:51]
And the reason they have that information
isn't because they asked about it.
It's it,
because they have access to these things
just like everyone else, just like I do.
If I want to jump on LexisNexis
and find something out about somebody.
Now, if we don't want to have that kind
of a system, the Congress can pass a law
regulating it, but they haven't done so.
And so the system that we have
is one where corporations
[00:10:09]
and, you know, institutions
and powerful people can use that.
What the people that can't know these
things is general public, and you have
to go way out of your way to redact it.
I mean, this is a principle
I've lived in my personal life.
People have posted my address.
Nothing has ever happened.
I've never complained about it.
I mean, I don't like it,
but it's kind of like it is public.
[00:10:25]
That's the system we have.
And so I felt wrong in the context
of a story that is about full disclosure
and giving the public something and
trusting them with it and thinking they're
adults that can make their own decisions
and then excising parts of it.
Based on I don't know what the criteria is
because there are a bunch of addresses,
[00:10:43]
like there are business addresses,
there are addresses of events.
So which one?
And they're only complaining
about the residential addresses.
But where do you draw the line?
It's so arbitrary.
And to me, I mean, it seems clear to me
that this is a pretext.
There was no situation in which they were
going to be like, yeah, that's a story.
[00:10:59]
We don't really have anything to say.
They were always going to create
something to point to and say,
hey everybody, it's not about Iran.
It's not about this or that.
It's about some other, you know, it's not
that there's a fight within the party
about how unpopular Vance is or how his
ideas are not supported by the kind
of elite segment of the Republican Party.
[00:11:15]
They were going to come up
with something else.
Yeah, in my view, if it wasn't that,
it would be something else.
Yeah. So on that point.
So look, I would have redacted
the addresses, but we're different.
You're an investigative reporter
and I'm a talk show host,
but they give away the game.
But that's not really their concern
when they also banned you over an
[00:11:33]
innocuous blog explaining all this.
Right. So that.
Exactly.
- Yeah, that there.
- Were two posts.
One of the posts
had nothing to do with any of that in it,
and I posted that on my Substack.
And I encourage people
to go in there and look at it
so they can get a sense that shows that
there's a political dimension to this,
because there was no personal information
in the second post that they cited
[00:11:50]
as being the reason that I was banned.
So, Ken, let's actually get into the
substance of the dossier because I really
want to read it and I plan to read it.
So thank you for reporting on it.
But just give us some of the highlights.
You mentioned that the Republican Party
in general doesn't really favor J.D.
[00:12:08]
Vance.
That doesn't surprise me, because J.D.
Vance does hold some populist like sincere
populist ideas that Republicans despise.
So can you be a little more
detailed about that?
What in particular
do they dislike about him?
Well, all sorts of foreign policy stuff.
[00:12:25]
Like he wants to step away
from US aid to Ukraine.
I mean, it wasn't I mean, the document
was long, something like 170 pages.
So it wasn't like every single issue,
but it was basically it was funny.
It's like essentially the MAGA core
of his identity was what they seem
[00:12:42]
to take the most issue with
and Nonintervention or the I mean,
I wouldn't call it non-interventionism,
but, you know, the kind of nativist
thrusts, the things that we think about
when we think about Trump,
the hardline immigration policies.
A lot of these things that they seem
worried about going into a general
election because they're sort of fringe
views, as we've seen with with Vance.
[00:13:00]
It was so interesting to see them
acknowledge that internally and to show
you that there's a fight within the party,
in a sort of similar way
to what you saw with Bernie Sanders,
the Democrats on the right.
And and one of the most interesting parts
about reporting on this was seeing
[00:13:15]
the way in which this document was given
to a number of other news outlets,
and they paraphrased it and they said,
you don't need to see
the underlying document.
We've paraphrased it.
You basically know
everything that's in there.
What's the big deal?
You look at the document, there's a whole
lot of stuff that they didn't mention.
And that's the problem
with what I call trust us journalism,
where you can just, you know, we I went
to journalism school, I went to Columbia.
[00:13:33]
I know what you're going
to be interested in.
How could they even if they're trying?
I'm not saying these are bad people.
I know a lot of them.
They are doing their best, but they have
a certain outlook, just like I do, and
they're going to notice certain things.
And so if you don't give people the
underlying information, you're you're at
their mercy to understand what happened.
[00:13:49]
And again, I encourage people
go through the document and compare it
with the reporting that purported
to summarize what was in that document.
You'll notice a big difference
between those two things.
