Tag: lies
Bob Cesca: Fooled Again by Breitbart and the Wingnut Right
by NewsFeed on Jul.21, 2010, under Watchdog Related News Feed
There’s nothing shocking or surprising about the latest Andrew Breitbart scam in which he released selectively-edited video of an African American USDA worker, Shirley Sherrod, and accused her of racism against a white farmer couple, the Spooners. That’s not to suggest we shouldn’t be vigorously talking about it. We absolutely should be. But the most outrageous aspects of the story are fairly typical of everyone involved: Breitbart, the so-called “liberal” news media, Democrats, Fox News Channel and all points in between.
For background purposes, it’s important to note that Andrew Breitbart is an attention-whore who is desperate to emulate his mentor, Matt Drudge, and this isn’t the first time he’s released misleading videotape “evidence” of African Americans behaving badly (or so he claims) in order to drive traffic to his various websites while augmenting his status as a player in the modern conservative movement. He previously engaged in the same chicanery when he released heavily edited and ultimately phony Jackass-style videos in which, he alleges, ACORN workers had given inappropriate advice to a (fake) pimp and a (fake) prostitute who were, among other things, seeking to engage in human trafficking. The videos turned out to be misleading at best, and the fake pimp character went on to plead guilty to charges of entering federal property under false pretense.
Breitbart scammed nearly everyone on the ACORN videos including people who should have known better, like, for example, Jon Stewart.
Breitbart has done it again. This time, he’s flimflammed the White House, the NAACP and the traditional news media.
None of this is a particularly big shocker, of course. This is what Breitbart does. He’s another Karl Rove type in that his entire modus operandi is to tangle the debate — to be an instigator. To kerfuffle everyone he engages until the discourse has become so confused, skewed and tangential that he’s able to walk away more or less unscathed while the targets of his regularly scheduled crusades are often damaged beyond repair. ACORN is a national pariah. And this week, a decent woman is out of a job.
By the way, also not shocking here is the fact that, once again, the far-right is targeting someone who is more or less a noncombatant. This isn’t the first time far-right operatives, bloggers or Fox News hosts have targeted people who aren’t participants in bigtime political discourse and who certainly don’t have the wherewithal to defend themselves against, in the case of Fox News, one of the largest media organizations in the world.
These aren’t fair fights. The far-right media has previously targeted schools, small town school administrators and, more times than I can count, children — often outing the geographic locations of these victims. And now, Breitbart and Fox News can add a notch in their pitchforks and torches for Shirley Sherrod, a low level government worker who did nothing wrong and who didn’t deserve to lose her job or to undergo this kind of media scrutiny.
What a coup, Breitbart. Who’s next? The assistant to the deputy undersecretary for paper clips and doodads?
Yesterday, on MSNBC’s Morning Joe, Margaret Carlson, who is normally one of the more measured and smart analysts on MSNBC, was aghast at the edited video of Sherrod’s speech. Carlson compared Sherrod to disgraced tea party leader Mark Williams and exclaimed, “It’s every bit as hateful [as the New Black Panther video]. Look at that woman! I mean, aren’t you ashamed?”
It’s possible, however unlikely, that the Morning Joe crew and Carlson were unaware of who released the tape. But at some point, journalistic instincts and restraint ought to kick in when it comes to a random videotape excerpt from a previously unknown speaker. Instead, the panel, like the White House and the NAACP, were outraged by Sherrod’s out of context remarks without bothering to investigate the source of the video and whether that source was credible. Today, on Morning Joe, Mark Whitaker and Mark Halperin were quick to indict the president while ignoring the initial media hysteria around the video. Halperin went so far as to warn the Democrats of repercussions in the midterms. Repercussions from whom? African Americans? It comes as no surprise that Halperin didn’t warn of repercussions against either Breitbart or his co-conspirator Fox News Channel.
And this will all happen again. Why? Because the traditional news media and, to a certain extent, the Democrats including the president, are too easily cowed by right-wing freakouts.
In fact, it’s happening again as I write this.
As near as I can ascertain, every cable news reporter covering this story is taking Breitbart at his word that he received the Sherrod video pre-edited and that he hadn’t seen the full speech until after he published his irresponsible, masturbatory screed — as though Breitbart still has credibility. This scam artist is going around to every camera he can find and suggesting that his “source” only sent him the so-called “racist” part of the video, but not the full Sherrod speech. And no one is challenging him on this, or even asking him whether he himself edited the video to take out of context the remarks about helping the Spooners. This hack just engaged in yet another scam in which he duped the traditional press, and yet the traditional press is taking his mea culpa — his “but… but… but…” at face value.
Meanwhile, the Obama administration and the NAACP kneejerked as soon as the Breitbart story broke and almost immediately demanded that Sherrod resign her post.
One of the reasons I so vocally and enthusiastically endorsed and supported the Obama campaign was because he seemed like a new and different kind of Democrat. Someone who wouldn’t collapse under pressure from the wingnut right. Sure, he spoke a lot about bipartisan cooperation, but I never got the impression the president would easily succumb to the crazies. While I still believe he’s a new kind of Democrat, I’m not entirely confident in his ability to call bullshit on the bullshitters and stand by his team in a fight. Too many good people have been too easily jettisoned because of loud noises from Fox News and AM radio. I get this idea of picking one’s battles, but this was an easily winnable fight and they still caved.
Though I’m not sure this is a trait reserved for Democratic politicians alone. Almost since I began writing this column, friends, commenters and colleagues have suggested that we simply ignore attacks from Glenn Beck or Rush Limbaugh or Drudge. If we constantly fire back, they say, then we’re only increasing the visibility of the usual suspects and welcoming a counterattack. Last week, Dave Weigel, a reporter who I normally admire, advised that we avoid the debate about the tea party and racism because it invites a “backlash” from the right. It’s baffling to me that so many otherwise smart people would want to walk away from injustices like these simply to avoid the subsequent loud noises from the right. This attitude is what helped to marginalize and weaken liberals and progressives for too many years. An unwillingness to fight.
It’s a shame because there’s a broader point here and a growing misperception about racial bigotry circulating around the conventional wisdom. While I’m sure anyone could track down examples of anti-white bigotry by African Americans, I’m also sure if you tried hard enough you could also track down gnat shit in a pepper shaker. In other words, yes, there are black people who dislike and distrust white people because of race. Much of that hatred has to do with 300 years of slavery and Jim Crow laws — scars that haven’t yet healed, and understandably so.
But to suggest there’s an equivalency here, or systemic harm from anti-white bigotry is laughable. African Americans are 12.4 percent of the U.S. population (not the commonly and inaccurately repeated 30 percent). Whites are 75 percent of the population. To listen to the tea party or Rush Limbaugh or Fox News, you’d think whites were a meek and defenseless minority being crushed under the boot of a powerful black majority.
Even if Sherrod’s remarks were flat out racist (they weren’t), and even if her remarks were representative of the views of most blacks and the NAACP, it’s numerically impossible for the sum total of 12.4 percent of the population to oppress 75 percent of the population. There’s no way. In short: there is no threat of widespread anti-white bigotry. None. Sure, we have an African American president. But the vast majority of the American government is white. President Obama is the first black president out of 44. The U.S. Senate is widely and disproportionately white (and male). There’s one African American member of the Supreme Court, and he’s a Republican. I’ll stop here because it’s absurd that I have to enumerate the minority status of African Americans in government leadership when it ought to be obvious to anyone with a brain — even if the brain resides under a pointy white hood.
And now, Breitbart is using some sort of hamfisted logic to insist that he proved his point about the alleged hypocrisy of the NAACP’s resolution regarding the tea party and race. (Breitbart also accused the white farmer couple, the Spooners, of being plants.)
If, in fact, Breitbart’s agenda was seriously more than just satisfying his own narcissism — if his agenda was to seriously point out anti-white bigotry among black people, he was doomed to fail. Partly because his lies were easily and quickly exposed by CNN, and because there’s no threat whatsoever from anti-white bigotry. In order to prove a point and to defend the tea party, the only evidence of anti-white bigotry he could find within the NAACP was a speech by an obscure government worker from Georgia, and the speech turned out to be a speech in opposition to anti-white bigotry.
Somehow in Breitbart’s twisted gourd this is equivalent to tea party leaders engaging in Southern Strategy politics, race-baiting and, in the case of Dale Robertson and Mark Williams, outright racism — this deliberately misleading videotape of a virtually unknown official is equivalent to Rush Limbaugh’s constant racial stereotyping or members of Congress validating the Birthers or the wide variety of racist mailers and rally signs.
