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Jamison Foser
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The conservative media don't believe their own attacks

December 23, 2009 5:11 am ET

The best single reason to permanently ignore the rantings of the right-wing media is not that their attacks are often easily disproven. Don't get me wrong: That's a good reason. But the best reason is that it is clear the conservative echo chamber often doesn't believe its own attacks.

Take last week's explosive allegation, first described in detail by The Weekly Standard's Michael Goldfarb, that in order to secure Sen. Ben Nelson's (D-NE) support for health care reform, the White House had threatened to close Nebraska's Offutt Air Force Base. That sent the right-wing attack machine into overdrive, with accusations of "politicizing national security" flying around and dark talk of the White House weakening U.S. national security and committing impeachable offenses.

It was an obviously ludicrous allegation (pushed, by the way, by people who worked for John McCain's presidential campaign), but it was hyped so forcefully that 20 Republican senators demanded an investigation.

Now, ordinarily, 20 U.S. senators calling for an investigation into a "scandal" the conservative media had been promoting would really set off a frenzy. Like sharks sensing blood in the water, right-wing bloggers and broadcasters would go for the kill. We'd see a constant barrage of attacks on Democrats for "blocking" an investigation into a vital matter of national security and allegations of corruption at the highest levels. They'd attack the media for not covering the alleged threat like it was Watergate, Teapot Dome, and Tiger Woods all wrapped into one. They'd be absolutely relentless.

But that didn't happen. In fact, the opposite happened: When those 20 senators sent a letter to the Armed Services Committee asking for an investigation, the right-wingers who had been so outraged promptly went silent.

On December 16, for example, an Investor's Business Daily editorial said the Obama administration's alleged threat "would amount to playing politics with our national security." IBD hasn't mentioned the allegation since, even though it devoted its December 21 editorial to Ben Nelson's support for health care reform.

On December 15, Hot Air blogger Ed Morrissey accused the White House of "extortion" and "threatening more base closures and disruption for [sic] national security." Morrissey wrote about Nelson twice more on December 17, again on December 19 and December 21, and once more on December 22 -- but he never again mentioned the base-closure allegation.

Last week, Glenn Beck suggested the alleged threat would constitute "high crimes" -- a reference to the "high crimes and misdemeanors" requirement for impeaching the president. Later that day, he said it "borders on treason." But then he went quiet. (Beck has been on vacation this week, but he didn't mention Nelson during last Thursday's broadcast of his Fox News show -- his last -- or his Friday appearance on The O'Reilly Factor. And if Glenn Beck really believed President Obama had committed anything approaching "treason" or a "high crime," you can be sure he wouldn't let a little thing like vacation keep him away from his chalkboard.)

Michelle Malkin wrote on December 15 that Nelson "is reportedly being threatened with closure of an air force base if he doesn't fall in line." Malkin has written at least nine posts since then that mention Nelson -- but has never again mentioned the alleged threat.

RedState's Dan Perrin wrote on December 15: "The White House and Democratic Leadership in the Senate has [sic] told Senator Nelson they will close every military base in Nebraska." That went further than anyone else, both by including the "Democratic Leadership in the Senate" in the threat and by expanding it to include "every military base in Nebraska." But Perrin, who acknowledged the threat was not "credible," has never again mentioned it, despite writing about Nelson on December 17, December 18, December 19, and December 20.

Even The Weekly Standard's Goldfarb has gone silent on his big "scoop" -- along with colleagues John Noonan and Matthew Continetti, who touted Goldfarb's claim on December 15 but haven't touched it since.

So what's with the sudden silence? Why isn't the right-wing noise machine that last week seemed so eager to accuse the Obama administration of "playing politics with national security" continuing the drumbeat? After all, it isn't like they've come up with any better ways to derail health care reform, which appears to be on the verge of passing the Senate (and is significantly closer to doing so than it was before Goldfarb came up with the Offutt allegation).

The simplest explanation is that they know the base-closing allegation is absolute nonsense, and they're afraid that an investigation into it would blow up in their faces.

Either that, or they take "playing politics with national security" and "treason" so lightly they just forgot all about it overnight.

Jamison Foser is a Senior Fellow at Media Matters for America, a progressive media watchdog and research and information center based in Washington, D.C. Foser also contributes to County Fair, a media blog featuring links to progressive media criticism from around the Web, as well as original commentary. You can follow him on Twitter and Facebook or sign up to receive his columns by email.