Yeah, I. Noticed one thing because I think
that JD Vance is a fake populist,
but I was actually surprised.
In fact, I think that for me, I didn't get
a chance to read the whole 271 page thing
[00:14:08]
because he released it earlier today.
Right.
But, the part that I read about how he
didn't he thought it was a bad idea
to assassinate General Soleimani
because he thought he could actually
create a bigger war in the Middle East.
That's an Iranian general
that Trump assassinated.
[00:14:24]
I was like, really behind the scenes.
He actually objected to that.
That made me think that he was real
in being an anti-war candidate,
which I never believed before.
So. So this isn't just
about smearing JD Vance?
[00:14:39]
No, this gives a full picture and some
of it might be helpful to JD Vance,
but you're never going to know that
if you don't actually reveal the document.
And you have to your point, like
establishment media guys summarize it.
They're not going to put that in there.
They don't even think that's noteworthy
when it's in reality enormously noteworthy
[00:14:58]
and actually is
to the benefit of JD Vance.
Totally.
And and, you know, paints a complex
picture that doesn't fit this kind of we
have this dichotomy of like, there's the
grifters and then there's the good people.
The reality is a lot of people in politics
lie somewhere in between those two poles,
perhaps,
I would say very far to the grifter end.
[00:15:16]
But, you know, it's not 100%.
And things like that give you a sense of,
in the context of an election that we're
again, go and look at the convention.
They mentioned the word healthcare
once or twice in each of them.
I'm not exaggerating.
I did a story on this.
[00:15:31]
I did a little keyword search
of the convention speeches
of both the Republicans and the Democrats.
It was 1 or 2 times
that they mentioned it.
There's no policy in this election.
It's all vibes.
And so documents like these give
us a sense of what the heck is going on
when not just not just the people
running aren't saying anything,
[00:15:47]
but the media isn't pressing them
to say anything either,
and they allow them to fall back
on this kind of vague, feel good nonsense.
I totally agree with you on that. It's.
And I love that we have the opportunity
to read the actual source material
and not rely on, you know, a summarized
narrative that some journalist has decided
[00:16:05]
is worth knowing about.
But the other thing that I love
about your reporting here, Ken,
is that it's touching on what I think is
one of the most fascinating political
phenomenons happening on the right,
which is this disconnect
between the Republican elite
[00:16:22]
and the voting base, the electorate.
You know, you hear from some of the more
traditional conservative Republicans,
you know, those who are more in line with
the neocons of the Bush administration,
really like pushing back against Trump
and hoping that once the election is over
[00:16:39]
and if Kamala Harris gets elected,
well, that's it.
Trump is is over.
But no, I don't think Trumpism is over
because that voting base still exists.
And what they are craving from their party
is very different from the naysayers
who were against JD Vance in this dossier.
[00:16:57]
So I'm just really curious
to see how that plays out.
Do you have any indication that JD Vance
is aware that the political elite within
the party are very much against him, and
where he stands on some of these issues?
I would imagine he has to be right.
[00:17:12]
I mean, he's they're in a tough spot
where they can't run a Romney again,
who's just kind of like straight center.
I mean, as much as cable news
would have you believe that that's
overwhelmingly popular, it's not.
People hate it.
People hate that center, you know,
tax cuts and get rid of all the social,
[00:17:28]
you know, services and and just,
you know, trust us on the, you know,
national security consensus
on a war that's failed since nine over 11
on wars that have failed
since nine over 11. People throw that out.
But so then they have to, you know,
run on some amount of deviation from
the norm which people are appropriately,
[00:17:44]
appropriately critical of
because, you know, Trump doesn't
deliver on all the stuff he says.
As and you know, that's the case
with many politicians.
But so so they have
to differentiate themselves
from that Romney kind of center figure.
And then they're in a tough spot
where the differentiation is going to rub
[00:18:00]
up against the elite donors in the party,
who who are the reason
that these unpopular centrist opinions
to take the foothold that they do
in these, in these candidates.
- Yeah.
- Ken, last thing here.
We've got the in my opinion,
the absurdity of, you know,
[00:18:18]
both the intelligence officials,
the United States government
and the media telling us, oh my God,
Iran might have done this hack
and gotten the JD Vance files.
That is just a foreign government
interfering with our elections.
It's terrible.
Russia. 4 million Twitter impressions,
which is probably more.
[00:18:36]
You probably had more on this tweet
before they banned you.
And back in 2016, this is unacceptable.
Meanwhile, we have AIPAC and Democratic
majority for Israel, and they both have
Israel in their names and their spending
over $100 million in this election cycle.
[00:18:52]
Yeah, I get it's legal, but it doesn't
mean that they are not trying
to purchase politicians in our system
on behalf of a foreign government.
Does anybody ever even note that in media,
or do they all think like that's.
Of course that's a of course you should.
[00:19:10]
Israel should interfere
and buy off all of our politicians.
But but we don't like Iran and Russia,
so they shouldn't.
I mean, how do they.
Does anybody even realize it,
let alone justify it?
Whenever they talk about foreign
interference, you'll notice they always
mention it's like the usual suspects
they bring in to throw in jail.
[00:19:26]
It's always three countries.
It's China, Iran, Russia
and sometimes North Korea.
What they will never mention ever.
I can't find a single example of it.
I've been studying this for years.
Now is when a partner like Israel does it,
which they do,
and which we know they do from reporting,
they will never mention that.
[00:19:42]
And so you have within the intelligence
community, there's something called
the Foreign Malign Influence Center.
They recently had a private briefing
with some members of the press
where they described the threats
from foreign influence,
and I encourage people to Google this.
I can't remember the name of the title,
the title of the story,
but it was in NBC news.
They described how a reporter asked, okay,
so what about Israeli influence, though?
[00:20:01]
Because there was a story in the times
recently about how through the Israelis,
I think it was like the Cultural Affairs
Ministry or something they were pushing
they were pushing disinformation
within the US, targeting lawmakers to vote
a certain way on the on the Gaza war.
Or maybe it was on US
military aid to Israel.
[00:20:18]
I think it was.
So we know that these things happen.
We know the government finances them.
That was the New York Times.
And what the malign foreign malign
Influence Center said was, oh, you know,
well, we don't really talk about partners.
They just said this and this was in NBC.
It was like the middle of the article.
So not only do they not mention it
when on the rare occasion they're pressed,
[00:20:36]
they just give up the game and say, yeah,
we don't really we're you know, obviously
we don't want to talk about that.
And it's like, well, isn't that part
of the equation of of people influencing.
So does influence matter or not.
If there's certain reasons
that you're going to overlook it,
why not overlook these
other inefficacious, forms of influence?
[00:20:54]
And there's just there's no
discussion of any of this.
Yeah.
So we just found out that Israel's Bruno.
We don't.
Do we talk about Bruno? No, no, no.
Okay.
So. All right, Ken Klippenstein,
joining us from exile from Twitter.
And we wish you luck
and hope that you rejoin the island.
[00:21:14]
And that, hypocrisy is vanquished.
Well, more.
Importantly, everyone, please go
check out Ken's amazing Substack.
Ken, tell us a little bit more
so people can find you there.
Well, stories like these are exactly
the reason I went independent.
I mean, they make people queasy.
They invite all sorts of nasty attacks.
[00:21:32]
They are difficult to get through the kind
of bureaucracy of many news outlets,
which is not my opinion,
which is that's what we saw here.
Do you know how many outlets
had this story and wouldn't run it?
Not one. They couldn't find one.
It's crazy, so I didn't.
I feel as though
I didn't have much choice.
But one of the exciting things about going
independent is being able to do that and
[00:21:49]
not have to worry about all the barriers
that would have been in place before.
So I really enjoy writing it.
I like doing it.
I have a live chat that I participate
in close to every day, where we just
talk about different things, and it's
a lot of fun to learn from readers.
So please, if you if you have a second,
check that out.
Awesome. Yeah.
[00:22:05]
And obviously when Ken talks about
the freedom to publish those things
independent of former places he's worked
with, he obviously doesn't mean the Young
Turks or he means the other guys.
The other guys were problematic.
- The non YouTube shows.
- All right, all right.
[00:22:21]
Former investigative reporter
for TYT Ken Klippenstein.
We appreciate you brother.
Thanks, guys. Bye.
Thanks for watching the video guys.
We also love it if you hit the join button
below because that makes you a member.
And members
allow us to be independent, honest.
We can be as progressive as we want.
No corporate media influence.
And that's all because of you guys.
[00:22:39]
We love doing the show with our members.
Hit the join button,
become one of the Young Turks.
Now Playing (Clips)
Episode
Podcast
The Young Turks: September 26, 2024
- 18 minutes
- 14 minutes
- 22 minutes
- 9 minutes
- 12 minutes
- 7 minutes
- 6 minutes