Tangle - Tulsi Gabbard reignites "Russiagate."
Episode Date: July 23, 2025On Friday, Director of National Intelligence (DNI) Tulsi Gabbard announced the release of files that allegedly show President Barack Obama and his national security cabinet members concocted... a false narrative of Russian interference in the 2016 election. DNI Gabbard claimed the documents showed a “treasonous conspiracy” to overturn Donald Trump’s electoral victory, posting on X that the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) will be turning the documents over to the Department of Justice for criminal referral.Ad-free podcasts are here!Many listeners have been asking for an ad-free version of this podcast that they could subscribe to — and we finally launched it. You can go to ReadTangle.com to sign up!You can read today's podcast here, our “Under the Radar” story here and today’s “Have a nice day” story here.Take the survey: How would you describe Russia’s role in the 2016 presidential election? Let us know!Disagree? That's okay. My opinion is just one of many. Write in and let us know why, and we'll consider publishing your feedback.You can subscribe to Tangle by clicking here or drop something in our tip jar by clicking here. Our Executive Editor and Founder is Isaac Saul. Our Executive Producer is Jon Lall.This podcast was written by: Isaac Saul and edited and engineered by Dewey Thomas. Music for the podcast was produced by Diet 75.Our newsletter is edited by Managing Editor Ari Weitzman, Senior Editor Will Kaback, Hunter Casperson, Kendall White, Bailey Saul, and Audrey Moorehead. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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This episode is sponsored by the OCS Summer Pre-Roll Sale.
Sometimes when you roll your own joint, things can turn out a little differently
than what you expected.
Maybe it's a little too loose.
Maybe it's a little too flimsy.
Or maybe it's a little too covered in dirt because your best friend
distracted you and you dropped it on the ground.
There's a million ways to roll a joint wrong.
But there's one roll that's always perfect.
The pre-roll. Shop the Summer Pre-roll and infuse pre-roll sale today
at ocs.ca and participating retailers.
Say hello savings and goodbye worries with Freedom Mobile.
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Condition supply details at freedommobile.ca. From executive producer, Isaac Saul, this is Tangle.
Good morning, good afternoon, and good evening, and welcome to the Tangle Podcast, the place
we get views from across the political spectrum, some independent thinking and a little bit
of my take.
I'm your host, Isaac Saul.
And on today's episode, we're going to be talking about the DNI report that is the director
of national intelligence, Tulsi Gabbard's report that came out last week,
which has been drummed up as maybe a potentially massive
scandal with president Barack Obama at the center.
We're gonna talk about exactly what the report says
and what we have learned from it.
And this is one of those ones where I definitely
have a lot of thoughts from writing and reporting
about a lot of this stuff over the last eight or nine years.
So we're gonna jump into that.
Before we do though, a quick heads up that on Friday,
I'm gonna be releasing a members only edition
a little bit different.
I'm gonna be writing about the things I've gotten right
that is correct.
I realized a couple of weeks ago
when we did the five things I got wrong about Trump piece
that a lot of the kind
of reflective naval gazing pieces that we've done
in Tangle are ones where I'm writing about stuff
that I've gotten wrong.
And I don't want you to think I'm a total idiot.
Otherwise, why come to Tangle?
There's actually a good deal of stuff that I've written
in the last six months that I've been pretty right about.
So I'm gonna take some victory laps for once, maybe pat myself on the back a little bit and talk about some of the analysis
or writing that I've done in Tangle that has panned out pretty well. So I'm excited for this.
It will be a much less painful exercise than the one that I normally do, which I'm looking forward
to. With that, I'm going to send it over to John for today's main topic and I'll be back for my take.
Thanks Isaac and welcome everybody.
Here are your quick hits for today.
First up, President Donald Trump announced a trade deal with Japan that includes 15%
tariffs on Japanese exports and a decrease of levies on Japanese auto exports from 25%
to 15%.
Separately, President Trump announced a trade deal with the Philippines that will place
a 19% tariff on Filipino exports.
2.
House Speaker Mike Johnson sent members on summer recess early in lieu of holding votes
on releasing files related to Jeffrey Epstein.
Johnson said the decision was intended to give the Trump administration time to determine
how to proceed.
Separately, a House Oversight and Government Reform subcommittee voted to subpoena Ghislaine
Maxwell, a convicted sex offender and Epstein's longtime associate.
3.
A federal appeals court said President Trump can continue restricting the Associated Press's
access to restricted spaces, such as the Oval Office and Air Force One, while the decision is challenged in court.
4.
General Motors reported that its net income shrank 35 percent in Q2, attributing the decrease
to new tariffs on imported cars and auto parts.
The manufacturer said it expects greater impacts from tariffs in Q3.
5. Manufacturers said it expects greater impacts from tariffs in Q3. And number five, Columbia University announced a disciplinary action against over 70 students
who participated in the anti-Israel campus protests earlier this year.
The actions come as the school negotiates with the Trump administration over approximately
$400 million in withheld funds over its purported failure to address anti-Semitism on campus.
President Trump's Epstein controversy made headlines Friday saw also did a report from
the office of the director of national intelligence.
That report claims to have new evidence of an Obama administration conspiracy to subvert
President Trump's 2016 victory and presidency.
This report claims politicized intelligence was used as the basis for smears seeking to
delegitimize President Trump's victory.
On Friday, director of national intelligence Tulsi Gabbard announced the release of files
that allegedly show President Barack Obama and his National Security Cabinet members
concocted a false narrative of Russian interference in the 2016 election.
DNI Gabbard claimed the documents showed a treasonous conspiracy to overturn Donald Trump's
electoral victory, posting on X that the Office of the Director of National Intelligence will
be turning the documents over to the Department of Justice for criminal referral.
For context, in January 2017, following President Trump's election in 2016, what would be later
known as the Steele dossier, an unverified opposition research report alleging that Trump
conspired with Russia to boost his candidacy, was published by BuzzFeed News.
Also in 2017, the ODNI released an assessment finding that Russian President Vladimir Putin
ordered an influence campaign to undermine U.S. faith in its elections, denigrate Democratic
nominee Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, and support Russia's clear preference for
President-elect Trump through social media campaigns and hacking groups affiliated with
the Democratic Party. The Justice Department then appointed Robert Mueller as special counsel to
investigate possible collusion between Trump and Russia. Mueller's 2019 report concluded that Russia
had interfered in the 2016 U.S. election, including hacking the Democratic National
Committee email servers and coordinating leaks of its content, but did not find sufficient
evidence to prosecute President Trump or members of his campaign for conspiring with Russia.
Subsequent Senate Intelligence Committee hearings also confirmed these findings, including that
Russia did not hack voting machines or alter votes.
In her announcement, D&I-Gabbert alleged that President Obama and members of the intelligence
community ignored benign intelligence reports to create a narrative of Russia-Trump collusion ODNI's report shows that talking points developed for then-DNI James Clapper stated that foreign adversaries did not use cyberattacks on election infrastructure to
alter the U.S. presidential election outcome.
However, following a December 9th meeting between President Obama, Clapper, and other
members of the intelligence community, Clapper's executive assistant sent a memo directing
the intelligence community to create the January assessment detailing
tools Moscow used and actions it took to influence the 2016 election.
Gabbard claims that the report and its leak to the Washington Post are evidence of a conspiracy
to subvert the will of the people.
Many Republicans took the DNI report as proof of an attempted coup.
President Trump posted on Truth Social that Obama, Clinton, and then Vice President Biden had participated
in the crime of the century and should be investigated by the Justice Department.
Conversely, Democrats criticized Gabbard's report as baseless.
President Obama also issued a rare response to these claims.
These bizarre allegations are ridiculous and a weak attempt at distraction, Obama's office said in a statement.
our allegations are ridiculous and a weak attempt at distraction," Obama's office said in a statement.
Nothing in the document issued last week undercuts the widely accepted conclusion that Russia
worked to influence the 2016 presidential election but did not successfully manipulate
any votes.
Today, we'll get into what the left and the right are saying about the DNI report, and
then Isaac's tape.
We'll be right back after this quick break.
This episode is sponsored by the OCS Summer Pre-Roll Sale.
