Monday, July 24, 2023

Fox News’ Conservative Stance Belies Hidden Liberal Agenda


The longshoreman turned homespun philosopher Eric Hoffer is semi-forgotten today. But his book The True Believer (1951) is full of pertinent aperçus. One that has recurred to me often of late is the observation that “Every great cause begins as a movement, becomes a business, and eventually degenerates into a racket.”

I cannot quite say why, but Hoffer’s tart mot comes back to me, especially when I have pondered the recent fate of Fox News. I should begin by acknowledging that I do not regularly watch any television news, including Fox. Indeed, I do not regularly watch any television. Whenever I stumble over the offerings by the so-called “mainstream” outlets – CNN, MSNBC, CBS, etc. – I vacillate between being appalled by their glitzy vacuousness and outraged by their shrill, almost hysterical (I do not mean funny) partisanship.

I used to enjoy watching Tucker Carlson, which I discovered one could get in segments gratis after the show aired. I thought it the single most intelligent and most independent-minded commentary on television. It was also supremely entertaining. But then Fox infamously jettisoned Carlson, their most popular host, for reasons that, to me at least, remain somewhat obscure. Some people say it has something to do with the $787 million libel judgment rendered against Fox in its fight with the Dominion voting machine company. Maybe so.

In any event, like many people, I thought that the change I sensed happening at Fox accelerated markedly after Carlson was pushed out. The truth is, however, that the change has been happening since 2016 when Roger Ailes, who started Fox in 1996 and built it into a $20 billion per year business, was pushed out by Rupert Murdoch. The whole Ailes story is ably told in a documentary called, in homage to Teddy Roosevelt, The Man in the Arena.

Curiously, Fox, the dispenser of news, is now the object of news itself with the revelation that it has been enabling charitable contributions to such dubious organizations as the Satanic Templethe Trevor Project and the Southern Poverty Law CenterPlanned Parenthood, dear to the hearts and wombs of feminists, is another leftwing recipient of Fox’s largess.

This weekend, Newsmax and Blaze Media aired an extraordinary exposé of the scheme. Under the guise of corporate charitable giving, Fox is matching contributions of up to $1,000 per employee to various tax-exempt entities that meet its criteria. Amazingly, entities like Satanic Temple and the LGBTQ Trevor Group qualify for the dough.

The write-up from The Blaze minces no words in describing these radical groups. “The Satanic Temple,” we read, is an atheistic leftist organization that has distributed satanic literature to children; publicly performed“unbaptisms”; sought to ensure that women can legally have their unborn children killed by way of their “religious abortion ritual” and erected statues of Baphomet [an occult Satanic deity] on government property.

The Southern Poverty Law Center is a leftist grievance organization that tends to characterize conservatives, parental rights groups, constitutionalists and those critical of big government as extremists and bigots. For instance, last month, the SPLC deemed Moms for Liberty an “anti-government extremist group.” Fox, which the SPLC previously called a “megaphone” for far-right extremist groups, has even written up some of the SPLC’s various scandals in the past, including the 2012 incident when a gunman attacked the Family Research Council, which he noted he had seen on the SPLC’s “hate map.”

The Trevor Project is an activist group that purportedly seeks to “end suicide among LGBTQ young people” but actively promotes gender ideology and woke propaganda. The group claims that “gender is a social construct” and holds fast to the notion that sex-change mutilations and cross-sex hormone therapies can be meaningful remedies for at-risk teens.

Hitherto, Fox has been regarded as a conservative voice in a landscape overwhelmingly dominated by “progressive,” which is to say, increasingly woke and activist voices.

The Blaze quotes a current Fox employee who said, “Fox pretends to care about Christians, but some of the stuff they push internally suggests otherwise. Glory holes, trans surgeries for kids, and potential donations to Satan are a huge slap in the face to every Christian at the company, and we resent it.”

The story of Fox’s errant charitable giving probably would have passed under the radar absent the organization dedicated to promulgating the philosophy of Satan, i.e., the philosophy of evil. But Satan was a step too far. As Roger Ailes’s widow Beth memorably put it, what we see on view here is “industrialized devil worship.” You’re not supposed to say such things, of course, but Mrs. Ailes is right. At some point, Fox News took a wrong turn. Now it appears to have driven off a cliff. No amount of woke, virtucratic flag-waving can save them. What they need is a new moral compass and a recommitment to delivering a “fair and balanced” news product. Will that happen? The jury is still out on that one.



X22, Christian Patriot News, and more- July 24

 




The Undumpable Biden


Listening to Republican media pundits counting the days until the Dems abandon a scandal-ridden president, I have to wonder what kind of fantasy world these Pollyanna types inhabit. Biden is exactly the kind of figurehead his handlers, whether woke ideologues or Deep State operatives, want as their frontman. Why should they care if Jim Jordan, James Comer, Chuck Grassley or the head of a Ukrainian gas company think that Joe or his ne’er-do-well son is a criminal slimebag? Our corrupt demented titular head of state serves the needs of those who put him in power and who right now are keeping him there. These would include the MSM, all leftist constituencies everywhere and, lest I forget, “world opinion.” Why exactly would I believe that the revelations of whistle-blowers and the overwhelming evidence of a weaponized Justice Department, IRS and FBI are going to change existing ideological divisions in this country?

There’s little on network TV about Biden’s sins but lots about the legal problems that Donald Trump has brought on himself by being such a horrible person. According to the latest Yahoo News poll, almost twice as many Americans consider Trump to be more corrupt than Biden and, by a larger margin, see him as more dangerous. One also encounters portentous media references to the “insurrection” on Jan. 6 and to the rancorous social divisions caused by Christian fanatics, the gun lobby and the bigoted opponents of LGBT. Those who listen to such reports, watch our politically correct TV dramas and/or attend our universities know or care zilch about the scandals that Miranda Devine, John Solomon and websites like this one detail. But they are concerned that Republican neo-Nazis and those who want women to lose their “reproductive rights” might someday get back power. Then we’ll be living in the world of The Handmaid’s Tale and the Klan.

