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Sunday, May 9, 2010
WND's Shameless Bizarro World
Topic: WorldNetDaily

Sometimes you gotta look in awe at the utter shamelessness of WorldNetDaily.

WND devoted an entire story to the satirical suggestion by a "conspiracy website" that a promotion for Aaron Klein's conspiracy-laden, birther-promoting, Obama-bashing book caused the recent stock market "flash crash."

WND also performs a bit of cleverness that the rest of us would call a false claim. The "conspiracy website" WND is referring to, ObamaConspiracy.org, is not a "conspiracy website"; rather, it debunks conspiracy theories -- like WND's long-held belief that Obama is not an American citizen.

This means that WND is bizarrely suggesting that the people telling the truth about Obama are the real conspiracy theorists. Talk about Bizarro World...


Posted by Terry K. at 12:24 AM EDT
Saturday, May 8, 2010
WND Falsely Links Allegedly Coerced Abortion to Non-Existent 'Death Panels'
Topic: WorldNetDaily

From a March 6 WorldNetDaily article by Bob Unruh:

A longtime veteran of the battle against abortion in the United States says the case of a Philadelphia teen who reportedly was coerced into a late-term abortion by a social services agency can be blamed on government's so-called "death panels."

The issue of "death panels" came up during debate over the Democrats' health-care reform law. Critics said the plan, signed into law in March, included government boards that would approve or refuse certain medical services for some patients.

"Obamacare" supporters denied that such panels existed or would exist, but Troy Newman, president of the pro-life Operation Rescue organization, said the Philadelphia case is evidence they already exist and are operating.

Let's unpack the mendacity, shall we?

Unruh is lying about the existence of "government boards that would approve or refuse certain medical services for some patients." Unruh's couching it in the weasel words of "critics say" is dishonest; at no point does he explain exactly how those "government boards" constitute "death panels," nor does he report the actual truth: there is no such thing as "death panels" in the bill.

Even if the "death panels" did exist as right-wingers like Unruh claim they do, the Philadelphia case would not have fallen under their purview. Since WND's reporting is so untrustworthy, we consulted Unruh's original source, the Philadelphia Daily News, which appears to confirm the basic facts. Unsurprisingly, Unruh fails to tell the whole story, filing to mention that the Daily News also reported "a source familiar with the case insisted that the girl was not coerced and that her foster mother, whose first language is Spanish, did not understand the conversation between the girl and the DHS worker."

If true, such alleged coercion raises ethical questions within the Philadelphia Department of Human Services. But coercion is not "approving or refusing certain medical services."

But WND is Obama Hate Central, and Unruh embraces his opening claim like he's contractually obligated to smear the president.


Posted by Terry K. at 3:44 PM EDT
Newsmax's Ponte Still Lying About MEChA
Topic: Newsmax

Lowell Ponte just can't stop lying about MEChA.

In his May 6 Newsmax column about an incident in which a California high school sent four students home for wearing American flag-emblazoned clothing during the school's Cinco de Mayo -- celebrated by "Mexican-American students" he declared to be "brainwashed" -- once again described the Hispanic group MEChA as a "radical organization" that is "working for the reconquest of the Southwest."

As we detailed the last time Ponte made this claim, MEChA has never advocated such a thing in real life, and its references to reconquista are only spiritual.


Posted by Terry K. at 9:10 AM EDT
Klein's Co-Author Not Taking Criticism Well
Topic: WorldNetDaily

Brenda J. Elliott, co-author of Aaron Klein's WorldNetDaily-published (and problematic) anti-Obama tome "The Manchurian President," doesn't like what we wrote about her PR agent. After highlighting a blogger who claimed Klein's book "is being shunned and bastardized by the conglomerate media and their 'Handlers'" (while misspelling the name of Tim McVeigh and the name of the building he blew up), Elliott writes:

The reference may also be to the hideously ridiculous suggestion made by George Soros-funded, Media Matters/ConWebWatch lackey Terry Krepel’s Cass Sunstein-inspired nudge-toward-the-exits piece, WND’s PR Agent Torpedoes Her Career. Enough said.

We're not even sure what that means. But whatever it means, it's clear Elliott doesn't understand what we wrote. So here's another stab at it.

Maria Sliwa's job as a PR agent is to schmooze the media into giving attention to whatever it is you're promoting. If you instead publicize the negative reaction by certain members of the media to what you're promoting in order to make them look bad, however petty that reaction might be, you have set up a situation in which these media members will not promote anything you're involved in, simply because you are involved. You have, therefore, failed as a PR person. Having worked in the newspaper industry, I know I would not be interested in dealing with a PR agent who made me look bad in public.

Plus, as I already noted, in defending her behavior, Sliwa proclaimed herself to be a liberal -- a political philosophy anathema to Joseph Farah and WND. She has given WND a reason never to hire her again -- try to find a liberal anywhere else on the WND payroll -- and, since she betrayed trust among members  of the media, promoting anything else, even a non-WND product, has become increasingly difficult. Thus, Sliwa has failed twice.

If we're wrong, perhaps Elliott or Sliwa could explain instead of offering illogical ridicule.


Posted by Terry K. at 12:22 AM EDT
Updated: Saturday, May 8, 2010 1:08 PM EDT
Friday, May 7, 2010
Is Robert Ringer Advocating Violence Against Obama?
Topic: WorldNetDaily

Robert Ringer writes in his May 7 WorldNetDaily column:

So, is Chairman Obama a communist or a mere socialist? No one can say with certainty what's in his heart, but my own feeling is that he would quite enjoy establishing a totalitarian government where the state owns all means of production with the aim of establishing a stateless society.

[...]

Don't allow your logic to get sidetracked by oil spills, union-inspired riots in Arizona, or BHO's wisecracks at elegant media functions about his birth certificate and his socialist policies. What is happening in Washington is not just another little shift to the left. It's a prelude to the coming insurrection.

If you don't believe me, by all means feel free to join the walking dead and cheer on BHO and his comrades as they continue with their plan to nationalize whole industries and collapse the U.S. economy through deficit spending.

Make no mistake about it: Criminal government in Washington is on a roll and moving forward at full throttle – and its momentum can be stopped only by a defiant and vigilant populace, a populace that clearly understands there is no last communist.

Wake up, America!

Given that it is illogical for a seated president to be described as leading an insurrection -- the word is defined as "an act or instance of revolting against civil authority or an established government" -- Ringer appears to be advocating an "insurrection" against Obama. And given his use of charged words like "insurrection" and "defiant," Ringer would likely not be disppointed if the "insurrection" he's calling for is armed and violent-- especially given that Ringer defines Obama as among the "one-third of the population" who "get their inspiration from M.M.M. (Mass Murderer Mao), and the barrel of a gun as the final arbiter is ingrained in their twisted minds."


Posted by Terry K. at 8:29 PM EDT
'The Manchurian President,' Dissected
Topic: WorldNetDaily

We've had the distinct pleasure of fact-checking Aaron Klein's WorldNetDaily-published book "The Manchurian President" -- and we found a mishmash of false and misleading claims, conspiracy theories, an embrace of birtherism, and a heavy dose of guilt by assocation (despite Klein's claim in the book's introduction that "We do not believe in 'guilt by association'").

Read our report at Media Matters.


Posted by Terry K. at 3:17 PM EDT
Harvey Revives Discredited Attack on Jennings
Topic: WorldNetDaily

In a May 6 WorldNetDaily column castigating Goldman Sachs for being "a major donor to GLSEN, the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network," Linda Harvey revives an old, discredited smear about GLSEN founder Kevin Jennings, claiming that he "wrote about one incident as a teacher where he apparently condoned sex between a teen boy and an adult male."

As we've detailed, that's a malicious distortion of events -- the student in question has stated that he was 16 (and thus of legal age of consent) at the time of his counseling by Jennings, and has also stated that he had "no sexual contact with anybody at the time."

Harvey also misleads about GLSEN's list of recommended books for students on gay issues: "The 'Book Link' on the GLSEN site lists resources the organization recommends to "support" students. I reviewed selected books from the list and found jaw-dropping descriptions of grade-school masturbation, student porn use, explicit teen heterosexual and homosexual episodes, gender-bending, homosexual hook-ups via the Internet and sex between underage teens and adults. All were described either positively or neutrally, as if this conduct is typical, manageable, legal and low-risk." Harvey fails to mention that the list is accompanied by a statement in big red type that "We recommend that adults selecting books for youth review content for suitability."


Posted by Terry K. at 12:47 PM EDT
Matthew Vadum Strikes Again
Topic: Capital Research Center

We've had our encounters with the dickish Matthew Vadum (who, if you'll recall, thinks we're "largely responsible for the civil unrest that is growing across America"); now our Media Matters colleague Simon Maloy gets a taste.

After Vadum embraced Glenn Beck's conspiracy theory that Venezuela's Hugo Chavez is secretly sending in special teams to "nudge" the U.S. toward "collapse" (while conceding he has "no proof" this is actually occurring), Maloy highlighted it. This drew an indignant response from Vadum, who proudly declared, "My work on the Left is cited repeatedly in the new Aaron Klein book, The Manchurian President. Eat shit, Media Matters."