Sometimes when you roll your own joint, things can turn out a little differently than what you expected. Maybe it's a little too loose. Maybe it's a little too flimsy.
Or maybe it's a little too covered in dirt because your best friend distracted you and you dropped it on the ground.
There's a million ways to roll a joint wrong, but there's one roll that's always perfect.
The pre-roll.
Shop the Summer Pre-Roll and Infuse Pre-Rroll sale today at ocs.ca and participating retailers.
Say hello savings and goodbye worries with Freedom Mobile.
Get 60 gigs to use in Canada, the US and Mexico
for just 39 bucks a month.
Plus get a one-time use of five gigs of Roam Beyond data.
Conditions apply details at freedommobile.ca.
Alright, first up, let's start with what the left is saying. The left describes Gabbard's findings as implausible and at odds with past reports
endorsed by Republicans.
Some say the report is an attempt to distract the public from the Jeffrey Epstein story.
Others argue Gabbard's conclusions are deliberately misleading.
In CNN, Aaron Blake wrote, Gabbard's Russian interference claims directly contradict what
other Trump officials have said.
When Donald Trump sided with Vladimir Putin over his own intelligence community on the
topic of Russia's interference in the 2016 U.S. election, then-Senator Marco Rubio sharply
rebuked Trump.
The Florida Republican said in 2018 that the intelligence community's assessment of 2016
is accurate.
It's 100% accurate.
The Russians interfered in our elections, Blake said.
But seven years later, it just keeps happening, over and over again, as Trump and his most
loyal allies seek to sow doubts about the 2016 episode and punish their political enemies.
That's now taken the form of Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard threatening criminal
referrals and even floating allegations of treason for key officials in the Obama administration.
Gabbard's commentary is especially striking when juxtaposed with those she serves within
the second Trump administration.
Rubio didn't just rebuke Trump for siding with Putin's denials back in 2018.
He also spearheaded the Senate Intelligence Committee's big, bipartisan Russia report
in 2020, Blake wrote.
The report concluded that Russia had engaged in an aggressive, multi-faceted effort to
influence or attempt to influence the outcome of the 2016 presidential election.
It not only said that Russia had interfered, but also that it had done so to benefit Trump.
In USA Today, Chris Brennan argued Gabbard yells Russia hoax to distract MAGA from Epstein
for Trump.
Tulsi Gabbard was on the outs, literally and figuratively, with President Trump last month
after contradicting him about Iran's nuclear program, which he was about to bomb.
Gabbard, Trump's director of national intelligence, was shut out of planning meetings about Iran's nuclear program, which he was about to bomb. Gabbard, Trump's director of national intelligence, was shut out of planning meetings about Iran
and pushed to the intelligence sidelines for asserting that Iran had not been trying to
build a nuclear weapon, Brennan said.
She needed a way back inside Trump's bubble.
The president's new Epstein-Files scandal offered an opportunity.
Gabbard dug deep into the classics of Trump's hoax claims.
She's claiming Obama's team manufactured intelligence to hobble Trump's impending presidency after
he won.
There's a hole in that theory.
The Obama administration said shortly after the 2016 presidential election that hackers
had not tampered with the election results, Brennan room.
Gabbard is dredging back up Russian interference because American voters just don't buy what
Trump has tried to sell them about the Epstein files
That his administration is still keeping secret after he promised during last year's campaign to make them public
In tech dirt Mike Masnick said Gabbard uses the Twitter files playbook to mislead
The pattern is always identical release narrow technical documents that most people won't understand, surround them with
inflammatory innuendo, then hand them off to gullible rubes like Matt Taibbi, who will
falsely claim the biggest scandal in history just dropped," Masnick wrote.
Here's what actually happened.
Russia absolutely tried to influence the 2016 election, primarily to sow chaos and division
in the U.S.
This generally involved supporting Trump, who brought more chaos and division in the U.S. This generally involved supporting
Trump, who brought more chaos, and attacking Hillary Clinton, whom Putin despised from
her time as Secretary of State.
This basic fact has been confirmed over and over again by multiple investigations, including
those led by Republicans.
The original report was narrowly focused on one thing that was widely known.
No successful hack impacted the actual election.