Breitbart has only succeeded in underscoring how much of a buffoon he is. But somehow he managed to sell his buffoonery to the news media, to the NAACP and to the White House who, by their cowardice, only managed to empower him, making it more likely he’ll keep trying. I wonder who will be fired and disgraced next. Unless there are serious changes, it certainly won’t be the operatives responsible for these hoaxes.
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Read more: Shirley Sherrod Andrew Breitbart, Andrew Breitbart, Rush Limbaugh, Acorn, Naacp Tea Party Racism, Shirley Sherrod, Matt Drudge, Racism, Fox News, Barack Obama Race, Tea Party, Naacp, Politics News
Breitbart flounders as his Sherrod story collapses
by NewsFeed on Jul.21, 2010, under Watchdog Related News Feed
As his story about former Obama administration official Shirley Sherrod has disintegrated, Andrew Breitbart has desperately tried to maintain his credibility. Media Matters chronicles Breitbart’s shifting stories, lies, and attempts to spin the story and pass the blame to others.
Breitbart Ascendant: Video is “evidence of
racism” by Sherrod
Initial post:
“Video Proof: The NAACP Awards Racism” by Sherrod. In his
initial July 19 BigGovernment.com post,
published at 11:18 AM ET and headlined “Video Proof: The NAACP Awards
Racism–2010,” Breitbart wrote in the piece’s first two
sentences:
Context is
everything.In this piece you will
see video evidence of racism coming from a federal appointee and NAACP award
recipient and in another clip from the same event a perfect rationalization for
why the Tea Party needs to exist.
After detailing the
“context” – that “Americans who consider themselves
aligned with the Tea Party movement have suffered the indignity of being falsely
labeled racist by the NAACP and their pro-bono publicity managers, the
main stream media” — Breitbart wrote:
We are in possession
of a video from in which Shirley Sherrod, USDA Georgia Director of Rural
Development, speaks at the NAACP Freedom Fund dinner in Georgia. In her
meandering speech to what appears to be an all-black audience, this federally
appointed executive bureaucrat lays out in stark detail, that her federal duties
are managed through the prism of race and class distinctions.In the first video,
Sherrod describes how she racially discriminates against a white farmer. She
describes how she is torn over how much she will choose to help him. And, she
admits that she doesn’t do everything she can for him, because he is white.
Eventually, her basic humanity informs that this white man is poor and needs
help. But she decides that he should get help from “one of his own kind”. She
refers him to a white lawyer.Sherrod’s racist tale
is received by the NAACP audience with nodding approval and murmurs of
recognition and agreement. Hardly the behavior of the group now holding itself
up as the supreme judge of another groups’ racial tolerance.
Breitbart then posted
the heavily edited video clip from Sherrod’s speech.
On
Twitter, Breitbart says Sherrod “Brags About Discriminating Against Whites,”
asks if DOJ will investigate. In
tweets posted at 11:51 AM and 12:31 PM on
July 19, Breitbart wrote:


Breitbart
victory lap: “Racist Govt Official/NAACP Award Recipient Resigns after Big
Government Expose.” In a July 19 blog
post published at 7:51 pm ET, “Publius,” the pseudonym of
BigGovernment.com’s “Editorial Panel,” wrote that “This morning, we broke
video of a USDA official, Shirley Sherrod, recounting for
attendees at an NAACP awards dinner how she withheld help from a white farmer
seeking the agency’s help in saving his farm.” After noting a report that
Sherrod had resigned, they wrote that “Presumably, [the
NAACP] will denounce
the racism in the video.” The post was headlined, “Racist Govt Official/NAACP
Award Recipient Resigns after Big Government Expose.”
As cracks form in story, Breitbart
doubles down
Atlanta
Journal-Constitution: Sherrod says
clip “completely misconstrued” her comments. In the Atlanta Journal-Constitution‘s July 20 article
(since updated) on the controversy surrounding Shirley Sherrod’s statements at
an NAACP banquet, the paper reported that “the tale she told at the banquet
happened 24 years ago — before she got the USDA job — when she worked with the
Georgia field office for the Federation of Southern Cooperative/Land Assistance
Fund.” The article also reported that, according to Sherrod, the “38-second
video posted online Monday by biggovernment.com and reported
on by FoxNews.com and the AJC completely misconstrued the message she was trying
to convey.”
“White farmer”
and his wife: Sherrod is a “friend” who “helped us save our farm.”
Later in the day, Sherrod appeared on
CNN Newsroom to discuss the
accusations against her. On the show, anchor Tony Harris contacted the wife of
the “white farmer” Sherrod had discussed in her appearance at the NAACP banquet.
The wife, Eloise Spooner, described Sherrod as “a good friend” who
“helped us save our farm.” In a later CNN interview, the farmer, Roger Spooner, said
that Sherrod “did her level best” to help him save his farm and those that are
smearing her as a racist “don’t know what they’re talking
about.”
Video producer confirmed that “the
full speech is exactly as Sherrod described … she goes on to explain learning
the error of her initial impression.”
Talking Points
Memo reported
that in an interview, Breitbart acknowledged that he hadn’t seen the full video,
but believed that the video “speaks for itself” and illustrated “a present tense racism” by
Sherrod:
The crux of the Shirley
Sherrod controversy is what she said outside of the two-minute video clip
posted by Big Government — whether she was, as she claims, telling a story
about how she overcame racial prejudice while helping poor farmers in Georgia,
or whether the clip is a good encapsulation of her views. So we asked Andrew
Breitbart, the founder of Big Government, why he hasn’t posted the full
video.“I don’t have it,” Breitbart told
TPMmuckraker in an interview. Breitbart said his source sent him just the edited
clips at first, but is in the process of sending the full
video.Breitbart said he’ll post the full
video, if he can get permission from the video production company who filmed it
for a local NAACP chapter. He also maintained that he didn’t edit the clip and
that it was sent to him already edited.[...]
“I think the
video speaks for itself,” he said. “The way she’s talking about white people …
is conveying a present tense racism in my opinion. But racism is in the eye of
the beholder.”
In media blitz, Breitbart flounders,
hurls bizarre accusations, tries to change story
NAACP releases
full tape vindicating Sherrod. The NAACP released the full video of Sherrod’s
comments on the evening of July 20. In the video, Sherrod sates that “working
with him [the white farmer] made me see that it’s really about those who have
versus those who don’t.” She went on to state that “they could be black, and
they could be white, they could be Hispanic. And it made me realize then that I
needed to work to help poor people — those who don’t have access the way others
have.”
Breitbart now
says his story is “not about Shirley Sherrod,” blames White House for
making her the story. On the July 20 edition of CNN’s
John King Live, Breitbart was asked
whether there is a “factual mistake” in his initial report. He replied, “This story
is about the NAACP. This story is about the NAACP falsely accusing the Tea Party
of being racist.” Throughout the interview, Breitbart denied that his story was
about Sherrod, saying at one point, “It’s not about Shirley
Sherrod. I can say it 20 times. It’s about the NAACP.” Likewise, in a
July 20 interview on Hannity,
Breitbart said (accessed from Nexis):
The reason why Shirley Sherrod is
the story right now, not the NAACP, is because the White House which stands by
the firing or the forced resignation — harassment as she said — they made the
story about Shirley. They threw her under the bus.I have not asked that she get fired.
I’ve not asked for an investigation into her. The whole point was to show that
the — for the NAACP to spend five days on national TV saying that the Tea Party
is racist without any evidence when we can prove that the central argument
didn’t happen and the mainstream media won’t play it — for them to talk about
racism they should not be throwing stones in glass houses.
Similarly, on the July 20 edition
of America’s Nightly Scoreboard,
Breitbart said the story is “about the NAACP, not about Shirley
Sherrod.”
Breitbart invents
NAACP audience cheers and applause, claims they are the real story.
On Hannity, Breitbart claimed that the real
story is how “the audience was
laughing and applauding as she described how she maltreated the white farmer.”
He also said that “The point is that the NAACP at a dinner honoring this person
is cheering on a person describing — describing a white person as the
other.”
And on a July
21 Good Morning
America interview, Breitbart
again claimed that his video shows that “at an
NAACP event, people are applauding racism.” But in his initial post, Breitbart described the
audience reaction as only “nodding approval and murmurs of recognition and
agreement.” And in fact, Breitbart’s claim that
the audience was applauding as she “described how she maltreated the white
farmer” is demonstrably
false. Contrary to Breitbart’s claim, the audience does not
applaud or cheer at any point during the story about her interaction with the
farmer.
Freak-out: On
CNN, Breitbart suggests events didn’t happen decades ago, “farmer’s wife” isn’t
who she says she is. On John King Live, Breitbart suggested
that the incident Sherrod discussed in the clip didn’t happen decades ago,
saying, “I mean there — if
you’re going to accuse me of a falsehood, tell me where you’ve confirmed that
this incident happened 24 years ago. This is Shirley Sherrod trying to save her
job.” In fact, in the
clip he posted, Sherrod placed the
events of her story when “Chapter 12 bankruptcy had just been
enacted.” This occurred in 1986.
Breitbart also asked King, “You tell me as a reporter how CNN put on a person
today who purported to be the farmer’s wife? What did you do to find out whether
or not that was the actual farmer’s wife?” He later added: “You’re going off of
her word that the farmer’s wife is the farmer’s wife. What type of extra
reporting have you done on this?”
Reaction becomes farce: Breitbart
feels “sorry” that “the media” made Sherrod fiasco “about her”
Breitbart is
“sympathetic” to Sherrod’s “plight.” In a July 21 interview with MSNBC,
Breitbart – who smeared Sherrod for racism, cheered her resignation, and
questioned whether she would be investigated by the Justice Department – said:
I feel bad that they made this about
her. And I feel sorry that they made this about her. I’m not sure if that was
done because they rushed to judgment or whether they wanted to make it about
Shirley versus me, because that’s what it’s become. But watching how they’ve
misconstrued, the media has misconstrued the intention behind this, I do feel a
sympathy for her plight, currently. And I do think that she’s gone — when you look at the
full video and you look at the video that was excerpted, you see that she
mentions that she went through some type of a transformation. So I’m sympathetic
to her that she’s caught in this plight right now. I’m sympathetic to the fact
that they went after her and not after the NAACP.
Big Falsehoods: An updated guide to Andrew Breitbart’s lies, smears, and distortions
by NewsFeed on Jul.21, 2010, under Watchdog Related News Feed
Following the dissolution of Andrew Breitbart’s smear of former Obama administration official Shirley Sherrod, Media Matters provides an updated look at how his sensationalist stories have been based on speculation, gross distortions, and outright falsehoods.
The “video evidence” of Shirley
Sherrod’s “racism” (NEW)
“Nationwide ACORN child
prostitution investigation” (UPDATED)
Platform for anti-gay Jennings smears
Breitbart-promoted O’Keefe
Census tape features selective editing (NEW)
Breitbart-promoted video
falsely accuses Democrats of reconciliation hypocrisy (NEW)
Wild accusations over Gladney case
Breitbart’s websites make baseless
claim that NEA engaged in lawbreaking
Bertha Lewis’ nonexistent White House
visit
The Maoist Christmas tree ornaments
False claims of community organizers
“praying” to Obama
The “video evidence” of Shirley
Sherrod’s “racism”
Breitbart
released heavily edited
video purporting to provide “proof” of Obama admin official’s “racism.”
In a July 19 BigGovernment.com post
– headlined “Video
Proof: The NAACP Awards Racism —
2010″ — Breitbart purported to provide “video
evidence of racism coming from a federal appointee and NAACP award recipient.”
The heavily edited
video clip Breitbart posted shows Shirley Sherrod, then the USDA Georgia Director of Rural
Development, speaking at an NAACP Freedom Fund dinner in
Georgia, and stating
that she didn’t give a “white farmer” the “full force of what I
could do” because “I was struggling with the fact
that so many black people have lost their farmland, and here I was faced with
having to help a white person save their land.” Breitbart characterized
Sherrod’s comments as her “describ[ing]
how she racially discriminates against a white
farmer.”
Full video
vindicates Sherrod, destroys Breitbart’s accusations of racism.
On July 20, the NAACP posted the
full video of Sherrod’s remarks, exposing how the clip
Breitbart posted had taken Sherrod out of context. The heavily edited clip included her
statements that she initially did not help the farmer, but removed her statements indicating that
she ultimately did help him save his farm and learned that
“it’s not just about black
people, it’s about poor people.”
Immediately prior to the portion of
Sherrod’s speech included in Breitbart’s clip, Sherrod says that she originally
made a “commitment” “to black people only,” but that “God will show you things and he’ll put things in your
path so that you realize that the struggle is really about poor people.”
Immediately following the portion of the video included in the clip, Sherrod
detailed her extensive work to help the farmer save his farm. She then said,
“working with him made me see that it’s really about those who have versus those
who don’t,” adding “they could be black, and they could be white, they could be
Hispanic. And it made me realize then that I needed to work to help poor people
– those who don’t have access the way others have.” She later added, “I
couldn’t say 45 years ago, I couldn’t stand here and say what I’m saying — what
I will say to you tonight. Like I told, God helped me to see that its not just
about black people, it’s about poor people. And I’ve come a long
way.”
Breitbart falsely
suggested Sherrod was describing her actions as an Obama admin official. Breitbart falsely suggested that
his heavilyedited clip of Sherrod’s speech showed her saying that Sherrod
discriminated against a white farmer in her capacity as the USDA Georgia director of rural development, writing that she “lays out in
stark detail, that her federal duties are managed through the prism of race and
class distinctions.” In fact, in the video, Sherrod says the incident occurred
when “Chapter 12 bankruptcy had just been enacted for the family farm.” Chapter
12 bankruptcy was
enacted in 1986. In a June 2009 press release
touting Sherrod’s appointment to USDA, the Federation of Southern
Cooperative/Land Assistance Fund states that Sherrod had worked for them “since
1985.”
Farmer and his
wife defend Sherrod as a “friend” who “helped us save our farm.”
In an interview with CNN on July
20, Eloise Spooner — the wife of the farmer who Sherrod helped
– came to the defense
of Sherrod, calling her a “friend” who “helped us save our farm.”
The
Atlanta Journal-Constitution
similarly reported
that Spooner considered Sherrod a
“friend for life” and said that Sherrod “worked tirelessly to help the
Iron
City couple hold onto their
land as they faced bankruptcy back in 1986.” In a separate interview, Roger
Spooner, the farmer, told CNN that Sherrod “did
her level best” to help him save his farm and those that are smearing her as a
racist “don’t know what they’re talking
about.”
After Sherrod
smear dissolves, Breitbart falsely claims his story was “not about Shirley
Sherrod.” Since his smear of
Sherrod was repudiated, Breitbart has claimed that his story is “not about
Shirley Sherrod” but rather about “the NAACP.” In fact, in his initial post
on July 19, Breitbart claimed that the video is “evidence of racism coming from
a federal appointee” and that Sherrod discriminated against a white farmer in
her “federal duties” as the USDA Georgia Director of Rural Development. The video
itself also included text that said,
“Ms. Sherrod admits
that in her federally appointed position,
overseeing over a billion dollars she discriminates against people due to their
race.” Breitbart also
posted a
tweet on July 19
asking, “Will Eric Holder’s DOJ hold accountable fed appointee
Shirley Sherrod for admitting practicing racial discrimination?” After the USDA
forced Sherrod out of her position in response to the deceptive video, Big
Government celebrated with a post
titled: “Racist Govt Official/NAACP Award Recipient Resigns after Big Government
Expose.”
Breitbart tries
to redirect conversation with false claim that NAACP audience was “applauding
racism.” In a July 20 Fox News appearance, Breitbart
claimed that the video proves there are racists among the NAACP
because “the audience was laughing and applauding as she described
how she maltreated the white farmer,” and he argued that the audience did not
“know that there was going to be a point of redemption” in her story.
On
a July 21 appearance on ABC’s Good Morning America,
Breitbart again claimed that his video shows that “at an NAACP event, people are
applauding racism.” But in his initial post, Breitbart described the
audience reaction as only “nodding approval and murmurs of recognition and
agreement,” not applause. Indeed, a review of the full video indicates that the
NAACP audience does not applaud at any point in her story about her interaction
with the farmer.
Media across the
board reject Breitbart’s race-baiting lies. Media figures and
outlets from across the board have
rejected Breitbart’s false claims against Sherrod. For example, NRO’s Jonah
Goldberg has said that Sherrod is
“owed apologies from pretty much
everyone, including my good friend Andrew Breitbart,” CNN’s Anderson
Cooper said Sherrod’s remarks
“were taken out of context … She was smeared by allegations of racism,
lost her job, and is now being redeemed by the truth, it seems, the whole
truth,” and Fox News’ Glenn Beck said Sherrod “deserves her job back.” Moreover,
NBC News’ Chuck Todd, Mark Murray, Domenico Montanaro, and Ali Weinberg wrote in
a July 21 post on First Read:
After conservative activist James
O’Keefe pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor for entering a federal building under
false pretenses, you would have thought that all of us in the ACTUAL news
business would have learned this lesson about Andrew Breitbart and his protégés:
They’re not out for the truth; they’re out for scalps. So once again, we find
out that Breitbart has distributed an EDITED video that gets wide play on Drudge
and cable TV; that the target of the video is embarrassed, forced to resign, or
stripped of federal funding; and that — surprise, surprise — the video didn’t
tell the whole truth.
“Nationwide ACORN child prostitution investigation”
Breitbart coordinated release of conservative activists’ undercover ACORN videos. On September 10, 2009, conservative activist and videographer James O’Keefe posted an entry to BigGovernment.com in which he revealed that he and fellow activist Hannah Giles had posed as a pimp and prostitute at a Baltimore ACORN Housing office and secretly filmed their meetings with ACORN staffers. As O’Keefe wrote, their intention was to take “advantage of ACORN’s regard for thug criminality by posing the most ridiculous criminal scenario we could think of and seeing if they would comply — which they did without hesitation,” the “scenario” being the “trafficking of young helpless girls and tax evasion.” O’Keefe would later release similar recordings of their interactions with ACORN and ACORN Housing employees at several other ACORN offices nationwide.
Breitbart authored a separate September 10 BigGovernment.com post ”introducing” O’Keefe and making it clear that he and BigGovernment.com would play a central role in the distribution of O’Keefe and Giles’ videos. But as Breitbart, O’Keefe, and Giles released and promoted the “heavily edited” videos, their allegations about ACORN and its employees were undermined by numerous falsehoods and distortions.
Assessment “did not find a pattern of intentional, illegal conduct by ACORN staff.” In his December 7, 2009, “Independent Governance Assessment of ACORN,” former Massachusetts Attorney General Scott Harshbarger (D), who was hired by ACORN to conduct an inquiry in part into the videos, wrote, “While some of the advice and counsel given by ACORN employees and volunteers was clearly inappropriate and unprofessional, we did not find a pattern of intentional, illegal conduct by ACORN staff; in fact, there is no evidence that action, illegal or otherwise, was taken by any ACORN employee on behalf of the videographers.”
A December 22, 2009, report by the Congressional Research Service prepared for the House Judiciary Committee on “several issues” relating to ACORN and its affiliates stated that “[a] search of reports of federal agency inspectors general did not identify instances in which ACORN violated the terms of federal funding in the last five years.” Addressing “the recent videotaping of ACORN workers and the distribution of conversations with ACORN workers without consent,” the report stated that “the laws of Maryland and California appear to ban private recording of face to face conversations, absent the consent of all the participants.”
Investigations by
CA, Brooklyn authorities find no criminality.
On April 1, California Attorney
General Edmund G. Brown Jr.
stated
that his office concluded that the
videos show “some members of the community organizing group ACORN engaged in
‘highly inappropriate behavior,’ but committed no violation of criminal laws.”
Kings County, New
York, district attorney Joe Hynes likewise
cleared
ACORN of wrongdoing stemming from
claims instigated by O’Keefe and Giles’ taping at ACORN’s Brooklyn office, stating: “That investigation is now
concluded and no criminality has been found.” After Brooklyn prosecutors cleared
ACORN, Breitbart backtracked on his previous accusation of ACORN criminality, writing
in a March 2 post that the “ACORN
tapes were less about ‘criminality’ than facility with which employees all knew
how to work system for any lowlife wanting govmnt
$.”
Authorities
criticize selective editing of ACORN videos.
According
to the California attorney
general’s office the videotapes were “severely edited by O’Keefe.” In a
statement, Attorney General Brown said that “The
evidence illustrates… that things are not always as partisan zealots portray
them through highly selective editing of reality. Sometimes a fuller truth is
found on the cutting room floor.” Likewise, a March 1 New York
Daily News article
reported that “a law
enforcement source” said of O’Keefe and Giles: “They edited the tape to meet
their agenda.” A March 2 New York
Post article,
headlined “ACORN set up by vidiots: DA,” reported of O’Keefe and Giles’ ACORN
tapes: “Many of the seemingly crime-encouraging answers were taken out of
context so as to appear more sinister, sources said.”
Breitbart said his strategy for promoting ACORN videos was to “deprive” people of “information.” The Washington Independent reported on September 24:
Within hours, Breitbart was doing interviews with reporters who wanted to know how, exactly, the story had come about, and why Big Government was releasing the videos and the identity of the muckrackers – 25-year-old James O’Keefe III and 20-year-old Hannah Giles – so slowly.
“It was strategized,” Breitbart told TWI this week, so “that they would be deprived of the type of information that a defense attorney would try to gather in order to create a defense.”
Who were “these people?” They were not just the leaders or members of ACORN itself. “They” were the Democratic Party, the White House, the progressive Center for American Progress and its president John Podesta. The “Democrat-media complex” is Breitbart’s name for the whole apparatus. “We deprived them of information,” Breitbart explained, “so that they couldn’t come up with a vile, kill-the-messenger attack with the media doing the groundwork for them.”
O’Keefe falsely claimed undercover video campaign was a “nationwide ACORN child prostitution investigation” implicating many ACORN employees. From a November 16, 2009, BigGovernment.com post by O’Keefe:
Although Mr. Felix D. Harris of Los Angeles ACORN told us he didn’t care about our prostitution business in regards to a housing loan, he drew the line when we spoke about the underage girls.Although he did not kick us out, he was the only employee in our nationwide ACORN child prostitution investigation who would not assist us.
The videos, however, don’t support the allegation that many ACORN offices were willing to aid child prostitution. Giles and O’Keefe released heavily edited videos of their encounters at eight ACORN or ACORN Housing offices. In at least six of those instances, either the activists did not clearly tell the ACORN employees that they were planning to engage in child prostitution; or the ACORN employees refused to help them or apparently deliberately misled them; or ACORN employees contacted the police following their visit.
Giles falsely claimed no ACORN employee refused to assist them. From the September 16, 2009, edition of Fox News’ Hannity:
HANNITY: [W]hen you go to Baltimore and D.C. and New York and San Bernardino and San Diego, and this all happened, were there any cities you went to where you just didn’t get any videotape, not worthy to air?
GILES: We are airing it. It’s pretty worthy. Everyone seems.
HANNITY: In other words, you didn’t go into one office and they said we’re not going to help you do anything like that?
GILES: No.
HANNITY: Not one. Every place you went they helped you or were willing to help you either not report you for an underage prostitution ring, evade taxes as we have.
BREITBART: Right. The — it is interesting. There’s no place, as ACORN tried to state, that kicked them out based upon the premise that they were doing something nefarious.
From the September 13, 2009, edition of Fox News’ America’s News HQ:
GILES: [A]bout the whole kicking out, I mean, the women in Baltimore hugged me and — when I left. And the women in D.C. — I did follow-up phone calls, and they asked if I could come and meet them for coffee so we could further discuss how to make this possible.
ERIC SHAWN (Fox News correspondent): So these first two tapes, they didn’t kick you out, but you are saying that there were some that did refuse? James or Hannah?
GILES: Not — no
O’KEEFE: Say that again.
SHAWN: Were there some that refused their your offers, that actually did not — were not willing to cooperate?
O’KEEFE: No — in none of the facil — [laughs] none of the facilities kicked us out. That’s a lie.
But a video released months later showed an ACORN employee who refused to assist Giles and O’Keefe. After withholding the video for more than two months — despite reportedly vowing to “release all the tapes soon to show if any ACORN offices did the right thing,” in the words of Fox News’ Chris Wallace — O’Keefe finally acknowledgedthat a Los Angeles ACORN employee “would not assist us obtain a house for our illegal activities” — an admission that directly contradicts Giles’ false claims that no ACORN employees refused to help them.
O’Keefe falsely claimed Harris “was the only employee … who would not assist us.” From O’Keefe’s November 16, 2009, BigGovernment.com post:
Although Mr. Felix D. Harris of Los Angeles ACORN told us he didn’t care about our prostitution business in regards to a housing loan, he drew the line when we spoke about the underage girls. Although he did not kick us out, he was the only employee in our nationwide ACORN child prostitution investigation who would not assist us.
Contrary to O’Keefe’s assertion that the Los Angeles ACORN worker “was the only ACORN employee in our nationwide investigation who would not assist us obtain a house for our illegal activities,” ACORN employees inPhiladelphia and the San Diego area contacted the police following their encounters with O’Keefe and Giles, an action that indicates that they had no intention of helping O’Keefe and Giles conduct any illegal activities. At two other ACORN offices — in New York and Washington, D.C., — Giles and O’Keefe did not make clear that they were planning to engage in child prostitution.
Additionally, in the video of Giles and O’Keefe’s visit to the San Bernardino ACORN office, an ACORN employeegives them advice on how to run a brothel and falsely informs them that she murdered her ex-husband. In astatement subsequently released by ACORN, the employee stated of the conservative activists who filmed her: “They were not believable. … They were clearly playing with me. I decided to shock them as much as they were shocking me.” Indeed, even Fox News’ Sean Hannity later acknowledged that O’Keefe and Giles were the “least convincing pimp” and “prostitute” in “the entire world.”
Breitbart threatened to release more tapes during election unless DOJ investigates ACORN. During the November 19, 2009, edition of Fox News’ Hannity, Breitbart offered a “message” for Attorney General Eric Holder:
BREITBART: I want you to know that we have more tapes, it’s not just ACORN, and we’re going to hold out until the next election cycle. Or else, if you want to do a clean investigation, we will give you the rest of what we have, we will comply with you, we will give you the documentation we have from countless ACORN whistleblowers who want to come forward but are fearful of this organization and the retribution, that they fear that this is a dangerous organization. So if you get into an investigation, we will give you the tapes. If you don’t give us the tapes, we will revisit these tapes come election time.
Following up on his comments with a November 21, 2009, blog post on BigGovernment.com, Breitbart stated, “There will be consequences if there isn’t an investigation into ACORN. The videos will be shown and at a particular moment.”
O’Keefe later
pleaded guilty to misdemeanor criminal charge in Landrieu office
case.
As
reported
by
The
Times-Picayune on May 26:
The four defendants who were
arrested in January in Sen. Mary Landrieu’s office in the Hale Boggs federal
complex in New Orleans pleaded guilty Wednesday
morning in federal court to entering real property belonging to the
United
States under false
pretenses.Magistrate Judge Daniel Knowles III
sentenced Stan Dai, Joseph Basel and Robert Flanagan each to two years
probation, a fine of $1,500 and 75 hours of community service during their first
year of probation.James O’Keefe, as
leader of the group and famous for posing as a pimp in ACORN office videos,
received three years of probation, a fine of $1,500 and 100 hours of community
service.
Platform for anti-gay Jennings smears
Blogger Hoft’s smear campaign against Jennings. Writing for the website Gateway Pundit, Jim Hoft has authored a series of factually dubious attacks on Department of Education staffer Kevin Jennings and the organization Jennings founded and previously led, the Gay, Lesbian, and Straight Education Network (GLSEN). Hoft’s Jennings posts — which he has labeled “Fistgate,” even though many of those allegations have little or nothing to do with the sexual practice of fisting – often draw upon the work of MassResistance, a Massachusetts based anti-gay organization that has been labeled a “hate group” by the Southern Poverty Law Center. Even conservative commentator Dean Barnett has stated that the organization “verges on being a hate group.”
Breitbart eagerly embraced and promoted Hoft’s false attacks on Jennings. Hoft’s “Fistgate” attacks on Jennings and the GLSEN have been faithfully cross-posted on BigGovernment.com, and Breitbart himself has used Twitter topromote Hoft’s work. Among the smears and distortions Breitbart has embraced:
- Hoft deceptively linked Jennings to “fisting” workshop he criticized. Hoft claimed that a 2000 conference sponsored by the Boston branch of GLSEN included “a workshop where GLSEN activists promoted ‘fisting’ to 14 year olds,” citing a recorded exchange that occurred during a “Queer Sex and Sexuality” workshop at that conference. In fact, Jennings reportedly criticized some of the workshop’s content when the recordings were first released in 2000, and the people involved in conducting the controversial discussion were state employees and contractors, not GLSEN employees.
- Hoft falsely claimed high-school students received “fisting kits” at 2001 GLSEN conference. Hoft falsely claimed that “fisting kits” — which he placed in quotes — were distributed at the 2001 GLSEN/Boston conference. But Hoft has presented no evidence that the kits distributed by Planned Parenthood of Massachusetts were actually intended for fisting. Indeed, while the conservative newspaper Massachusetts News — cited by Hoft – reported in 2001 that the kits were “intended for ‘fisting’ or oral sex,” the paper described the kit’s contents as “a single plastic glove, a package of K-Y lubricant and instructions on how to make a ‘dental dam’ out of the material” and offered no support for the claim that the kits were “intended for ‘fisting.’ ” Even FoxNews.com has reported that Hoft “alleged that Jennings and GLSEN were involved in Planned Parenthood’s purported distribution of ‘fisting kits,’ ” but that the kit “was actually for making a ‘dental dam’ — designed to prevent STD transmission during oral sex.”
- Hoft falsely suggested Jennings’ organization handed out explicit safe-sex booklet to children. Hoft falsely suggested that that GLSEN had distributed to children an explicit safe-sex booklet that included ”a list of the local gay bars” and ”Pushed Anal S*x in Parks With Strangers.” In fact, a community health group — not GLSEN itself — reportedly said that it had mistakenly “left about 10 copies” of the booklet on an informational table it rented at a 2005 GLSEN conference at Brookline High School in Massachusetts; the group reportedly apologized for doing so; GLSEN stated that if it had known the booklets had been at the conference, it would have demanded they be removed; and the Brookline school superintendent reportedly said he believed no students had actually taken the booklet.
- Hoft falsely claimed Jennings “Pushed Books That Encouraged Children to Meet Adults at Gay Bars For Sex.” Hoft falsely claimed that Jennings “Personally Pushed Books That Encouraged Children to Meet Adults at Gay Bars For Sex,” citing MassResistance’s falsehood that a book Jennings recommended to high school and college students, One Teenager in 10, “encourage[s] teens to, among other things, go to gay bars and have sex with adults to see if they like it.” Media Matters for America has reviewed the book, compiled all references to gay bars, and determined that the book at no point encourages teens to “go to gay bars and have sex with adults.” In fact, a majority of the youth testimonials included in the book that mention gay bars refer to them negatively.
Breitbart.tv also smeared Jennings. An October 6, 2009, Breitbart.tv post grossly distorted comments Jennings made to a GLSEN audience in 2000 to claim he “criticize[d] schools for promoting heterosexuality.” In fact, in the audio files posted at Breitbart.tv, Jennings promoted a curriculum that demands “respect [for] every human being regardless of sexual orientation, regardless of gender identity, regardless of race or religion or any of the arbitrary distinctions we make among people,” and said that efforts to promote a specific sexual orientation through schools were ineffective.
Breitbart-promoted
O’Keefe Census tape features selective editing
Breitbart-promoted
O’Keefe video: “Census supervisors” were “systemically encouraging
employees to falsify information on their time sheets.”
In a 10-minute
video posted on
Breitbart’s BigGovernment.com on June 1, O’Keefe stated that he had been hired
as a Census worker and attended two days of training. He said, “What I found
were Census supervisors systematically encouraging employees to falsify
information on their time sheets.” The video includes clips of census leaders
who, according to
O’Keefe, “didn’t seem to have a problem with the discrepancy” of the hours
recorded on his time sheet versus the hours he claimed to have
worked.
BigGovernment
video omits additional clip showing census crew leader stressing need for
accuracy in time sheet reporting. On June 1, ABC’s Good
Morning America interviewed O’Keefe and
Andrew Breitbart, airing a clip excluded from the BigGovernment video of a census crew leader telling workers that they must
carefully and accurately report on their time sheets the number of miles they
drive when they are doing their enumeration work. From the June 1 edition of ABC’s Good
Morning America:
GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS (host): But
this was the training program. And you concede that in the actual Census
program, they were holding workers to much stricter standards. We have some
video tape of that as well.CREW LEADER (video clip): This is
not a big issue here, but when you start doing this enumeration thing, you want
to make sure you are watching your miles, OK? Set the odometer and every day
record it. Don’t estimate it, don’t guess it. That’s part of their ability to
audit you, would be to look at your miles, take a look at the places you went
to, if it didn’t add up, you know, they’ll go crazy.
In video, O’Keefe
uses fuzzy math in calculating potential cost of the alleged census
“fraud.” In the opening of his video,
O’Keefe displayed the
following on-screen text
to illustrate the potential cost of the alleged census “fraud”:
“If 600,000 Census employees get paid $18.25/hour and each of them gets paid
just four hours extra that’s $43,800,000.” But O’Keefe’s figure is based on the assumption that all census workers make the same amount
of money he did, when
he spent two days training to be a census enumerator in New Jersey. However,
according to the Census 2010
website,
“census
takers” are paid different amounts based on which local office
they report to. These starting wages vary from $10.00/hour to $25.00/hour. The
average starting salary for all 492 local offices is
$14.78/hour.
Breitbart-promoted
video falsely accuses Democrats of reconciliation
hypocrisy
Breitbart.tv
headline: “Obama & Dems in ’05: 51 Vote ‘Nuclear Option’ Is ‘Arrogant’ Power
Grab Against the Founder’s Intent.”
On February 24, Breitbart.tv posted video showing Democratic
senators expressing opposition to a Republican proposal that would have
eliminated use of the filibuster for judicial nominations. Text accompanying the
video states, “Biden: ‘I pray God when the Democrats take back control we don’t
make the kind of naked power grab you are doing.’ “
Conservative
media jump on video to accuse Democrats of hypocrisy. Numerous conservative media
figures, particularly at Fox News, jumped on the
video as evidence that Democrats who
in 2010 supported the use of the budget reconciliation process for
health care reform are hypocrites, falsely suggesting that the “nuclear option”
to which the Democrats referred was the budget reconciliation
process.
Democrats in
video were discussing “nuclear option” of changing Senate rules, not
reconciliation. The term “nuclear option” was coined
by former Sen. Trent Lott (R-MS), one of the leading advocates of
the proposal to change the Senate rules on filibusters for judicial nominations.
The Democrats in the video were expressing opposition to this proposal to change Senate rules,
not the use of
reconciliation.
Reconciliation
process is part of congressional budget process, was repeatedly used by Republicans to pass Bush
agenda. The budget
reconciliation process is
defined
by the U.S. House Committee on Rules as “part of the congressional
budget process … utilized when Congress issues directives to legislate policy
changes in mandatory spending (entitlements) or revenue programs (tax laws) to
achieve the goals in spending and revenue contemplated by the budget
resolution.” Republicans used this procedure to
pass several Bush agenda items, including his 2001 and 2003 tax
cuts.
Wild accusations over Gladney case
Breitbart baselessly implicates White House in alleged Gladney assault. On August 6, 2009, a fight broke out at a health care town hall meeting with Rep. Russ Carnahan (D-MO), during which Tea Party activist Kenneth Gladney was allegedly assaulted and injured. Gladney quickly became a cause célèbre among conservatives, with Breitbart leading the way and accusing the White House of directing SEIU representatives to attack Gladney.
Claims WH “directed” town hall violence based on egregious distortions. Breitbart grossly distorted a reported quote from White House deputy chief of staff Jim Messina to blame the White House for Gladney’s alleged assault, claiming that “union thugs were directed by the White House to go to” health care town hall meetings “and ‘punch back twice as hard.’ ” In fact, Messina reportedly told Senate Democrats — not union groups — that the administration will “punch back twice as hard” when senators are attacked over their support for health care reform. There is no indication it was anything other than a metaphorical explanation of how the White House plans to respond to political attacks against Senate Democrats.
From Breitbart’s August 10, 2009, Washington Times op-ed, headlined “I am Kenneth Gladney”:
Last week, a black gentleman named Kenneth Gladney went to a town-hall meeting hosted by Rep. Russ Carnahan, Missouri Democrat. While passing out “Don’t Tread on Me” flags, he was viciously attacked by Service Employees International Union (SEIU) members. One called him a “nigger.”
These union thugs were directed by the White House to go to the protests and “punch back twice as hard.” And they did.
In a November 30, 2009, BigGovernment.com post titled “Anatomy of a Beat-Down Part 1: Why Kenneth Gladney Was Beaten, And by Whom,” Larry O’Connor similarly referenced Messina’s quote and linked it to Gladney’s alleged assault:
Finally on August 6th, hours before the Carnahan town hall meeting where Kenneth Gladney was assaulted by members of the SEIU, David Axelrod and Jim Messina gave a pep talk to Senators on Capitol Hill prior to their leaving for the August recess. According to Politico:
They showed video clips of the confrontational town halls that have dominated the media coverage, and told senators to do more prep work than usual for their public meetings by making sure their own supporters turn out, senators and aides said. And they screened TV ads and reviewed the various campaigns by critics of the Democratic plan.
“If you get hit, we will punch back twice as hard,” Messina said, according to an official who attended the meeting.
Two days after the instructions on how to manage and control protestors at town hall meetings were released by Margarida Jorge at HCAN, one day after the Speaker of the House likened protestors to Nazis and mere hours after President Obama’s top political advisors assured Congressional Democrats that “If you get hit, we will punch them back twice as hard”, Kenneth Gladney lay beaten and bloody on the ground outside Rep. Russ Carnahan’s Town Hall meeting.
Breitbart’s websites baselessly attack Missouri law enforcement. After six people were charged with misdemeanor ordinance violations on November 25, 2009, in connection with the alleged assault of Gladney, Breitbart’s websites accused St. Louis prosecuting attorney Robert McCulloch of displaying “partisan bias” in supposedly delaying the charges and not making them harsher, and suggested that the Obama administration may have played a role in the delay. Their “evidence” for the accusation was that McCulloch, in 2008, “worked on behalf of the Obama for America campaign … by aggressively promoting a pre-emptive strike against negative campaigning against Barack Obama” and that the head of the Obama for America campaign in Missouri, Buffy Wicks, now works in the White House Office of Public Engagement. In a December 2, 2009, BigGovernment.com post, O’Connor wrote:
Meanwhile, [county counselor Patricia] Redington let this case languish for months before finally bringing modest charges against the suspects on the afternoon before Thanksgiving (an obvious attempt to let the story disappear). One week before the charges were brought, Big Government reported:
- Redington hasn’t spoken to Kenneth Gladney
- Redington hasn’t called any of the witnesses on the police report.
- Redington hasn’t contacted any of the Tea Party members that are seen on video
- Redington hasn’t contacted any of the people who shot video that night and whose YouTube urls are listed on the evidence page
Also, despite the fact that Redington never investigated the injuries Gladney suffered and never interviewed the medical personnel who administered assistance to Gladney, she still felt it best to reduce the charges down to an ordinance violation. In the words of Judge Anthony Napolitano: “The moral equivalent of jay walking.”
But, make no mistake; this is happening on McCulloch’s watch. He has the authority to handle this case and to ensure that proper charges are filed, but he has chosen not to. It begs the question: If he jumped through the “Truth Squad” hoops when Buffy Wicks asked him to during the campaign, is it possible he has turned his back on this case for similar reasons?
Missouri law enforcement denies delaying charges. The St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported on November 25, 2009:
The charges were filed Tuesday by the St. Louis County counselor’s office. All six are to appear in court Jan. 21. The maximum penalty would be one year in jail and a $1,000 fine.
Some bloggers and others watching the case have raised questions for months about the lag between the arrests at the politically charged event and the filing of charges.
County Counselor Patricia Redington insisted it had nothing to do with politics or anyone’s influence.
[...]
Ordinance violation charges are usually filed within four to six weeks of an incident, Reddington said, but this case involved interviews with dozens of witnesses and review of many videos posted on the Internet. [from the Nexis database]
Breitbart’s websites make baseless claim that NEA engaged in lawbreaking
BigHollywood.com claims NEA “looking to the art community to create an environment amenable to the administration’s positions.” In an August 25, 2009, BigHollywood.com entry, Patrick Courrielche wrote that he was “invited by the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) to take part in a conference call that invited a group of rising artist and art community luminaries ‘to help lay a new foundation for growth, focusing on core areas of the recovery agenda — health care, energy and environment, safety and security, education, community renewal.’ ” According to Courrielche, the conference call, in which NEA and White House staffers took part, was “a gross overreach of the National Endowment for the Arts and its mission.”