We, along with Maloy, are reading Klein's book, and Maloy accurately describes it as "a sloppy, guilt-by-association smear job." Further, one of the Vadum works cited in the book is his false claim that White House staffer Patrick Gaspard worked for ACORN.

Congratulations, Matt. Not only do you look bad, you're making Aaron Klein look bad too.


Posted by Terry K. at 10:18 AM EDT
Another Round of Catholic-Bashing At AIM
Topic: Accuracy in Media

Over the past week, Accuracy in Media has engaged in another round of Catholic-bashing.

An April 29 column by Cliff Kincaid attacks "the shameful role of the Roman Catholic Church in facilitating the foreign invasion of the U.S.," which he claims "deserves as much attention as the seemingly never-ending cases of sexual child abuse involving priests." Kincaid asserts that "Catholic officials want to encourage illegal immigration" because "Most of the illegal aliens are Catholics. Plus, the church makes lots of government money by hosting and serving the immigrants." Kincaid adds, "These facts are considered by some to be anti-Catholic, which is why you seldom read or hear about them in the major media." Kincaid also highlights a writer who claims "that the Roman Catholic Church is aiding and abetting the criminal invasion of America from Mexico because the illegals are almost all Roman Catholics."

Kincaid followed on April 30 by complaining that a May Day immigrant rally in Washington is "financially supported by the Catholic Church."

On May 2, Kincaid bashes Catholic bishops for opposing the harsh anti-immigrant law in Arizona, repeating claims made by Minuteman group founder Jim Gilcrhist (with Jerome Corsi) that "Churches pander to illegal aliens, seeking financial windfalls when more church members come across the borders. This is especially true of the Catholic Church, because so many of the Mexicans coming here are Catholic."


Posted by Terry K. at 12:01 AM EDT
Thursday, May 6, 2010
MRC Blames Newsweek Woes on (What Else?) Liberal Bias
Topic: Media Research Center

We've previously detailed how the Media Research Center reflexively blames liberal bias for, well, pretty much everything. So it surprises exactly no one that the MRC would blame Newsweek's problems -- the Washington Post Co. has decided to sell the newsmagazine -- on liberal bias as well.

A May 5 NewsBusters post by Brent Baker claimed that Newsweek "repeatedly showcased their favorite candidate, Barack Obama, on the cover" and asked, "Might such obvious blatant liberal advocacy, which anyone could see in the grocery store checkout line, help explain its decline in fortunes – in credibility followed by finances?"

A May 6 TimesWatch post kept up the drumbeat, complaining that a New York Times article failed to mention "Newsweek's purposeful shift toward liberal opinion over news-gathering."

Completely missing at the MRC, meanwhile, is any claim about Newsweek that deviates from its right-wing talking points, or any serious analysis of its problems. Slate's Jack Shafer and Reuters' Felix Salmon, for example, offer insightful looks at Newsweek's problems, as does Chris Rovzar at New York magazine.

You won't find such analyses discussed -- let alone acknowledged -- at the MRC. Why? If they can't frame it in their liberal-bias tunnel-vision template, it doesn't exist.


Posted by Terry K. at 9:27 PM EDT
More One-Sided 'Experts' At Newsmax
Topic: Newsmax

A May 5 Newsmax article by David Patten cites "experts" who "tell Newsmax fears of massive racial profiling due to Arizona's new immigration law are largely overblown." But Patten doesn't tell his readers that his "experts" are biased.

Patten cites just two "experts" -- the Center for Immigration Studies' Stephen Camerota and National Review blogger Andrew McCarthy. At no point does Patten explicitly identify their slants:McCarthy, as his National Review affiliation indicates, is a conservative who can be assumed to be anti-immigration to some extent, while Camerota's CIS has a "low-immigration vision."

Patten has a long history of citing "experts" with a bias and omitting the views of "experts"  that contradict Newsmax's conservative agenda.


Posted by Terry K. at 4:55 PM EDT
Dan Gainor's Nazi-Double-Standard Double Standard
Topic: Media Research Center

From the Department of Manufactured Outrage, Dan Gainor complains in a May 5 MRC Business & Media Institute column about liberals who "think it’s OK to compare everything to Nazis as a way of bashing conservatives and pushing every agenda item, from nationalized health care to immigration amnesty." Gainor makes sure to include examples of such.

Missing from Gainor's column, of course, is any actual outrage of conservatives tossing the Nazi smear around, let alone any examples. Gainor does make a passing mention of "some" conservatives who "compared Obama to Hitler," but, again, he can't be bothered to name names or specifically criticize the practice beyond the tepid closer "Let’s be honest. Conservatives aren’t Nazis. Neither are liberals."

As we've detailed, WorldNetDaily absolutely loves to tar Obama with the Nazi smear (and worse). But WND is to be found nowhere in Gainor's column.

While Gainor whines that "journalists and liberals love this Nazi double-standard," he's engaging in his own -- calling out liberals but afraid to call out his fellow right-wingers. This dude needs to sack up.


Posted by Terry K. at 12:29 PM EDT
Sheppard: Time Square Bombing Is Media's Fault
Topic: NewsBusters

Yes, this exists:

There's a cynical theme growing in the media that Faisal Shahzad, the man accused of attempting to set off a car bomb in New York's Times Square Saturday, was driven to violence by the loss of his job, the loss of his house, and his anger towards former President George W. Bush.
In all of this theorizing -- or what some might call psychobabble -- those making the assertion have yet to ponder if six years of Bush Derangement Syndrome might also be involved.

For over a year, Americans have been warned that so-called "hate speech" directed at Barack Obama and Democrats by conservative talk show hosts such as Rush Limbaugh, Glenn Beck, and Sean Hannity, as well as others at Fox News, is going to manifest itself in violent acts against elected officials and/or our nation.

With this in mind mightn't years of "hate speech" directed at Bush and Republicans by liberal talk radio hosts and MSNBC in particular have incited Shahzad's anger to such an extent that he decided to become a domestic terrorist?

-- Noel Sheppard, May 5 NewsBusters column


Posted by Terry K. at 10:36 AM EDT
WND's PR Agent Torpedoes Her Career
Topic: WorldNetDaily

It seems Maria Sliwa -- the PR agent working Aaron Klein's anti-Obama book, "The Manchurian President," for WorldNetDaily -- has effectively ended her career as a full-service public relations person.

A May 5 WND article details how Sliwa chose to publicize comments from members of the media who refused to accept a review copy of Klein's book, referring to it as "Absolute crap" and "sensational rubbish," among other things. WND claims the responses were "expletive-laden," but no evidence of that is offered beyond the use of "crap."

The article repeated the laughable assertion that Sliwa's "goal in publicly exposing the e-mail responses to "Manchurian" is not to embarrass the journalists," but to "call them out on their duty as members of the press to leave their biases where they belong – at the door."

This strikes us as stunningly unprofessional behavior on Sliwa's part. Through her pettiness in, yes, trying to embarrass media members who won't play ball with her, Sliwa has sharply limited her PR practice to anyone predisposed to agree with what she's peddling.

Increasingly, she's shilling for every piece of crap WorldNetDaily sends down the pike. When WND wanted Larry Sinclair's bogus story of drugs and sex with Obama publicized (except for the bogus part, of course), it called on Sliwa.When Joseph Farah wanted the world to know just how hate-filled Molotov Mitchell is, Sliwa was his go-to gal.

In another laugher, the WND article claims that Sliwa "dentifies herself as liberal." Not only that, she "lists Robert Thurman, Ghandi and Malcom X as her heroes." First, the names of those last two "heroes" are misspelled, which is either ignorance and atrocious copyeditng on WND's part or a lack of actual commitment on Sliwa's part. Second, stating Malcolm X is one of your heroes is a recipe for getting fired by WND -- after all, Farah has included him on his list of desipcable black "extremists." And Farah is not known for hiring people whose views deviate even slightly from his -- try to find a WND employee who sends their kids to public school, for example.

(Robert Thurman, by the way, is a Buddhist writer and academic. WND is not terribly fond of Buddhists; it was offended that one town put up a banner welcoming the Dalai Lama but not the Ten Commandments, and howled about an insurance company training seminar called "Buddha: 9 to 5."

So not only has Sliwa committed the PR equivalent of burning her sources, which will land her in the ghetto of promoting only right-wingers, she has outed herself as something less than a WND-approved right-winger, which may cost her her WND flacking job as well.

Well played, Maria. Well played.

Of course, if she's an actual Buddhist, she will be glad to get a little of her soul back by no longer taking money from WND.

P.S. It seems the media critics Sliwa so desperately wants to burn may be right in their prejudging of Klein's book. Media Matters' Simon Maloy offers 10 reasons why "The Manchurian President" lives up to the "ridiculous crap" sobriquet.


Posted by Terry K. at 12:11 AM EDT
Wednesday, May 5, 2010
Meanwhile ...
Topic: The ConWeb
We have a fun little blog post up at Media Matters noting, given Fox News' rejection of an ad from a progressive group because it was "too confusing," the kinds of ads Fox News apparently doesn't find confusing.

Posted by Terry K. at 10:04 PM EDT

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