Oh, So That's Why DOJ Isn't Going After Pro-Terrorism Agitators
The UN Endorses a Second Terrorist State for Iran
The Stormy Daniels Trial Was Always Going to Be a Circus. It's Reached...
Biden Administration Hurls Israel Under the Bus Again
Israeli Ambassador Shreds the U.N. Charter in Powerful Speech Before Vote to Grant...
MSNBC Is Pro-Adult Film Testimony
The Long Haul of Love
Here's Where Speaker Mike Johnson Stands on Abortion
Trump Addresses the Very Real Chance of Him Going to Jail
Yes, Jen Psaki Really Said This About Biden Cutting Off Weapons Supply to...
3,000 Fulton County Ballots Were Scanned Twice During the 2020 Election Recount
Joe Biden's Weapons 'Pause' Will Get More Israeli Soldiers, Civilians Killed
Left-Wing Mayor Hires Drag Queen to Spearhead 'Transgender Initiatives'
NewsNation Border Patrol Ride Along Sees Arrest of Illegal Immigrants in Illustration of...
One State Just Cut Off Funding for Planned Parenthood
OPINION

A Disturbing Glimpse Into The Manufacturing of Fake News

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
AP Photo/Mary Altaffer

President Trump’s enemies are providing yet another disturbing glimpse of the veritable fake news factory into which the mainstream media has morphed.

Late last week, Ian Bremmer, one of the most well-known foreign policy experts in America, tweeted a made-up quote from President Trump without offering any indication that the statement was fictitious. “President Trump in Tokyo: ‘Kim Jong Un is smarter and would make a better President than Sleepy Joe Biden,'” Bremmer wrote, providing no further context.

Advertisement

Predictably, the fake news twitterverse took the quote at face-value. Journalists and lawmakers alike went on to share Bremmer’s tweet, blasting President Trump for a statement he never made.

CNN contributor Ana Navarro-Cárdenas, for instance, retweeted the fake quote with an emotional message to her followers.

“Don’t shrug your shoulders. Don’t get used to this insanity,” she wrote. “The President of the United States praising a cruel dictator who violates human rights, threatens nuclear attacks, oppresses his people, and kills political opponents, IS NOT FREAKING NORMAL.”

Democrat Representative Ted Lieu also took the bait, tweeting a list of critical questions at the President in response to Bremmer’s fabricated quotation.

“Is this when @realDonaldTrump became our President? Or was it when he kowtowed to Putin in Helsinki? Or was it when he said there are fine people on both sides? Or was it when he obstructed justice multiple times? Or was it when he separated infants from parents? Or was it w…” the lawmaker said.

The outrage continued to percolate across social media until Bremmer posted an “update” admitting that he had invented the “objectively ludicrous” remark for the purposes of an apparent experiment. The following day, Bremmer finally issued a belated apology for his original tweet, acknowledging that he “should have been clearer” when (mis-)quoting the President.

Whether or not you believe Bremmer’s claim, it’s clear that his initial tweet lacked proper context — as a respected foreign policy expert, columnist, and editor-at-large for Time magazine, Bremmer is - or was - viewed as a reputable source by many of his followers, and should have taken that responsibility more seriously. That being said, however, Bremmer is not an objective “reporter” who is paid to publish facts, and media personalities who quickly pounced on his tweet without verifying the information should have known the difference.

Advertisement

The whole episode was distressingly reminiscent of the Covington Catholic controversy, in which reporters across the mainstream media landscape aggressively defamed a group of high school students based on incomplete and inaccurate reports from non-journalists on social media, only to discover that their original description of the encounter was practically the exact opposite of the truth.

Sadly, the fake news media haven’t learned their lesson from the Covington travesty. In fact, the Ian Bremmer debacle wasn’t even the only fake news scandal that happened in recent days.

The New York Times, for instance, published an editorial suggesting that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and President Trump are partially responsible for the rise of anti-Semitism. The Times, of course, is a notorious purveyor of anti-Semitism itself. BuzzFeed News was forced to delete an “inaccurate” tweet claiming that a pro-Nazi vandal was radicalized in part by conservative political commentator Ben Shapiro, who happens to be Jewish. And Democrat presidential candidate Robert Francis “Beto” O’Rourke’s twisted facts about immigration, inmates, and gun violence during a CNN town hall barely received any attention from the mainstream media at all.

The high-profile journalists and elected Democrat politicians who were so quick to amplify Bremmer’s “objectively ludicrous” tweet should be embarrassed by their own gullibility, and the American people should be disgusted by this glimpse at the sausage-making behind the spread of fake news, which persists like a plague on our society in the age of Trump.

Advertisement

Ken Blackwell served as the mayor of Cincinnati, Ohio, the Ohio State Treasurer, and Ohio Secretary of State. He currently serves on the board of directors for Club for Growth and National Taxpayer Union.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos