The media’s ‘war on misinformation’ loses all credibility



Like many in the influential yet shrinking elite media bubble, the Atlantic is in a panic over misinformation. In an October 10 article titled “I’m Running Out of Ways to Explain How Bad This Is,” Charlie Warzel laments how Americans no longer automatically follow the directives of the establishment or rely on the media-academia-expert complex to think for them. Warzel frames the issue differently, describing it as “nothing less than a cultural assault on any person or institution that operates in reality.”

“It is difficult to capture the nihilism of the current moment,” he writes. “The pandemic saw Americans, distrustful of authority, trying to discredit effective vaccines, spreading conspiracy theories, and attacking public-health officials.”

The media’s lies and disinformation began well before 2020 and continue today.

Warzel contends that things only worsened from there. He describes “journalists, election workers, scientists, doctors, and first responders” as victims in a “war on truth” because they “must attend to and describe the world as it is,” which, in his view, makes them dangerous to people who resist “the agonizing constraints of reality” or who have financial and political interests in perpetuating misinformation.

Warzel, of course, is not alone. Recently, many have sounded the alarm against the so-called plague of misinformation allegedly affecting society today. Among these voices, the most authoritative have come from a who’s who of Democratic Party leaders.

Hillary Clinton: “I think it’s important to indict the Russians just as Mueller indicted a lot of Russians who were engaged in direct election interference and boosting Trump back in 2016. But I also think there are Americans who are engaged in this kind of propaganda and whether they should be civilly, or even in some cases, criminally charged, is something that would be a better deterrence.”

Tim Walz: “There’s no guarantee to free speech on misinformation or hate speech, and especially around our democracy.”

John Kerry: “If people only go to one source, and the source they go to is sick, and, you know, has an agenda, and they’re putting out disinformation, our First Amendment stands as a major block to be able to just, you know, hammer it out of existence. So what we need is to win the ground, win the right to govern, by hopefully winning enough votes that you’re free to be able to implement change.”

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez: “We’re going to have to figure out how we rein in our media environment so you can’t just spew disinformation and misinformation.”

And, of course, Kamala Harris: Social media companies “are directly speaking to millions and millions of people without any level of oversight or regulation, and it has to stop.”

Nowhere in Warzel’s article, or in any of these bold pronouncements and threats against dissenting voices, is there the slightest acknowledgment of a simple, undeniable truth: We stopped trusting them because they lost our trust. Science, once a self-correcting pursuit of truth, has become Dr. Fauci’s “the Science” with a capital S — a dogma similar to the one that the church used to stifle Galileo.

Much of the media, formerly our bulwark against state tyranny, now operates as the Democratic Party’s ministry of propaganda. When Donald Trump burst onto the political scene in 2015 and went on to secure the GOP’s nomination a year later, the media decided objectivity was no longer necessary. Instead, their new mission became crusading against Trump at every opportunity. Our loss of trust in these former arbiters of truth was a natural result.

Rather than acknowledging this erosion of trust, these politicking journalists, along with academics and political allies in their bubble, labeled any resistance to their often-false narratives as “misinformation.” Researcher David Rozado has documented a sharp rise in mentions of “misinformation” and “disinformation” in the media and academia, starting in 2016 — the year of Trump’s election.

Seriously, not literally

Warzel and others with a similar viewpoint might argue that the media began addressing misinformation in 2016 because Trump himself started spreading it, thereby inspiring a wave of conspiracies and outlandish claims from his supporters. There is some truth in this. Trump undoubtedly pushed the boundaries of acceptable political discourse and often lacked substantial proof for his claims.

While politicians have always bent the truth, Trump — a salesman from the high-stakes world of real estate rather than a lawyer like most national politicians — didn’t shy away from exaggeration. His go-to phrases — “the best ever,” “the worst ever,” “like no one’s ever seen before” — were part of his rhetorical style of inflation and hyperbole.

I would argue that most people, regardless of education, recognize Trump’s claims for what they are. Trump talks like that braggadocious, big-talking uncle we all know — not like a slippery politician skilled at lying through subtle phrasing and misleading statistics. People understand not to take Trump literally. In fact, unlike most politicians, Trump’s supporters know exactly what he stands for.

Ironically, despite claims from the left that Trump is a shameless liar, many people support him precisely because he speaks openly and directly about things other politicians might only hint at. That transparency, though often crude, appeals to his base. I would agree, however, that Trump has likely lowered the level of our political discourse more than anyone in recent memory. But crudity is not the same as deception. If anything, it’s the opposite of deception.