Posters on Breitbart’s websites baselessly claim NEA broke laws. In a September 2009 blog post that appeared on Breitbart’s Big Hollywood and Big Government sites, Ben Shapiro asserted that the conference call “is in blatant violation of the Anti-Lobbying Act”; in a post the next day, he added that the call also “violates the Hatch Act.”
Fox News runs with baseless lawbreaking allegation. Fox News followed Big Hollywood’s lead as Glenn Beckrepeatedly attacked the NEA over the conference calls and Fox & Friends co-host Gretchen Carlson asserted that former NEA communications director Yosi Sargent’s actions during the conference call were “against the law.”
No evidence that activities broke Anti-Lobbying Act. The Justice Department — whose opinions about the Anti-Lobbying Act carry special force, according to the legislation itself — has stated that a violation of the Anti-Lobbying Act requires that the alleged perpetrator urge members of the public to pressure members of Congress “to support Administration or Department legislative or appropriations proposals.” The Justice Department has also stated that Anti-Lobbying Act violations are limited to lobbying campaigns of more than $50,000. Carlson and Shapiro pointed to Sargent calling on people to support the president but neither they, nor the “Full NEA Conference Call Transcript and Audio” posted on BigHollywood.com, show Sargent or any other government official encouraging participants to contact members of Congress.
CREW: No evidence of Hatch Act violations. According to a blog post by ABC News correspondent Jake Tapper, Melanie Sloan, executive director of Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington (CREW) said: “Government agencies are not supposed to be engaged in political activities. … Here, because they didn’t veer off into ‘This is about the election,’ where you’d get into violations of the Hatch Act, it’s not illegal. But it doesn’t look good — it looks terrible. It’s inappropriate.” [ABCNews.com, 9/22/09]
Fox and Breitbart kept trying to push NEA storyline through the end of the year. In December 2009, FoxNews.com posted ”Nine Big Stories the Mainstream Media Missed in 2009.” Story five was “politicizing the NEA.” On December 31, 2009, Big Hollywood trumpeted the FoxNews.com article with the headline “Fox News: Politicizing NEA Among Top Stories MSM Missed in ’09.”
Bertha Lewis’ nonexistent White House visit
BigGovernment.com claims ACORN CEO Bertha Lewis visited White House. A December 30, 2009, BigGovernment.com “exclusive” noted that according to recently released White House visitor logs, a “Bertha E. Lewis” had visited the White House on September 5, and alleged that “Bertha E. Lewis” was, in fact, ACORN CEO Bertha Lewis. The story further noted: “Ms. Lewis doesn’t seem to have returned to the White House after this visit. Of course, just 5 days after this visit, James O’Keefe would release the first video of his undercover journalism on the systemic corruption within ACORN.”
Politico: White House says it was a different Bertha Lewis. On December 31, 2009, Politico senior political writer Ben Smith reported that an anonymous White House staffer had denied that the “Bertha E. Lewis” who visited the White House was the ACORN CEO and that ACORN officials had pointed out that their CEO’s middle initial, as it appears on her New York voter registration, is “M,” not “E.”
Breitbart issues semi-correction. In a January 4 BigGovernment.com entry, Breitbart wrote that he had contacted Smith “to tell him that Big Government would offer a correction if the ‘administration official’ who offered the information went on record and told us who the ‘other’ Bertha Lewis is and got the unnamed administration source to come out from behind the veil of anonymity and use his/her name.” Smith responded to Breitbart’s challenge by updating his blog post to report that White House deputy press secretary Jen Psaki “confirmed … that, indeed, it was a different Bertha Lewis.” Breitbart subsequently updated the original BigGovernment.com story, writing: “Since we have no information on how to hunt down the ‘other’ Bertha Lewis — Ms. Psaki wouldn’t reveal who she is, citing ‘privacy concerns’ — Big Government will err on the side of prudence and grant the White House its side of the story.”
Breitbart countermands his own correction. Despite having “grant[ed] the White House its side of the story,” Breitbart continued to suggest that it was, in fact, ACORN CEO Bertha Lewis who visited the White House on September 5. After posting the correction, Breitbart issued to Media Matters a $1,000 challenge to produce proof that “Bertha E. Lewis” was not Bertha Lewis of ACORN. This despite the fact that ACORN CEO Bertha Lewis’ middle initial, as noted above, is “M” and not “E.” In the introductory post to his new website, BigJournalism.com, Breitbart credited himself for posting a correction to the Bertha Lewis story, but at the same time explained, “I don’t really believe it wasn’t her.”
The Maoist Christmas tree ornaments
BigGovernment.com: “Transvestites, Mao And Obama Ornaments Decorate White House Christmas Tree.” A December 22, 2009, BigGovernment.com “exclusive” featured photographs of three ornaments adorning the Christmas tree in the White House Blue Room that depicted Obama’s face superimposed on Mount Rushmore, Mao Zedong, and Hedda Lettuce. BigGovernment.com suggested the White House was “making some political statements” with the ornaments and attacked it for “pegg[ing] controversial designer Simon Doonan to oversee the Christmas decorations for the White House.”
Accusations undermined by facts, common sense. On the December 22 edition of Fox News’ Special Report – one of many conservative media outlets to run with BigGovernment.com’s dubious “exclusive” — host Bret Baier reported that the first lady’s office “says local community groups were asked to decorate hundreds of ornaments but that they are unaware of these specific decorations.”
Moreover, as the Los Angeles Times‘ Culture Monster blog explained, the image of Mao adorning one ornament was actually “one of a very large series of silkscreen paintings and prints [Andy Warhol] made of Mao. Warhol’s parody transformed the leader of the world’s most populous nation into a vapid superstar — the most famous of the famous.”
In a December 22 entry on the conservative blog Hot Air, blogger Allahpundit dismissed as nonsensical the idea that the White House would use three Christmas tree ornaments out of hundreds to make a “political statement,” writing: “Laying aside the fact that spotting a right-wing dictator on ornaments in the Bush White House would have had Media Matters stumbling towards its fainting couch, isn’t the most likely explanation here that they really didn’t know what was on the ornaments? Why court PR trouble with a deliberate provocation via something this trivial?”
The ACORN “document dump”
Breitbart announces Dumpster-diving “evidentiary phase” of ACORN “scandal.” In a November 23, 2009, BigGovernment.com entry, Breitbart announced the existence of “20,000 deeply sensitive and highly political documents discovered in the dumpster behind ACORN in San Diego on October 9, nine days after ACORN was announced to be under state investigation.” Breitbart added: “Some might call that ‘obstruction of justice.’ “
That same day, Derrick Roach, a San Diego-area private investigator, posted an entry on BigGovernment.com announcing that it was he who had retrieved the documents, which he said “were irresponsibly and brazenly dumped in a public dumpster, without considering laws and regulations as to how sensitive information should be treated.” Roach also posted a YouTube video shot on “the evening of the document dump” that, in his words, “shows ACORN operatives clearly engaged in some kind of discussion — likely related to the activities of that evening.”
“Deeply sensitive” documents mainly trash. Despite claims of “obstruction of justice,” neither Breitbart nor Roach offered any evidence that the documents they took from the trash bin behind ACORN’s San Diego office had anything to with California Attorney General Jerry Brown’s reported investigation into ACORN. Indeed, the limited selection of documents they posted online included a food stamp application, a canvassing form, and redacted documents presumably containing an employee’s tax and personal information.
NBC Los Angeles reported on November 23, 2009, that Amy Schur of ACORN’s California office stated of the discarded documents: “In early October, when our San Diego staff were doing an office clean-up in preparation for a major 10-station phone bank program being set up in our offices, it appears that included in the piles of garbage being thrown out may have been some documents containing private information.” Schur further stated: “Our files were not part of the scope of the visit by the Attorney General’s office, and the majority of what was thrown out was junk — old leaflets, newsletters, etc… It looks like our staff were careless and some documents with personal information were included in the piles of garbage.”
False claims of community organizers “praying” to Obama
Breitbart announces “shocking” video of community organizers “praying” to Obama. On September 29, 2009, Breitbart.tv embedded a YouTube video under the headline: “Shock Discovery: Community Organizers Pray TO President-Elect Obama.” The video included captions reading “Deliver Us Obama” and “Hear Our Cry Obama,” suggesting that the crowd of people — members of the faith-based group The Gamaliel Foundation — featured in the clip was “pray[ing] to” Obama.
