Over at NewsBusters, Lachlan Markay takes Joy Behar to task for allowing Jesse Ventura on her show to discuss Bill O'Reilly's “Muslims attacked us on 9-11” claim, during which he referenced his truther leanings: “I got a conspiracy theory. So who's to say they actually did or not?” Markay went on to harangue Behar, asking whether she "is in fact a truther herself, or simply so viciously hostile to conservatives that she will dub a center-right position 'hate speech' while overlooking a repugnant, wackjob conspiracy theory simply because the person espousing it agrees that Bill O'Reilly is a 'spineless puke.' "
NewsBusters might have a little more credibility in criticizing anyone who helps Ventura spread his conspiracy theories if one of its editors hadn't himself done exactly that.
Late last year, an episode of Ventura's TruTV show, helpfully named Conspiracy Theory, focused on global warming and asked whether it was “a plot to cheat, extort, and control you and everybody else.” Playing a lead role in advancing the conspiracy was none other than NewsBusters associate editor Noel Sheppard.
The conspiracy-lovers at Alex Jones' Prison Planet website loved that show so much they clipped the entire thing (Jones, himself a 9-11 Truther, appears in the show too). Sheppard -- ludicrously identified as an “investigative journalist” -- appears in the opening segment, eagerly playing along to make things sound as spooky and clandestine as possible, declaring that global warming is all about “power and money and control of the population.” He goes on to call the idea of carbon credits “one of the biggest Ponzi schemes we've ever seen,” then slips Ventura “a list of scientists that I want you to talk to. You will learn a lot from these folks.”
Sheppard has regularly used his NewsBusters soapbox to attack the idea of global warming and make distracting claims such as portraying the existence of cold weather during the wintertime as evidence there's no global warming.
It seems NewsBusters' criticism of Ventura's conspiracy theories only applies when it's not promoting the same conspiracy theory.