In any discussion of lies and misinformation in politics, the “Big Lie” attributed to Trump — widespread election fraud in 2020 — looms large. But an undeniable fact remains: The media’s lies and disinformation began well before 2020 and continue today. These distortions cover a wide range of topics and often involve coordination among news outlets, scientists, academics, and others.

Warzel’s alleged defenders of truth against misinformation have committed numerous notable infractions against reality.

Expert alarmism

For years, the media, relying on handpicked “experts,” has bombarded us with alarmist rhetoric about the imminent danger of manmade climate change. They promote a phony 97% consensus among climate scientists while censoring evidence-based alternative views, despite data from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change that doesn’t fully support such alarmism.

We were falsely told that President Trump colluded with Russia to steal the 2016 election from Hillary Clinton. This baseless accusation led to years of costly investigations that hamstrung his administration, while the New York Times and the Washington Post received Pulitzer Prizes for their extensive reporting on these unsubstantiated claims.

During the 2020 Black Lives Matter riots, which brought American cities to their knees with widespread arson, vandalism, looting, and destruction of small businesses, we were told these events were “mostly peaceful protests.” This disinformation campaign, along with the promotion of critical race theory and anti-law enforcement ideologies, led to lenient or nonexistent prosecutions for those involved. Meanwhile, the media labeled the events of January 6, 2021 — which resulted in far less loss of life and property damage — as an “armed insurrection” and an attempted “coup.”

The media omitted key facts about January 6, including that Trump, the alleged instigator, had warned top advisers days before that many protesters would be coming to the Capitol and requested the National Guard be prepared. They ignored and defied his request. Consequently, those involved in the Capitol breach were prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law and given disproportionately harsh sentences for what, in many cases, amounted to minor infractions, often limited to acts of trespassing.

On the eve of the 2020 election, the media — including Twitter and Facebook — suppressed the New York Post's explosive story about Hunter Biden’s laptop, labeling it “Russian disinformation.” This suppression likely influenced the election outcome in Biden’s favor. Only later, when it no longer mattered, did the media reveal that the laptop and the story were real. Anyone who dismisses Trump’s claims of 2020 election interference must first contend with this major flaw in the media’s “Big Lie” narrative.

Accounting for COVID

The COVID-19 era exposed how the media colluded with the government to spread fear, propaganda, and disinformation while silencing evidence-based alternative views. Continued censorship on these issues — including the absurd censorship and deplatforming of respected scientists like Dr. Robert Malone, a pioneer of mRNA technology used in COVID vaccines — limits full and frank discussion.

The handling of the lab-leak theory of COVID’s origin provides a glaring example. Initially dismissed as a “conspiracy theory,” the lab-leak hypothesis now holds wide acceptance, yet the media originally pushed a flawed natural-origin narrative. Acknowledging a lab origin would have implicated Dr. Anthony Fauci, who approved gain-of-function research tied to the virus’ creation.

To discredit the lab-leak theory, scientists coordinated with Fauci and NIH Director Francis Collins to publish an influential paper in Nature, arguing for a natural origin. Yet, their contemporaneous communications reveal they did not believe the narrative they promoted. The media amplified this false narrative, labeling dissenters as conspiracy theorists whose claims had been thoroughly “debunked.”

War, dementia, and ‘cheapfakes’

The media uncritically promoted the Biden administration’s false narrative that the Russia-Ukraine war was an “unprovoked” attack by Moscow. While Putin bears responsibility, evidence strongly suggests that the attack was substantially provoked by neoconservatives within the Biden administration. These actions built upon the Obama administration’s support for the 2014 overthrow of Ukraine’s government in favor of a more anti-Russian regime.

Biden administration officials continued to draw Ukraine foolishly closer to NATO, despite knowing that establishing an enemy alliance on Russia’s border was a red line for Putin — just as it would have been for the United States had Canada joined the former Soviet Union’s Warsaw Pact or placed nuclear missiles in Cuba.

The media also colluded with the Biden administration and others close to Joe Biden to hide his cognitive decline and ongoing descent into dementia. They attempted to gaslight the public, dismissing videos of Biden’s apparent incapacity — including moments like talking to a dead politician — as “cheapfakes.” When the June presidential debate made Biden’s condition undeniable, the media feigned shock.

After Biden was ultimately compelled to drop out of the race by former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and wealthy donors, the media continued their false narrative. They portrayed his withdrawal not as an action forced on him by party elites despite his objections but as a courageous decision he made to protect democracy against Donald Trump.

Covering for Kamala

Once Democratic Party bosses appointed Kamala Harris to replace Biden, the media launched an unprecedented, coordinated effort to portray her as something she clearly was not: capable, intelligent, informed, inspiring, visionary, eloquent, articulate, honest, principled, and free of responsibility for the Biden administration’s mismanagement of the economy and immigration.

This full-scale media campaign included giving Harris and her running mate a month-long pass on unscripted interviews and press conferences. When they finally faced the media, reporters served up softball questions, allowing them to evade or respond with vapid pabulum or evasive nonanswers without follow-ups.

The presidential and vice-presidential debates further underscored this bias, with moderators framing topics to favor the Democratic ticket and engaging in misleading “fact-checks” exclusively for the Republican candidates. During the vice presidential debate, moderators even conducted fact-checks, despite rules prohibiting them.

The October “60 Minutes” interview with Kamala Harris stood out as a particularly egregious example. Unlike the unaltered footage of Biden’s apparent cognitive struggles, CBS edited out Harris’ incoherent rambling in response to a question about Israel. They skipped directly to a slightly more coherent part of her answer, creating a genuine “cheapfake.” While the Biden clips aimed to reveal his cognitive deficits that his administration and the media sought to hide, the shameful editing stunt at “60 Minutes" blatantly tried to conceal Harris’ cognitive deficits from the public.

Who are you gonna believe?

In the face of this longstanding barrage of lies, propaganda, and disinformation, only two types of people would retain complete trust in the powers-that-be: 1) those deeply embedded in the Democratic Party-aligned information bubble, lacking the motivation, common sense, or drive to seek alternative perspectives; and 2) complete morons.

Most of us, thankfully, fit into neither of those categories — nor the massive overlapping area where the two converge. As a result, we no longer take anything from the media and their allies at face value. This widespread disillusionment, however, has led many to a point where it’s difficult to discern truth from misinformation, struggling to balance healthy skepticism with slipping into loony conspiracy land. Social media further amplifies this predicament, acting as both an escape from the distortions of the mainstream narrative and a potential detour from reality itself.

And yes, it’s a problem. But before the media priests blame us for opting out of their funhouse hall of mirrors, I have a suggestion for them: Take a long, hard look in one of those mirrors, recognize your own complicity, and ... well ... stop lying to us!

WATCH: Marco Rubio brilliantly slams fake news, puts ABC host to shame



Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) has recently been added to Trump’s growing list of potential vice president candidates.

While Rubio has never spoken directly to Trump or anyone running his campaign about the position, the senator says he would consider the opportunity “an honor.”

Apparently, that shocked ABC News host Jonathan Karl.

“You said it would be an honor to be offered a spot on his ticket. Really?” Karl asked, confused.

“Yeah, I think anyone who’s offered the opportunity to serve this country as vice president should be honored,” Rubio said. “I'm in the Senate because I want to serve the country; being vice president is an important way to serve the country.”

“Look what happened to the last guy. A mob stormed the Capitol, literally calling to hang Mike Pence, and Trump defended those chants of ‘Hang Mike Pence,”’ Karl fired back.

“I will tell you this: When Donald Trump was President of the United States, this country was safer; it was more prosperous; we had relations, for example, in a part of the world that I care about called the Western Hemisphere ... I think the country and world was a better place when he was president, and I would love to see him return to the White House,” said Rubio.

He then went on an epic tear about all the ways Joe Biden has been “a disaster.”

“Every single day, we wake up to a new crisis, a new conflict. Everything has been on fire since the time Joe Biden took over,” he said. “Afghanistan has gone down, Ukraine has been invaded, now the Philippines and the Chinese are on the verge of something bad ... not to mention the threats to Taiwan. We have this blowup in Haiti going on in our very own hemisphere.”

“You’re not suggesting that’s all happening because of Biden?” Karl asked.

“Absolutely, I am,” Rubio boldly stated.

“Because of Biden, Russia invaded Ukraine?” Karl asked, shocked, adding that “Trump's the one suggesting that there should be a deal that effectively gives Putin what he wants in Ukraine.”

“That’s not true. What he’s said is that he wants the conflict to end,” Rubio corrected, noting that “there is going to be a negotiation” in which “Russia is not going to take all of Ukraine, and Ukraine is not going to push Russia back to where it was in 2014.”

Pat Gray is wholly impressed with Rubio’s ability to so effortlessly debunk fake news while simultaneously speaking the truth.