But it's being used to pretend it proves that the Russians didn't try to influence the election
at all, a thing we already knew they absolutely did," Mastin said.
Gabbard then misrepresents Obama's request to the intelligence agency, following that
initial assessment, to write an analysis about Russian attempts to influence the election
as a whole.
That is, having seen the NARA report about a lack of success in hacking in to change
votes, the request was a broader look at the many ways which Russia simply tried to influence
the election, which is something entirely different than hacking voting infrastructure.
These two things are not in conflict at all.
Alright that is it for what the left is saying, which brings us to what the right is saying.
The right mostly views Gabbard's announcement as a major revelation that confirms Obama
and others conspired to target Trump.
Some contend the leaders of this effort should face criminal prosecution.
Others say Republicans have resurfaced this story to their own detriment.
In Racket News, Matt Taibbi suggested Obama is now squarely in Russiagate crosshairs.
The documents in the chain show that not only former Director of National Intelligence James
Clapper's office, but others, including the FBI, were relatively unconcerned about Russian interference.
Figures like Virginia Senator and key Russiagate figure Mark Warner are already dismissing
Gabbard's report as an attempt to cook the books by comparing apples and oranges, the
apples being Russian efforts to attack election infrastructure, the oranges being influence
operations, Tayibbi wrote.
But emails dating back to September 2016 show a dismissive attitude towards both concepts,
as well as a lack of conviction about Russia's ability to impact or disrupt the election
outcome in any way.
In sum, just before Obama was to receive a briefing that contained no reference to significant
Russian interference, the briefing was called off and a high-level meeting of White House security officials
was convened, after which Obama himself tasked them with a new assessment that would lean
toward a more aggressive conclusion," Tayyibi said.
It's suspicious that a presidential daily briefing was postponed to make way for the
intelligence community assessment ordered at Obama's request, fishier yet that
the evidence that Putin intended to help Trump came from a classified annex containing steel
dossier material.
In Fox News, Greg Jarrett wrote about how Obama and cronies created Trump-Russia hoax
and what happens next.
Newly revealed documents showed that in 2016, then-President Barack Obama and his national
security team manufactured and politicized phony intelligence to help frame Donald Trump
as a Russian asset when they knew it was untrue, Jared said.
Treason is a strong term with an exceedingly high legal standard.
So too is seditious conspiracy.
The use of violence or force is often a central element for both.
Closer to the mark are the other serious crimes.
They include conspiracy to defraud the government and deprivation of rights under the color
of the law.
That is, using knowingly false or fabricated evidence to support a case against Trump and
to obstruct or impair a lawful government function such as an election.
The FBI is reportedly examining the possibility of bringing a grand conspiracy case that would
encompass many of the above noted acts that were intended to unduly influence three presidential
elections, 2016, 2020, and 2024, Jarrett wrote.
The advantage of adopting this legal avenue is twofold.
First, it would extend any expired statute of limitations to the date of more recent overt acts such as the raid on Mar-a-Lago or events thereafter. Second,
it would allow any prosecutions to be brought in a venue other than Washington, D.C., where
the endemic bias of jurors make it nearly impossible to gain convictions.
In National Review, Andrew C. McCarthy said, Gabbard makes a frivolous argument.
The Trump administration's decision to revive this episode while titillating for the MAGA
political base is self-sabotage.
That is mainly because, after months of scrutiny, the Trump CIA has reaffirmed the ICA's conclusion
that 1.
Russia sought to interfere in the 2016 election and 2.
Did so in order to denigrate Hillary Clinton,"
McCarthy wrote.
The public position of President Trump and his most ardent supporters, the position that
Gabbard reiterates, is that Russiagate was a total hoax, a complete fabrication by Democrats
without a shred of truth to it, concocted to undermine his presidency.
This has always been a foolish stance.
The Democrats' caterwalling that Russia stole the 2016 election from Clinton was nonsense.
It has long been widely recognized for what it is, a fever dream by which Democrats sought
to avoid conceding the true cause of the party's loss, its nomination of a deeply unpopular,
scandal-scarred, politically flat-footed candidate, McCarthy said.
Yet, by claiming that there was no evidence of Russian interference,
the Trump camp invites correction, including now from the Trump administration's own CIA,
and thereby turns into a matter of consequence, something that was utterly inconsequential.
All right, let's head over to Isaac for his take.
All right, that is it for the left and the right are saying, which brings us to my take. I've been writing this newsletter long enough that I know when to expect blowback from all
comers and today is one of those days.
From the left, I'm going to be told that story is old news, that I'm falling for misinformation Gabbert
is willfully spreading to distract
from more important stories,
and that Trump is an obvious Russia stooge.
From the right, I'll be told that I can't see
the generational scandal in front of me,
that I'm protecting a nameless cabal
of democratic politicians and officials,
and that I hate Trump so much I can't see how obvious it is that his presidency was sabotaged by the quote-unquote deep state
So let me start by asking you to try to abandon the emotional attachment you may have to one narrative or another and
Honestly evaluate the facts and events in hand for the left. Yes
These stories are about events from nearly a decade ago
Yes Yes, these stories are about events from nearly a decade ago. Yes, they are still relevant because the new report alleges a generational scandal that,
if true, demands accountability and investigation.
They're also relevant because the alleged target, Donald Trump, is sitting in the White
House and promising to launch an investigation to hold the accused accountable.
For the right, no, I'm not personally invested in downplaying purported scandals
that implicate the Obama administration. No, I'm not blind to the failings of the Russia
investigation that dominated Trump's first term. In fact, in 2023, I wrote a deep dive
about everything the media got wrong on the Trump-Russia story. And no, I don't hate President
Trump and I'm not incapable of applauding his achievements or saying when he's been wronged.
As simply as I can say, I'm going to try to tell you exactly what we knew about this story before Gabbard's report and exactly what we know now after its release.
So you can see for yourself whether you think the report is meaningful.
So before the release, we knew that the Obama administration believed Russia was trying to influence the 2016 election.
We knew that they did not think Russia penetrated our voting infrastructure or changed any votes.
We knew that they determined Russia was influencing the election to help Trump and hurt Clinton.
We knew that intelligence officials inside the Obama administration had different assessments
of the threat that sometimes diverged, and that they ended up relying on a lot of shoddy
intelligence, like the Steele dossier,
to surveil Trump and the Trump campaign.
We knew that Obama's intelligence agencies
regularly leaked materials to the press
that produced alarming and increasingly breathless coverage
tying Trump to Russia's meddling campaign.
We knew that Obama and his top intelligence officials
were worried their assessment would be buried
by the incoming Trump administration, so they did everything they could to leave a
paper trail of what they found. There's actually a fascinating New York Times article from 2017 on
this very thing that's linked to in today's episode description. After the release, we know
that the Obama administration believed Russia was trying to influence the 2016 election.
We know that they did not think Russia ever penetrated our voting infrastructure or changed any votes.
We know that they determined Russia was influencing the election to help Trump and hurt Clinton.
We know that the day before the FBI was going to deliver a private intelligence report to Obama,
assessing that Russia had not hacked our election infrastructure, the Bureau withdrew that report.
We know that Obama then requested that several agencies collaborate
on a public intelligence report explaining their assessment that,
while Russia was not trying to hack our voting system,
they were trying to influence the election via the hacking of DNC emails
and the promotion of anti-Clinton messaging.
We know that a rough outline of that report detailing Russia's efforts
to influence the election immediately leaked to the press.
We know that Obama and his top intelligence officials were worried this assessment would be buried by the incoming Trump administration,
so they did everything they could to leave a paper trail of what they found.
You can listen to those differences a few times to be sure, but to me, the second paragraph adds a minuscule detail to a story
we already understood quite well.
Matt Taibbi, who has been one of the foremost journalists
covering the media's mishandling of Russiagate
and the scandalous way in which the intelligence community
hobbled Trump, published a series of overstated pieces
following the release that overtly implied Obama
could be in the crosshairs of an investigation
and senior members of his team
may actually end up in prison. Yet even in his own reporting, many paragraphs in,
Taibbi gets down to the brass tacks. Quote, some of this timeline was known, but the sudden
ditching of a tepid PDB and ordering of a new report per the president's request with
emails conspicuously invoking POTUS tasking never surfaced before."
