National Public Radio Face-Plants As It Delivers a Face-Palm ‘Exclusive’ From the Alaska Summit – RedState

Is it a desperate traffic jam for relevance? Perhaps something served as “proof” that they do great journalism that needs public support? Or is it a desire to shame the administration that recently drawn its federal funding? Whatever motivation, national public radio has just shame that it was certain was an explosive presentation of the recent summit held between President Trump and Vladimir Putin.
Read more: Trump arriving in Alaska Friday to meet Putin, and the local left has major projects
Journalist Chiara Eisner arrives with an excitable history of the discovery of documents in a nearby hotel where the two world leaders met last week. This is delivered with the whole intonation of the geopolitical intrigue which turns the earth, whose people have not been seen since perhaps the release of the Pentagon papers! Here are the geopolitical ramifications with the exposure of planned activities.
Documents with the brands of the US State Department, found on Friday morning in the business center of an Alaska hotel, revealed previously unhappy and potentially sensitive details on August 15 meetings between President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir V. Putin in Anchorage.
…
Friday around 9 am, three guests at the Captain Cook Cook Cook, a four-star hotel located 20 minutes from the Elmendorf-Richardson common base in Anchorage, where the leaders of the United States and Russia met, found the documents. NPR examined the photos of the documents taken by one of the guests, which NPR agreed not to identify because the guest said that they feared reprisals.
The use of “potentially” makes the whole uprising here. The following is not entirely the type of political intrigue or content with national thriller that you can find in a novel by Brad Thor. Instead, we get hyperventillary coverage on the content that reaches the level of your professional event planner. The eight pages (from what they are ridiculously describing as “government papers”) were not discreetly transmitted to an elevator or via an exchange of clandestine briefcase – they were found on a printer in the office room of the general hotel of the hotel near the hall.
These sheets have exposed potentially harmful secrets such as the calendar of events, names and faces of those present, the contact numbers of some members of the American delegation, as well as the gift presented to Vlad Putin (an ornament of white pygarm office). We also have an intercepted document exposing the seats table during the planned lunch. And part of this sensitive information that has now been made public include the discovery that the meal salad would have had a champagne vinaigrette.

It seems quite clear that Mrs. Eisner and her NPR publishers have not spent much time thinking about the origins of these “government documents”. Are they really thought that administration officials would use devices in the common area of a hotel, using public WiFi, to disseminate classified information? It is also obvious that Eisner is not familiar with the sheets of tips for events with specifications of the agenda passed out by the public – and, ironically, the press.
Find out more: President Trump and President Putin meet in Alaska – Here is what happened
Even if he is now obvious, she was not rolled up with these articles of the agenda, he did not come to the mind of this journalist that it was something that was sent to others as a basic context of the event? An indicator of this objective is to guide those covering the summit is the inclusion of the phonetic pronunciation of the Russian names. How was it designed that the most likely scenario was that an administration manager ran classified documents in the hotel hall, and not another journalist probably printing the event from an email provided by contact with the media?
But Eisner was so convinced of Pulitzer level journalism that she even aroused the opinion of an “expert” on global affairs to confirm her conclusions.
Jon Michaels, professor of law at the UCLA who gives conferences on national security, said that the documents found in the printer of the Alaska hotel reveal a period of professional judgment in preparation for a meeting with high issues. “It seems to me as an additional proof of the negligence and incompetence of the administration,” said Michaels. “You don’t leave things in printers. It’s just as simple.”
Yes, because of this non -professional spear, the world is now fully aware that the crème brûlée had to be served for dessert during lunch since the renunciation.
– Chiara Eisner 🎤 (@chiaraeisner) August 16, 2025
You get the true meaning of the lack of importation that this NPR distribution contains by the cover of the rest of the media. The rare follow -up reports did not sell the concept of revealed state secrets; Instead, they simply echo the details and claims of the NPR report.
We must assume that there can be a continuous survey on the details of this revelation of documents: the portion of the cute net and a stubble during the planned lunch considered as “surf and lawn”, or was it “surf or lawn” on the menu ????
Publisher’s note: tThe consumer media continue to deviate, from Gaslight, to turn and lie about President Trump, his administration and the Conservatives.
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