“Consider just some of the international things that have gone on — some of the policies of [Joe Biden] that have led to the slaughter in Israel, the debacle of the pullout in Afghanistan, China continues to threaten to invade Taiwan, the censure of the U.S. from the British Parliament for the first time in history, the French are pissed off at us over the submarine deal they were left out of, the border invasion catastrophe — I'm sure there's a hundred more things I could name, and that's not even getting into the economy, taxes, wages,” says Pat.

“It’s a disaster, John Karl.”


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'Don't trust mainstream media': Conservative author Douglas Murray and journalist Matt Taibbi win over hostile crowd, demolish media defenders in fierce debate



A fiery, high-profile debate took an unexpected turn in Toronto earlier this week when a duo arguing for the resolution, "Don’t trust mainstream media," not only trounced the opposition but also won over a crowd decidedly against them.

A condemnation fit to print

Matt Taibbi, the investigative reporter summarizing Friday's explosive release of the "Twitter Files," joined forces with British conservative author Douglas Murray in Toronto to face off with author Malcolm Gladwell and New York Times columnist Michelle Goldberg in the semi-annual Munk Debates.

As in previous Munk Debates, the audience voted both before and after the debaters duked it out.

Before Wednesday's "Mainstream Media" debate, 52% of attendees and listeners voted against distrusting the media while 48% supported the resolution to distrust the mainstream media. Of those who participated in the pre-vote, 82% indicated they were amenable to be swayed in either direction.

After the debate, Taibbi and Murray secured a vote gain of 39%. The final result, in favor of the resolution "Don’t trust mainstream media" was 67% to 33%.

The National Review reported that Taibbi and Murray won by the largest margin ever recorded at a Munk Debate.

The winning arguments

Murray made sure to note how the Canadian mainstream media not only is funded by the state but also worked hand in glove with the Justin Trudeau government, echoing the prime minister's smears of the peaceful Freedom Convoy protesters.

"Your prime minister decided in advance that these people ... were Nazis, they were white supremacists, they were anti-Semites, they were probably homophobes, they were misogynists, they were probably transphobes. ... He did all the things you do in the modern political age if you want to just defenestrate somebody who's awkward to you," said Murray.

Murray argued that "at such a time, what would the mainstream media do? It would question it. It would question it. The Canadian mainstream media did not. The Canadian mainstream media acted as an 'amen chorus' of the Canadian government."

Extra to listing a number of apparent falsehoods the Canadian media peddled during the pandemic, Murray underscored how the Canadian media's government funding all but guaranteed its deference and justified citizens' distrust.

\u201cWOW!\ud83d\udd25 You will NEVER hear a more eloquent takedown of Canadian legacy media than this.\u201d
— Canada Proud (@Canada Proud) 1669907692

Murray later noted that to trust the mainstream media would ultimately require individuals to conclude they don't need other information sources. He added that the corporate media is necessarily selective with the stories they report on or manufacture, and that this would result in a kind of myopia.

The Briton also seized upon an anecdote Gladwell shared about being rescued by a mainstream news reporter after a blogger defamed him. Murray pointed out that while a best-selling author can expect such treatment, an ordinary citizen might not be able to trust that the mainstream media would similarly offer such assistance. Murray intimated that everyday Americans can sometimes rely upon non-mainstream citizen journalists and bloggers that Gladwell derided in the debate.

Taibbi, an award-winning journalist, supported the resolution with a sense of grief, stating in his opening remarks, "I grew up in the press. My father was a reporter. My stepmother was a reporter. My godparents were reporters. Every adult I knew growing up seemed to be in media."

Taibbi noted that while loving the news business and having it in his bones, he mourns for it: "It's destroyed itself."

The job of the mainstream media now, according to Taibbi, isn't to "call things as we see them and leave the rest up to you" but instead to "sell narrative, as part of a new business that's increasingly indifferent to fact."

As Murray had suggested in his remarks, Taibbi claimed "reporters get too cozy with politicians and as a result report information either without attribution at all or sourced to unnamed officials or 'people familiar with the matter.'"

Although "no fan of Donald Trump," Taibbi underlined how Goldberg's New York Times and other mainstream publications appear "unashamed" for having peddled falsehoods and dubious narratives about the former president and others.

"Until we get back to the basics, we don't deserve to be trusted. And we won't be," concluded Taibbi.

The losers' rhetoric

Goldberg tried to differentiate between the public's perception of the media and the behind-the-doors reality in news rooms.

She contended that the mainstream media always has been interested in unexpected or counterintuitive stories and prioritized these over their political affiliations and liberal ideologies.

Gladwell emphasized in the debate that "trust is not about content. Trust is about process."

The non-mainstream media cannot allegedly adhere to a "strict set of professional norms," which Gladwell indicated the mainstream media otherwise tends to abide by.

Gladwell also reportedly scoffed when his opponents referenced the media's overwhelming complicity in deriding the Hunter Biden laptop story and intimated that Taibbi's and Murray's arguments against trusting the media "resemble the kind of classic structure of a conspiracy theory."

In Gladwell's debater bio, the "Revisionist History" podcast host is quoted as saying, "A newspaper is not merely a monopoly protected by the printing press...there are a separate set of skills that are difficult to acquire and worthy of preservation. You can't start blogging at 23 and call yourself a journalist."

This technocratic sense that only a well-trained media elite ought to be regarded and respected as arbiters of the truth is a sentiment, evident in his argument, that elements of the mainstream media have similarly expressed.

For instance, after claiming that everyday Americans could not read the Wikileaks reports, disgraced former CNN host Chris Cuomo said in 2016 that "everything you learn about this, you're learning from us."

Elon Musk called out this kind of thinking in a Nov. 6 tweet in which he denounced the problem of journalists thinking "they are the only source of legitimate information. That's the big lie."

\u201c@kylegrantham You represent the problem: journalists who think they are the only source of legitimate information. That\u2019s the big lie.\u201d
— \ud835\udc0a\ud835\udc32\ud835\udc25\ud835\udc1e \ud835\udc06\ud835\udc2b\ud835\udc1a\ud835\udc27\ud835\udc2d\ud835\udc21\ud835\udc1a\ud835\udc26 (@\ud835\udc0a\ud835\udc32\ud835\udc25\ud835\udc1e \ud835\udc06\ud835\udc2b\ud835\udc1a\ud835\udc27\ud835\udc2d\ud835\udc21\ud835\udc1a\ud835\udc26) 1667783842

An October Gallup poll revealed that only 34% of Americans trust the mass media to report the news "fully, accurately and fairly," 28% of U.S. adults have little confidence in newspapers, TV, and radio news, and 38% have none at all.

Associated Press reporter canned over erroneous report suggesting Russia had launched a missile into a NATO country



An award-winning Associated Press reporter got the boot on Monday after claiming that a "senior U.S. intelligence official" had said Russia fired a missile into Poland. Before the AP offered a correction, 35-year-old James LaPorta's report — containing an erroneous suggestion with potentially catastrophic and nuclear repercussions — was widely circulated, generating panic and stoking geopolitical tensions.

The facts

On Nov. 15, Russia launched a brutal missile barrage targeting energy infrastructure in western Ukraine. During the attack, Ukrainian air defenses reportedly fired an errant missile into Poland.

The resultant explosion rocked the Polish village of Przewodów, just five miles away from the Ukrainian border. Two farm workers were killed.

NATO, Polish, and American leaders suggested shortly after the explosion that it was not a direct Russian attack.

Polish presidential adviser Jakub Kumoch told Poland's TVN24 channel days later that there "are many indications that one of the (Ukrainian) missiles used to shoot down a Russian missile missed the target. Its self-destruct system did not work, and this missile unfortunately led to a tragedy."

Ukrainian foreign minister Dmytro Kuleba called the claim that the explosion was Ukrainian-caused a "conspiracy theory."

Fake news, real consequences

Hours after the incident, the Associated Press issued a news alert co-bylined by LaPorta and reporter John Leicester, which stated, "A senior U.S. intelligence official says Russian missiles crossed into NATO member Poland, killing two people."

A Russian attack on Poland would have been sufficient to trigger articles 4 and 5 of the NATO charter, potentially putting the U.S. into direct conflict with the nuclear power.

The Washington Post noted that the AP report had been sent to and seen by thousands of news outlets. News organizations frequently reprint reports from the AP.

CNN firmed up the narrative, reporting that Poland "confirms a Russian-made missile" was behind the explosion. CNN reportedly omitted any mention of how the Ukrainian military also uses Russian-made weapons.

Fox News and the Daily Mail similarly carried the AP reporter's suggestion, the former running a piece entitled, "Russian missiles cross into NATO member Poland, kill 2: senior US intelligence official," and the latter stating, "'Russian bombs' kill two in POLAND."

CBS Evening News tweeted "RUSSIAN MISSILE STRIKE: Two Russian missiles crossed over the Ukrainian border into Poland, a NATO country, killing two civilians."