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    • Author by steeve (December 23, 2009 7:05 am ET)
      19 2
      "they know the base-closing allegation is absolute nonsense" -- well yeah, but not until after they ran their initial pieces.

      I'm sure Foser is familiar with the conservative editing process:

      1 Verify that your source is conservative.
      2 Verify that your source is saying something conservative.
      3 Print.
      4 Determine the truth of the allegation:
      4a If a second source says it, it's true.
      4b If your source says it twice, it's just like having two sources.
      4c Otherwise it's not true. Not to be confused with pejoratives like "false" or "wrong".
      Report Abuse
      • Author by ifthethunderdontgetya™³²®© (December 23, 2009 8:29 am ET)
        11 1
        4c. The point isn't whether or not the allegation was true. What's important is that "people" THOUGHT IT COULD BE TRUE.

        So same thing as being true.
        ~
        Report Abuse
        • Author by rdelong23 (December 23, 2009 9:53 am ET)
          19 1
          Or as Glenn Beck says: "When you repeat a lie ... people actually start to believe it as fact"
          Report Abuse
          • Author by magnolialover (December 23, 2009 11:58 am ET)
            13 1
            I think the actual quote came from Goebbels during WWII. Seriously.
            Report Abuse
            • Author by Limit Corp. Ownership (December 23, 2009 1:36 pm ET)
              7 1
              I think Goebbels said something like: "If you lie, make it a big lie, people will believe a big lie. They won't believe a small lie."
              Report Abuse
              • Author by rumpleteasermom (December 23, 2009 3:04 pm ET)
                12 1
                The actual quote encompasses both of those ideas.

                “If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it. The lie can be maintained only for such time as the State can shield the people from the political, economic and/or military consequences of the lie. It thus becomes vitally important for the State to use all of its powers to repress dissent, for the truth is the mortal enemy of the lie, and thus by extension, the truth is the greatest enemy of the State.” - Joseph Goebbels
                Report Abuse
                • Author by ForTheLoveOfEllipsis... (December 24, 2009 9:39 am ET)
                  8 2
                  the truth is the greatest enemy of the State.

                  Or the Republican Party...
                  Report Abuse
                • Author by lynneg (December 24, 2009 2:49 pm ET)
                  8 1
                  Goebbels also said that you can control a people anywhere any time by doing the following 3 things
                  1. Always have an enemy to attack (2009 gays, Obama, Govt, illegals, Muslims etc)
                  2. Wrap your message in the flag of Patriotism (2009 tea partiers, birthers, etc)
                  3. Control the message, but it must be repeated and repeated until it becomes the truth (2009 talk radio(91 percent), Fox news, Conservative think tanks, websites newspapers etc)
                  The Right and corporate power implemented a very effective monopoly(AM Talk radio) after Reagan repealed the Fairness Doctrine. It is powerful, saturating and repetitive and also, in my opinion, the number 1 reason Americans are so badly misinformed. After the nationally syndicated programs (Rush, Beck, Hannity, Savage etc ) they have local like minded parroting hosts repeat and repeat the same propaganda throughout the Country at the drive home hours. For a D emocracy to survive it must have an informed citizenry. This is why talk hosts go ballistic and panic at even a whisper of reinstating the Fairness Doctrine. Corporate America has spent billions over the last 22 yrs to protect their intersts and keep the status quo.
                  If you listen to these hosts often you will realize that even though they wrap the message in Patriotism and Individual freedoms the ultimate benefactors are 1 of the Big 4
                  1. Wall St. 2. Health and Pharma 3. Big Oil/ energy and 4. Military Industrial Complex. (not the troops, their families and Veterans, but the defense contractors etc)
                  People believe the right supports our troops and Veterans, but if you research the voting records of Repub vs Dem Senators' voting records for them you will be shocked!! I was. The IAVA(Iraq Afghanistan Veterans Assoc and Bob Geiger .com actually researched this for us and the Dems had A's B's and 1 C. The Repubs had C, D AND F's. Why doesn't every American know this? meesage control. Please, if you want to vote Republican, for the sake of our Country and our troops and Veterans force your elected Senators to do the right thing by them.
                  Report Abuse
    • Author by mk3872 (December 23, 2009 9:46 am ET)
      15 1
      I wish the Dems would call their bluff on it and investigate the source of the "leaks".
      Report Abuse
    • Author by barscotch9441 (December 23, 2009 9:46 am ET)
         
      Thsi is what one of my old journalism profs used to call "print first, verify and retract later." He used it to describe a common journalistic ERROR committed by people who want a story in their instrument first, regardless of verifiability or correctness. It's the kind of thing that basically takes a media outlet's credibility, picks it up by the neck, knees it in the groin, spits in its face, throws it down the stairs, and throws tools at its neck. Especially if it happens repeatedly.

