False. This statement is basically a fact. There was no protest, and pretty much everybody in the administration knew that before Susan Rice went on the air. Mike Morell's point is that it wasn't a pre-planned terrorist attack. I agree. It was probably opportunistic in the sense that some bad guys gathered around the facility, maybe to cause some trouble in response to the escalating protests around the world, and then saw that there was very poor security and that they could probably break in and sack the place. It was not a protest that spun out of control due to crowd dynamics, which is the spin the administration gave it.
It's a pretty solid inference, not just an opinion. I really have no doubt that the administration was looking at the event primarily as a political problem that needed to be mitigated before the election. One way to do this was to make it seem like an unforeseeable event, rather than an intentional terrorist attack. If you disagree, then you shouldn't just call it baseless opinion. You should give your opinion as to the reasons the administration chose to spin things the way it did. The fact that information was preliminary or incomplete is not a good enough explanation. You can always play it straight and say that the cause of the attack was still unknown. But the administration was clearly eager to cherry-pick and highlight bits of information that were consistent with a protest evolving into a riot.
Same as above. The upcoming election was clearly the administration's main focus, indeed obsession.
Well, I hope it is an opinion that we all share. I have discussed it before in several threads, but I'm happy to discuss it again. It is unthinkable in a modern Western society to use an offensive work of art created by a 3rd person as a justification for a violent attack. Evidently, it is not unthinkable, or even unusual, in more primitive societies. However, and this is a key point, we should not stoop to their level. Aside from the fact that the video was most likely pretext for violence which was "due" in some sense, it undermines our values and lends validity to those of the jihadists even to mention the video as a cause, let alone denounce the video. There are literally millions of offensive videos on Youtube. It is not just craven and immoral to denounce a Youtube video in such a context; it is completely impractical too.
Same as above.
No, it's not. You simply just missed my point, which I have explained in more detail above.