\u201cRUSSIAN MISSILE STRIKE: Two Russian missiles crossed over the Ukrainian border into Poland, a NATO country, killing two civilians. Ukraine\u2019s president says the world \u201cmust act\u201d and the head of NATO called for an emergency meeting for tomorrow morning.\u201d
— CBS Evening News (@CBS Evening News) 1668556095

Extra to cable news channels and print news organizations spreading the erroneous information, social media influencers began banging the drums of war on the basis of the AP report, signaling that Russia's war on Ukraine had finally spilled out into a NATO country.

For instance, Irish writer Jennifer Cassidy advanced the AP's claim to her 167,000 or more Twitter followers:

\u201cSenior U.S. intelligence official says Russian missiles crossed into NATO member Poland, killing two. Many people now mentioning triggering Article 5. We must ALL keep a calm, and collected head here. Putin wants WWIII. He\u2019s in this war, until his end. We cannot give him that.\u201d
— Dr. Jennifer Cassidy (@Dr. Jennifer Cassidy) 1668540127

Although it is unclear whether he spoke out on the basis of the AP report, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy issued a forceful statement, saying, "Russian missiles hit Poland, the territory of our friendly country. People died."

\u201cZelensky: \u201cTerror is not limited to our national borders. Russian missiles hit Poland. \u2026 To fire missiles at NATO territory. This is a Russian missile attack on collective security! This is a very significant escalation. We must act.\u201d\u201d
— Christopher Miller (@Christopher Miller) 1668543105

Were LaPorta's news alert true, then millions of people would have been promptly informed of the facts of the matter. Unfortunately, that was not the case.

Retraction

After having updated the initial report several times, the AP indicated that a new assessment from three U.S. officials "contradicts information" in the original article. Shortly thereafter, the article was reportedly taken offline.

The AP issued a retraction later that day, writing: "In earlier versions of a story published November 15, 2022, The Associated Press reported erroneously, based on information from a senior American intelligence official who spoke on condition of anonymity, that Russian missiles had crossed into Poland and killed two people. Subsequent reporting showed that the missiles were Russian-made and most likely fired by Ukraine in defense against a Russian attack."

On Nov. 21, LaPorta, a former U.S. Marine who served in Afghanistan, was fired. Co-byliner Leicester reportedly is still working at the AP.

An AP spokesman did not comment on LaPorta's firing, but told the Daily Beast that the "rigorous editorial standards and practices of The Associated Press are critical to AP’s mission as an independent news organization. To ensure our reporting is accurate, fair and fact-based, we abide by and enforce these standards, including around the use of anonymous sources."

Customarily, the AP "requires more than one source when sourcing is anonymous," with an exception when a source is an authoritative figure who "provides information so detailed that there is no question of its accuracy."

The Washington Post reported that LaPorta had received and shared the alleged U.S. intelligence official's tip in an electronic message around 1:30 p.m. on Nov. 15.

One editor asked whether to issue an alert on the basis of LaPorta's tip or to seek "confirmation from another source and/or Poland?"

A second editor said she "would vote" for publishing an alert, noting she couldn't "imagine a U.S. intelligence official would be wrong on this."

Although this exchange may suggest wider culpability, the Post reported on the basis of an anonymous source at the AP that LaPorta allegedly told his editors that a senior manager had already vetted the source of his tip, even though that manager had not reviewed the missile story.

AP spokesman Lauren Easton indicated there will likely be no discipline for any AP editor.

CNBC reporter admits to falling for hoaxers pretending to be Twitter engineers fired by Elon Musk: 'I didn't do enough to confirm'



A CNBC reporter admitted that she didn't do enough to confirm a story after she fell for pranksters who pretended to be Twitter engineers fired by Elon Musk.

The two men were interviewed outside of Twitter headquarters as they held boxes appearing to be their personal items collected after being fired.

Deirdre Bosa of CNBC admitted the error Monday on air.

"I'd like to address something that CNBC reported Friday. I tweeted that a team of data engineers were laid off at Twitter after speaking to two people outside of headquarters who claimed that they were," said Bosa.

'They were not real employees and I didn't do enough to confirm that they were," she added. "They got me, and that, is on me. We, I regret the mistake."

She posted video of her comments on her social media and deleted the tweet with the false report.

\u201cAbout Friday at Twitter HQ - I didn\u2019t do enough to confirm and I regret the mistake\u201d
— Deirdre Bosa (@Deirdre Bosa) 1667243104

Bosa had been among those reporters who were far too eager to spread the false story without checking to confirm the prankster's stories.