      The problem -- and I think this problem can explain why conservative media continues to exist -- is that the consumers of the right-wing media instruments in question would rather be comfortably angry and afraid of anything labeled "liberal" or "Democrat" than be irritatingly informed on the stupidity or incompetence of anything or anyone labeled "conservative" or "Republican." Unfortunately, this same phenomenon often works in reverse.

      I don't wish to decry them as human beings: they could, at least some of them, be perfectly decent and honest people. But comfort in times fearful of unstable economy and risky military operations is very quickly embraced, regardless of where it comes from or how genuine it is. People would often rather be comforted than have their problems solved.

      Unfortunately, it's very escapist, and therefore very unproductive.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by captfoster2 (December 23, 2009 10:22 am ET)
      18 4
      I think the whole point of the collection of right-wing neanderthals making up a given lie and spreading it until they are faced with the potential that it 'could' be exposed is as MMfA said in this article.

      They (the right-wing mouth-pieces) don't lie for the sake of lying... they lie so that their core audience (whom they have never respected) ends up believing it and then those poor saps show up at Tea Bag rallies and argue against their own interests... which in turn inflates the egos of the right-wing mouth-pieces, strengthens corporations, and weakens democracy.

      It's all a vicious cycle.

      However, I have always believed that 'most' of the right-wing do not take what they say to heart!

      By and large they say and do what they say and do for the money.
      Report Abuse
      • Author by captfoster2 (December 23, 2009 2:44 pm ET)
        8 5
        they lie so that their core audience (whom they have never respected) ends up believing it and then those poor saps show up at Tea Bag rallies and argue against their own interests...

        Take for example the bonehead who gave me a thumbs down... he/she makes my point valid!
        Report Abuse
      • Author by cugagcmu805031 (December 23, 2009 4:14 pm ET)
        10 2
        Yes! Taking money from those they mislead. C&L had an article on it's blog yesterday stating that some organization is begging for $1/per person to buy Beckie Boy a Mercedes, a man who could easily afford any automobile he wants. They'll probably buy it for him and continue riding around in their hoopties.

        Same as someone on Sarahpac saying they'd feed their kids rice in order to be able to send some extra money to Palin, the newly minted multi-millionaire author of a book of lies.

        I donated quite a bit to several democrats over the past year, but I didn't have to feed my family rice to do it. Palin should post on her FB page that she doesn't want anyone or their children to go without by donating to her PAC. That would really help to burnish her Family Values creds.
        Report Abuse
      • Author by Anthony (December 26, 2009 1:19 am ET)
           
        Isn't it interesting, that the ones proclaiming to know "truth" are the same ones telling the biggest lies?

        'For the money' would explain such huge discrepancy and level of hypocrisy.
        Report Abuse
    • Author by LKL (December 23, 2009 12:02 pm ET)
      11 1
      I think you all are being too harsh on these poor right wing commentators. Perhaps they just took a page from Alice and are trying to believe six impossible things before breakfast??
      Report Abuse
      • Author by pbgv23 (December 24, 2009 12:43 am ET)
           
        Or else they cherish the hope we will simply believe whatever they say because, as the Bellman said in The Hunting of the Snark, "What I tell you three times is true."
        Report Abuse
    • Author by DellDolly (December 23, 2009 1:11 pm ET)
      11 1
      What we know is that the person who originally pushed this fraudulent story didn't know the base closure protocol, and so that person wasn't aware that a President can't really threaten a Senator with closing a base in his state! And what we also know is that many in the news media, as well as the rightwing blogosphere, failed to vet this story before running with it.

      Common sense told you it was impossible. The news media figured that out pretty quickly, but it took the rightwingers a little longer. Once they finally wised up, they realized how stupid they looked, and shut up.