End quote.
And that really is the whole story, right there in one sentence, though I'd argue that
almost all of this timeline was known already.
I don't say that to denigrate Taibbi, whose original and critical reporting over the last
nine years has unearthed a lot of information that has helped me better understand this
timeline.
Unlike the mainstream media, which often conflated election meddling with vote-altering or intrusion
of election infrastructure, Taibbi has long been more precise in his description of what
happened in the lead-up to the 2016 election.
But I wonder if he might be so tied to telling a particular version of events that his own
writing is now veering off into sensationalism and enthusiastically
trying to prove this story is the huge scandal he has long suggested it was.
Andrew McCarthy, who literally wrote one of the seminal books on this time period titled
Ball of Collusion, the Plot to Rig an Election and Destroy a Presidency, saw Gabbard's Mountain
for the Mole Hill that it is.
His lengthy response to Gabbard is worth reading in full,
but here's the thrust of it in his words, quote,
no new light is shed on this episode
by Gabbard's email disclosures last Friday,
which unsurprisingly were accompanied by an overwrought
and misleading press release rather than analytical report.
Gabbard sees this one directive following a single meeting
as the root cause
of countless smears against Trump,
a years long Mueller investigation,
two congressional impeachments,
the arrest of high level officials,
and heightened US-Russia tensions.
In the real world, as McCarthy noted,
neither of Trump's impeachments had anything to do
with Trump-Russia collusion allegations.
It's fair to argue the Trump-Russia narrative
made him
illegitimate in many Democrats' eyes, but one impeachment was for his call with Zelensky,
and the other one was for January 6. The Mueller probe did actually conclusively find no actionable
evidence of Trump-Russia conclusion, though it also assessed that Russia interfered in the election,
a conclusion affirmed by Senate and House Republican investigations,
as well as Trump's current CIA director
earlier this month for what it's worth.
No Trump officials have been prosecuted
or thrown in jail for anything related
to the January 2017 intelligence report
or the Steele dossier.
And US-Russia relations were plenty strained already
by Russia annexing Crimea and hacking DNC emails.
This is all just to say Gabbard's report tells us almost nothing new.
Not that Trump wasn't unfairly targeted in 2017.
Again, I've written in detail about what we now know from that period and the Trump-Russia
collusion theory was vastly overstated and veered into mania.
It was fed by a circular information
ecosystem between reporters and intelligence leakers, became a scandal of its own that shoddy
intelligence and bad journalism compounded, and led to a soon-to-be elected president getting spied
on by the U.S. government. At the same time, the Trump administration did invite much of that
scrutiny by opening its doors to Russian actors who wanted to help the campaign.
Also, our intelligence community did assess Russia meddled in the election.
Russia did leak DNC emails. Trump did egg on a lot of it.
And some of Trump's top campaign aides, like Paul Manafort,
were indeed some of the shadiest, most corrupt peopleS. politics who were charged and convicted for genuine crimes.
All of those things can be true at once.
Gabbard's report, to the degree that it tells us anything, reinforces that intelligence
officials in the Obama administration disagreed about how successful Russian efforts were
and about how to communicate its information to the public.
Ultimately, the report reads like a screed of old grievances bundled into scandal sounding intelligence
designed to get Trump's attention, which it has.
Given how much Gabbard has fallen out of favor
with Trump recently, maybe Aaron Blake,
under what the left is saying, is right,
that this was all an effort to get back in his good graces
and distract from the Epstein drama.
Maybe it is also the product of her being unqualified
for the job and conspiracy minded.
Or maybe it is a willful misrepresentation for other purposes I don't quite understand.
Whatever the actual motivation behind the release of this insubstantial report, none
of them reflects well on Gabbard or her office.
We'll be right back after this quick break. 5 gigs of Roam Beyond data. Condition supply details at freedommobile.ca.
This episode is sponsored by the OCS Summer Pre-Roll Sale.
Sometimes when you roll your own joint,
things can turn out a little differently
than what you expected.
Maybe it's a little too loose.
Maybe it's a little too flimsy.
Or maybe it's a little too covered in dirt
because your best friend distracted you
and you dropped it on the ground.