"It’s happening Entire team of data engineers let go. These are two of them," she tweeted with a photo of the two men.

The embarrassing episode became a popular Twitter meme after people began pretending to be fired Twitter engineers in order to mock the mainstream media.

\u201cJournalists - my name is Amanda Hugnkis, and today I was fired by Elon Musk himself at Twitter HQ. Willing to talk on the record. DMs are open.\u201d
— amanda aka frank \ud83d\udc22\ud83d\udc7b (@amanda aka frank \ud83d\udc22\ud83d\udc7b) 1666992242

"Journalists - my name is Amanda Hugnkis, and today I was fired by Elon Musk himself at Twitter HQ. Willing to talk on the record. DMs are open," read one parody that got more than 116k likes on Twitter.

"My colleague Ben Dover has informed me he is also willing to talk," she added in a second tweet.

Even Elon Musk laughed at the joke in a tweet posted to his official account.

Here's more about the Twitter employee hoax:

Pranked outside Twitter office after Elon Musk takes charge: These are not fired employeeswww.youtube.com

DeSantis team slaps back against 'false' Miami Herald report that claimed the governor had speaking invitation rescinded



The office of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) has contested a report by the Miami Herald that claimed the governor's invitation to be a keynote speaker at a Miami investment conference next month was canceled after some attendees complained about DeSantis' views on immigration. A spokeswoman for the governor has called the report "fake news" and demanded that the paper issue a correction after one of the event organizers said DeSantis was never invited to speak.

On Thursday, Mary Ellen Klas, the capitol bureau chief for the Miami Herald, published a story with the headline, "Investment conference in Miami cancels DeSantis' speech over 'anti-immigrant views.'" The story reported that DeSantis had been invited to be the keynote speaker at a conference hosted by EB5 Investors magazine, but that his invitation had been rescinded after some participants and sponsors objected to his immigration policies.

But the governor's office and his re-election campaign have contradicted this account, saying that DeSantis was never asked to speak at the conference and has never communicated with the event's organizers. Shortly after publication, DeSantis spokeswoman Christina Pushaw said the Miami Herald story was "false."

"Not only did Governor DeSantis NEVER agree to speak at the EB-5 conference, but also, the office of @GovRonDeSantis has *never even been in touch* with the organizers of this conference," Pushaw wrote on Twitter, calling on the paper to "do better."

False. \nNot only did Governor DeSantis NEVER agree to speak at the EB-5 conference, but also, the office of \n@GovRonDeSantis has *never even been in touch* with the organizers of this conference.\nHow could they "cancel" a speech that was never scheduled?\nDo better
— Christina Pushaw \ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8 (@Christina Pushaw \ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8) 1648159724

The Herald had reported an announcement from the conference that said, "Governor DeSantis has been cancelled for Miami," and also communications from conference attendees and sponsors who had reacted to the news that DeSantis would speak.

Miami immigration attorney Ira Kurzban was one of the individuals who objected to news that DeSantis would be the keynote speaker. In an email to the conference hosts reported by the Herald, Kurzban called DeSantis "a mini-me for his Trump-like tactics" and said he "has engaged in the most virulent anti-immigrant conduct we have ever seen by a public official in this state."

According to the Herald, Kurzban's email prompted other conference sponsors and panelists to threaten to withdraw from the event because of DeSantis' inclusion.

“We are sponsors as well as speakers. If we had known that you would be inviting DeSantis as the keynote speaker, we would have given this event a miss,’’ New York attorney Mona Shah wrote in an email sent Wednesday. "Even now, I am considering withdrawing from the event. EB-5 is all about welcoming immigrants and inviting this man as keynote just sends the wrong message."

The newspaper also shared an email from Marie Ekberg Padilla, the senior editor and vice president of operations for EB5 Investors Magazine, who wrote in response to these complaints Wednesday.

“As a bipartisan organization, the keynote was simply chosen as the highest figure in the state of our event, and we have historically had keynotes from both sides of the aisle,’’ Padilla wrote in the March 23 email. "With that, a decision has been made to reconsider DeSantis. He will not be joining our event in Miami.”

The documents published by the Miami Herald show that the EB5 conference had told participants that DeSantis would speak, and that after some attendees complained, the conference announced that the governor would no longer speak. And yet DeSantis' staff said they had never been contacted by anyone coordinating the event about the keynote address.

According to Padilla, a "staff error" was the cause of the confusion.

In an email to the DeSantis campaign shared by Pushaw, Padilla wrote: “The governor was never confirmed to participate, nor was he uninvited. We made a staff error and are regretful. It’s unfortunate that our event was used by media for political gain."

Padilla did not deny that the conference had advertised DeSantis as the keynote speaker. And while her previous email announced that EB5 would "reconsider DeSantis," she did not say whether this was due to DeSantis' immigration policies. This appears to be an inference that Miami Herald made based on the complaints shared with the paper.

Pushaw has demanded that the Miami Herald add a correction to its story, clarifying that DeSantis was never invited to speak nor was he canceled because of his position on immigration.

Issue a correction.pic.twitter.com/hGTNNzZ1a2
— Christina Pushaw \ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8 (@Christina Pushaw \ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8) 1648167463

"Issue a correction," she said.

The Miami Herald's story was updated to include comments from Pushaw, but the paper did not issue a correction to its report.

Levin rips the media's 'flat-out lies' accusing him of tanking the stock market

Friday night on the radio, LevinTV host Mark Levin picked apart reports that he somehow directly inspired President Trump's new plan to pressure Mexico into cooperation on illegal immigration via a series of escalating tariffs.

Earlier that day, Mediaite published a story titled "Mark Levin Reportedly Helped Inspire Trump Plan to Impose Tariffs, Tanking Stock Market"; that was based on an NBC report that relied heavily on anonymous sources and said that the president had gotten "riled up" about illegal immigration because of comments made by Levin.

"I inspired the five percent tariff plan?" Levin mused on the air. "I haven't talked to the president about this; he hasn't talked to me about this." Levin also said that Friday night was his first time discussing the new Mexico tariff plan on the radio or television and that he was doing so because of the reports.

"Will Mediaite publish a correction?" Levin asked. "Will NBC explain what the hell they're talking about? Of course not."

"That ... is what the president means by fake news," Levin concluded. "That's what I mean by flat-out lies."

Listen:

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Fact check: No, Pence did not compare President Trump to MLK Jr.

This was a banner weekend for fake news. First, BuzzFeed News got a "bombshell" story on the Mueller investigation so wrong that Mueller's team issued a response disputing BuzzFeed's reporting. Next, a group of MAGA hat-wearing Catholic high school students at the March for Life were subjected to a two-minute hate after the New York Times, the Washington Post, CNN, and other MSM outlets wildly mischaracterized a video supposedly showing the kids harassing a Native American man. Nothing of the kind happened. In fact, it was the kids who were being harassed and it seems the Native American man lied to the media about what happened.

Now, Newsweek, RawStory, and others are claiming Vice President Mike Pence compared President Trump to Martin Luther King Jr. in an interview on Face the Nation. That is fake news.

Newsweek's headline reads: "Mike Pence compares Trump to Martin Luther King Jr. on eve of MLK Day: Both 'inspired us to change." And that narrative prompted outrage:

You get the idea. Mike Pence is the worst human being alive not named Donald Trump because he "compared" Trump to Martin Luther King Jr. Now, here's what Pence actually said after CBS' Margaret Brennan asked him if Trump's proposal to trade a three-year DACA extension and temporary protected status for refugees to reopen the government with partial wall funding is "genuine":

I think what we saw the president do yesterday was say, "I want to set the table for us resolving this issue" in a way that achieves his objectives to secure the border, end the humanitarian security crisis, end the government shutdown, but also to bring together the Democrats' priorities to accomplish that. That's what the American people expect us to do.

And honestly, you know, the hearts and minds of the American people today are thinking a lot about it being the weekend where we remember the life and the work of the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. One of my favorite quotes from Dr. King was, ‘Now is the time to make real the the promises of democracy." You think of how he changed America, he inspired us to change through the legislative process, to become a more perfect union. That’s exactly what President Trump is calling on the Congress to do, come to the table in a spirit of good faith. We'll secure our border, we'll reopen the government, and we'll move our nation forward as the president said yesterday to an even broader discussion about immigration reform in the months ahead. [Emphasis added.]

Pence did not say Donald Trump is "exactly like" Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. He did not compare Trump to Dr. King at all. Pence said that Trump is "calling on the Congress" to "make real the promises of democracy," as Dr. King put it, by coming to the table and negotiating a deal to reopen government. Pence, in other words, is asking Congress to legislate: to act like the lawmaking body of a democratic republic, compromise, and govern well.

To represent Pence's comments as comparing Trump to Dr. King is straight-up fake news. You would have to intentionally misread or mishear what Pence is saying to come away with the take that he's disrespecting Dr. King's legacy by comparing him to Trump.

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