Breitbart walks back “praying” allegation. Breitbart.tv later embedded a different version of the video — this one without captions — under the headline: “Newly Discovered: Community Organizers Appear to ‘Pray’ to President-Elect Obama.” Attached to this version was an “Editor’s note” explaining: “We’ve updated this post with the longer version of the original event. As you’ll see in the comments and related links there is a debate over what is actually being said. Does the crowd say, ‘Hear our cry, Obama’ and ‘Deliver us Obama?’ Or are they saying ‘Oh God?’ In the longer version the first two repetitions seem to have a distinct ‘uh’ sound at the end that resonates as ‘Obama.’ The later repetitions are a little fuzzier.”
Gamaliel Foundation responds: “At no time, however, have we prayed to President Barack Obama.” After the video was posted on Beck’s blog, the Gamaliel Foundation issued a response, in which they stated:
As a faith-based organization, it is customary for Gamaliel Foundation affiliates to begin and end every action with prayer. At no time, however, have we prayed to President Barack Obama. In the form of call and response, those who took part in the UnitedHealthcare action can be heard saying, “Hear our cry oh God,” “Deliver us oh God,” etc.
It is obvious that those who took the time to distort our sincere action for healthcare reform, by posting their own edited version on the Internet, are against what we believe is a fundamental right. It is also obvious that those who are against healthcare reform will stoop to any level to stop what Dr. Martin Luther King called, one of the greatest forms of inequality.
Mark Potok: Shirley Sherrod and the Right: A Day That Will Live in Infamy
by NewsFeed on Jul.21, 2010, under Watchdog Related News Feed
The entire Shirley Sherrod affair is such a disgusting, stomach-churning episode of right-wing lies, propagandists posing as “journalists,” and craven political cowardice and gullibility, that it’s hard to know who to be most enraged at.
Andrew Breitbart, the chief propagandist of the American right who severely edited a videotape of a speech by the Agriculture Department official to falsely label her an anti-white racist? Fox News, several of whose miserable excuses for journalists relentlessly plugged the entirely false story until Sherrod was fired? Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack, who had a minion call Sherrod on a cell phone and insist that she pull over to the side of the road and text in her resignation before any of the relevant background facts about the “scandal” emerged? The White House, which, apparently frightened of appearing in any way linked to black racism, stood by the essentially forced resignation even when it became clear that Sherrod’s speech was nothing like what Breitbart suggested? Even the NAACP acted poorly in this sorry episode, calling for Sherrod’s firing based on what Fox News was airing. (To its credit, the civil rights group quickly recognized its error, retracting its call yesterday and saying it had been “snookered” by Breitbart and Fox’s falsehoods.)
Here’s the story in brief, for those few people who still don’t know about it. On Monday, Breitbart — the same loathsome character who publicly called Ted Kennedy a “pile of human excrement” a few hours after the senator’s death — aired a video of Sherrod speaking to an NAACP banquet in Georgia last March. In his edited version, Sherrod talks about initially not wanting to help a white man who was facing the loss of his farm because of her anger toward white racists. But Breitbart, furious about the NAACP’s recent criticism of racism within the ranks of the Tea Parties, edited out the crucial conclusion of what was really Sherrod’s tale of redemption — that in the course of the 1986 case she was discussing, she came to realize that “the struggle is really about poor people,” and that her anti-white feelings were wrong. She said the case changed her entire outlook. (And in fact the farmer and his wife were all over the media yesterday, saying that Sherrod had saved their farm, was a fine and caring woman, and should get her job back.)
Fox immediately picked up Breitbart’s fairy tale and began plugging it, as did a number of other right-wing media outlets. (Many of them suggested that Sherrod’s actions in the 1986 case had occurred while she was an Agriculture employee — a complete falsehood.) That prompted Vilsack to have her thrown out of her job as the department’s director of rural development in Georgia — an act that Washington Post columnist Richard Cohen rightly described today as pure political “cowardice.” Vilsack didn’t bother to hear Sherrod’s side of the story first, and he didn’t watch the full videotape. Incredibly, even as the true story began to emerge, Vilsack said he was sticking by Sherrod’s ouster, because, “rightly or wrongly,” perceptions about her comments could make her job more difficult. Then, early this morning, the Associated Press quoted an unnamed White House official saying President Obama had been briefed on the situation but was supporting Vilsack’s decision.
This isn’t the first time we’ve seen this kind of wilting of White House officials under pressure from the political right. They fired Van Jones, a White House environmental advisor, after Fox’s Glenn Beck made false claims that he was a “black nationalist” and former “radical communist” who was using green jobs as a form of “stealth reparations.” They repudiated an accurate 2009 Department of Homeland Security report that was leaked and then attacked by right wingers for supposedly defaming conservatives — a charge that was patently false.
Let’s take a closer look at a couple of the other actors in this nasty little episode.
Andrew Breitbart is a former editor for the right-wing Drudge Report and a columnist for the arch-conservative Washington Times who sometimes substitutes for Michael Savage, a radio talk show host who regularly makes racist remarks on the air (and who, in the interest of full disclosure, has attacked me personally many times). It was one of Breitbart’s websites that aired videos made by right-wing activists of ACORN employees giving advice concerning prostitution, and later suggested that ACORN was destroying incriminating documents. (California Attorney General Jerry Brown investigated, concluding there was no criminal activity depicted on the “severely edited” tapes Breitbart aired.) Breitbart also has claimed that Congressmen John Lewis and Andre Carson “made up” a story about being repeatedly called “niggers” during a walk through a Tea Party rally.
Breitbart recently blogged about the “insufferable assholes” he claims populate the mainstream media. Ironically enough, given the role he played in the defaming of Shirley Sherrod, he described “the racket that is modern journalism,” saying that journalists “lie when they claim to be objective.” Elsewhere, in his first column about Sherrod, he crowed that “the new media will not be silenced.”
Which brings us to Fox News, that infamous purveyor of falsehoods, wildly skewed reporting and propaganda posing as real facts. As my colleague Alexander Zaitchik wrote on this blog yesterday, the network has “a long history of crude and transparent race-baiting.” And Zaitchik wasn’t even talking about the Sherrod spectacle — he was writing about Fox’s current obsession with the “scandal” of the Justice Department dismissing part of a voter intimidation case against members of the New Black Panther Party, a black racist hate group. On MSNBC last night, Rachel Maddow did a serious takedown of Fox’s rantings about Sherrod.
The United States faces many serious problems in the year 2010, from a crashed economy to the largest oil spill in our history. But no American should ignore another serious threat to our integrity as a nation and a culture: the far-right propagandists, their media and political enablers, and the political cowardice that allows complete falsehoods to destroy perfectly innocent human beings.
Read more: Fox News, Andrew Breitbart, Shirley Sherrod, Politics News
Oliver Willis: President Obama: Time to Man-Up and Rehire Shirley Sherrod — and Apologize
by NewsFeed on Jul.21, 2010, under Watchdog Related News Feed
Mr. President,
You screwed up. Secretary Vilsack may have been the one who executed the decision, but the buck stops at your desk. Cabinet secretaries don’t work in a vacuum. Even if you were never consulted on a decision, the decisions they make are done with the full imprint of your office. The decision to fire Shirley Sherrod was a mistake, and it happened with your authority.
The clear mistake made was believing the lies and presentation of serial liar Andrew Breitbart and his allies at Fox News Channel. Bluntly, this was stupid. You should know better. The right wing is built on a foundation of lies and deception. If a figure on the right is speaking, it’s safe to assume that they are not telling the truth. I understand your belief in bipartisanship and reaching across the aisle, and I even support it (within reason) but especially when it comes to right-wing media figures, it is a fools errand of the worst sort for you or your cabinet to have invested anything in their words.
This was wrong, sir. This video and your actions smeared a public servant’s name. Shirley Sherrod is the kind of person whose service deserves reward, not to have her name dragged through the right wing mud with the aid of the highest office in the land.
The only honorable thing for your administration to do is to offer Ms. Sherrod her job back (I doubt she would take it under the circumstances, but she deserves for an offer to be made) and an apology from Secretary Vilsack and yourself.
If these steps aren’t taken, at best we’ll have to assume that the right wing media is now the final voice on who can and cannot serve in our government, based on falsified evidence that smears their name. When we voted for you, it was most certainly not a vote to give Andrew Breitbart hiring and firing power in our government.
This mistake lies at your feet. Enemies of the presidency and the American government have been enabled, while faithful public servants have been attacked. Please remedy this problem, quickly.
Read more: Fox News, Politics, Shirley Sherrod, Andrew Breitbart, Usda, Media, Tom Vilsack, Barack Obama, Politics News