There's a million ways to roll a joint wrong, but there's one roll that's always perfect.
The pre-roll.
Shop the summer pre-roll and infuse pre-roll sale today at ocs.ca and participating retailers.
All right.
That is it for my take.
I'm going to send it back to John for the rest of the pod and I'll see you guys tomorrow.
Have a good one.
Peace.
Thanks, Isaac.
Here's your under the radar story for today, folks.
In January, President Trump announced a joint venture between OpenAI, SoftBank, and Oracle
to build artificial intelligence infrastructure in the United States with an expected commitment
of $500 billion over the next four years.
However, in the month since, the project has struggled to gain traction, failing to complete
a single deal for an AI data center and scaling back its first-year goals.
Softbank and OpenAI have reportedly been at odds over the terms of the collaboration,
such as the location of the data centers.
Leaders of both companies maintain that the partnership is on track and recently committed
to building 10 gigawatts of data centers together, though further specifics were not given.
The Wall Street Journal has this story and there's a link in today's episode description.
Alright, next up is our numbers section.
There are 114 pages of documents released by Director of National Intelligence Tulsi
Gabbard reporting to show U.S. intelligence community's suppression of intelligence related
to the 2016 election.
According to a July 2018 Ipsos poll, 60% of U.S. adults said they believe that Russia
interfered with the 2016 presidential election, 85% of Democrats said they believed that Russia interfered in the 2016 presidential election,
and 75% of Republicans said that they believed that the FBI's investigation and actions
around the 2016 elections were the result of political bias against President Trump.
According to a May 2023 survey, 43% of Tangle readers said the Trump-Russia investigation
was an attempt to hurt Trump politically and should not have been conducted.
42% of Tangle readers said that the investigation was sloppily done, but there were good reasons
to start it.
And 7% of Tangle readers said the investigation was conducted reasonably and uncovered serious
criminal acts.
And last but not least, our Have a Nice Day story.
Once found across Australia, the Shark Bay Bandicoot faces critical endangerment due
to disease, predators, and human impact.
Fewer than 3,000 are left in the wild, and they're mostly confined to islands in their
eponymous region in Western Australia.
But in 2023, ecologists at the Australian Wildlife Conservancy began reintroducing the bandicoots elsewhere,
starting by releasing 66 in the Pilaga State Conservation Area.
Population growth was confirmed in 2024, and this summer ecologists spotted a family of
shark bay bandicoots on a trail camp.
It definitely made our day seeing the photo of the three young bandicoots scurrying to
keep up with their mum, ecologist Maisie Duffin said. Good, good, good has this story
and there's a link in today's episode description.
All right, everybody, that is it for today's episode.
As always, if you'd like to support our work,
please go to readtangle.com where you can sign up
for a newsletter membership, podcast membership,
or a bundled membership that gets you a discount on both.
We'll be right back here tomorrow.
For Isaac and the rest of the crew,
this is John Law signing off.
Have a great day, y'all.
Peace.
Our executive editor and founder is me, Isaac Saul, and our executive producer is John Law.
Today's episode was edited and engineered by Dewey Thomas.
Our editorial staff is led by managing editor Ari Weitzman with senior editor Will K. Back
and associate editors Hunter Kaspersen, Audrey Moorhead, Bailey Saul, Lindsay Knuth and Kendall White. Music for the podcast was produced by Diet75.
To learn more about Tangle and to sign up for a membership, please visit our website
at retangle.com. This episode is sponsored by the OCS Summer Pre-Roll Sale.
Sometimes when you roll your own joint, things can turn out a little differently than what
you expected.
Maybe it's a little too loose, maybe it's a little too flimsy, or maybe it's a little
too covered in dirt because your best friend distracted you and you dropped it on the ground.
There's a million ways to roll a joint wrong, but there's one roll that's always perfect,
the pre-roll.
Shop the summer pre-roll and infuse pre-roll sale today at ocs.ca and participating retailers.
Say hello savings and goodbye worries with Freedom Mobile.
Get 60 gigs to use in Canada, the US, and Mexico for just 39 bucks a month.
Plus, get a one-time use of 5 gigs of Roam Beyond data.
Conditions apply.
Details at freedommobile.ca.