      I think that's cause for celebration that they actually stopped pushing a false story!
      Report Abuse
      • Author by edgewaterprog (December 23, 2009 1:40 pm ET)
           
        We can appreciate that the lie has stopped but, like captfoster says above, what kind of damage has this lie done to the credibility of the President, the base closing process, and to some degree the stability of our democracy. It just feels like they are ruthlessly, and stupidly chipping away at the credibility of the governing and legislative process with these fabrications.
        Report Abuse
      • Author by jeff191 (December 23, 2009 2:48 pm ET)
           
        but the damage is done . a lot of their fans will remain convinced that the story could be true. thats why they have to constantly push the message that the media is liberal. then when the right wing lie is proven false, their fans will just refuse to believe that proof because the source is "tainted"
        Report Abuse
      • Author by Conchobhar (December 23, 2009 4:35 pm ET)
        9 1
        "I think that's cause for celebration that they actually stopped pushing a false story!" And isn't that a sad comment on the state of our politics.
        Report Abuse
    • Author by nodems2010 (December 23, 2009 4:00 pm ET)
         
      One Big Ass Mistake America!
      How's that Hoax & Shame working for you now?
      Report Abuse
    • Author by nodems2010 (December 23, 2009 4:10 pm ET)
         
      "Once you have posted enough comments that do not violate our terms of use, your comments will go through automatically."

      I see how this works, anything you don't like, you won't post. Makes sense coming from a bunch of liars. So, it's OK for YOU to exercise YOUR 1st amendment rights, because you report the truth. Maybe you should try reporting the truth. Maybe Jack was right, you can't handle the truth.

      It's OK if you don't post any of my comments. I have better things to do with my time.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by jeffgilooly (December 23, 2009 5:44 pm ET)
         
      What I love most is the anatomy of a right-wing lie.

      1. The Washington Times (the right's "legit" newspaper) finds something and twists it around.

      2. Drudge links to it and makes a splashy, sensationalist headline.

      3.. Red State, Breitbart and the other morons that make up the right-wing blogosphere publish it.

      4. Beck, Limbaugh and Hannity pick up on it and run it through the chamber.

      5. The mainstream media echoes it and usually stops short of debunking it.

      6. Gretchen Carlson repeats it the next morning and acts flabbergasted.

      7. It's discussed ad nauseum for the next three days through the village and continues picking up steam in the blogosphere. Maximum outrage is reached.

      8. Charles Krauthammer mumbles something stupid on Fox News Sunday, and on the network Sunday shows, the brain-dead hosts asks how much trouble this is for Obama.

      9. Howard Kurtz chimes in about how the media has done a poor job of debunking this particular lie, but it's liberals' fault, too.

      10. A few points are shaved off Obama's net favorability because of the lie, and numbers 1-8 are repeated.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by Boxer1979 (December 23, 2009 8:16 pm ET)
      3 1
      The conservative media don't believe their own attacks

      They never did. It really got wild after the invention of Radio and TV. Once called out on their attacks, they play the victim role believing what they said was justified.

      My only question is: WHEN?
      Report Abuse
    • Author by dr. engine (December 24, 2009 9:49 am ET)
      5 1
      Let's roll it back for a second and pretend this is true. Is shutting down a base in NEBRASKA really threatening national security? Who's attacking Nebraska?

      I kid. I kid. I love the Nebraskan people.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by dr. engine (December 24, 2009 9:50 am ET)
      3 1
      Let's roll it back for a second and pretend this is true. Is shutting down a base in NEBRASKA really threatening national security? Who's attacking Nebraska?

      I kid. I kid. I love the Nebraskan people.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by jms (December 24, 2009 10:53 am ET)
      1 4
      the story changed from closing bases to unconstitutional medicare benefits. duh.
      Report Abuse
    • Author by donaldmaddog5642 (December 24, 2009 5:47 pm ET)
      3 2
      This has NOTHING to do with this thread. I just want to wish all my friends (AND foes) a very MERRY CHRISTMAS and a HAPPY NEW YEAR!
      Maybe it would be a good idea to put these ugly thoughts away for a few hours and join with all people "of good will". After all, it is only a temporary peace. We can get back to tearing each other new ones after the holidays. Whadda ya say?
      Report Abuse
    • Author by kenpatty (December 25, 2009 11:31 am ET)
         
      You guys can talk all you want, but bottom line is that when you create an entitlement for millions of people, it will cost money. And lots of it. And the lie that is constantly being repeated is that it won't. 2+2=4 no matter how you spin it.
      Report Abuse