If the Democrats and their media lapdogs were really interested in being rid of Joe, why would they be exerting themselves to remove his only real competitor for the nomination? In the last few weeks, our presidential Praetorian Guard has gone after RFK Jr., Biden’s one minimally competitive opponent, with hyped-up charges of anti-Semitism. With a little luck, Joe’s protectors should be able to scare off anyone who challenges his renomination. Our president then won’t be forced to debate anyone during the primaries and may be able to coast toward reelection while babbling and slurping ice cream in his basement.

By the way, I was amused listening to Hakeem Jeffries attack RFK Jr. and his Republican well-wishers as vile anti-Semites. Apparently, RFK Jr.’s references during a dinner party to a study on the disparate impact of the COVID epidemic on different ethnic groups prove that he and those who refuse to condemn his action are ranting Jew-haters. Or so I learned from Hakeem Jeffries, the same Democratic politician who treasured his intimate friendship with his black Nazi uncle, Leonard Jeffries, and who has obsequiously courted Louis Farrakhan. By the way, Kennedy’s dinner conversation was silly and off-the-wall, and his subsequent apologies frenetic, but the ferocious media denunciations that ensued made me suspect that circling the wagons for Biden had something to do with these over-the-top reactions.

If the DNC, Democratic congressmen and the MSM were eager to dump Biden, they would have done so by now. They would not be noisily countering the charges of corruption as new evidence of Biden’s misdeeds comes to light. There is a good reason his party has not given him the heave-ho. He is still running even or ahead of likely Republican opponents; given the ideological polarity in the US, these poll results are likely to continue. If Biden suddenly fell behind in hypothetical races against Republican presidential contenders, then the powerbrokers might decide to pursue a different course. But this has not yet happened.

Even if the Democrats did try to replace Biden with another candidate, that would hardly be the kiss of death for them. Whether that candidate was Kamala Harris, Gavin Newsom, Michelle Obama or Pete Buttigieg, he or she would enjoy the support of Biden’s core constituency. Left-leaning “independents” would also likely move toward the Biden alternative, and no matter who won the GOP nomination, the media would turn that candidate into a Trump-like punching bag.

But Joe does have an advantage over other Democratic contenders, and that advantage is precisely his cognitively weakened, morally compromised state. Like John Fetterman, Biden is ridiculously easy for the Left to manipulate. He can also be easily blackmailed. Enough of the public already knows that Biden runs a crime family, and if he falls out of line, the media and his more immediate handlers may stop hiding this fact. Despite his cognitive limits, Joe is sufficiently sentient to understand his own vulnerability. He will therefore continue obeying his political masters, who have stood behind him while keeping his enemies in check.



Biden Grandchild No. 7 Magnifies the Male Privilege of Joe and His Boy


You can’t keep a little girl out of the family just because her daddy couldn’t keep it in his pants.



Every time the sun sets without President Joe Biden acknowledging his seventh grandchild, his masculinity becomes more — what’s the word? — toxic.

Thanks to a quiet settlement a few weeks ago, the president’s son dodged a paternity trial that was scheduled for July 23, meaning Sunday will come and go without much hullabaloo. And while this is surely a relief to the president, the child-support settlement doesn’t make grandchild No. 7 go away.

To hear any of the Bidens tell it, they are one big happy family with a total of six grandkiddos who are all loved. “I have six grandchildren, and I’m crazy about them. I speak to them every single day,” Biden said in April.

Before that, the first lady dedicated her 2020 children’s book “To my grandchildren,” with a list of six names. According to The New York Times, which cited two people familiar with the matter, in White House strategy meetings, the president’s aides are instructed that Joe and Jill Biden have six grandchildren, not seven. And at Christmas time, the Bidens meticulously placed six personalized stockings atop the White House mantle as a tribute to their posterity: Naomi, Finnegan, Maisy, Natalie, Beau, and Robert Hunter Biden II.

But what about Roberts? As in Navy Joan Roberts, 4-year-old daughter of Robert “Hunter” Biden the First. The presidential family not only fails to accept or acknowledge her — they go out of their way to reinforce the completely false idea that they have precisely six grandchildren. As Maureen Dowd recently scolded in The New York Times, “It’s Seven Grandkids, Mr. President.”

Biden’s fans didn’t like that. The shrews of “The View,” for instance, told Dowd to “find something else to write about.” Whoopie Goldberg was insistent: “When you start talking about people’s families, and what they’re doing, I find it unnecessary. This is not anybody’s business.”

All in the Family?

The problem is, the first family is always the first one to talk about the first family. You don’t get to lie about your relatives on the national stage and then claim Invasion of privacy! Unnecessary! None of your business! when critics correct the record. This is especially true if you routinely invoke your family and its tragedies to present yourself as a dedicated family man.

Joe Biden does this all the time. He frequently refers to his deceased son Beau to score political points or weasel his way out of accountability. More than once, Biden’s even lied about the circumstances of Beau’s death, claiming he died in combat in Iraq when he actually died of cancer. When Biden’s dereliction of duty led to a catastrophic withdrawal from Afghanistan, leaving 13 brave American servicemembers dead, Beau’s name was cocked and loaded.

Biden also loves to talk about how “very proud” he is of his addict son, Navy’s father, whom Biden calls “the smartest guy I know.” The patriarch has many times talked about the loss of his first wife and daughter in a car accident more than 50 years ago. And in 2021, he claimed he “had a house burn down with my wife in it.” (According to reports from the time, a lightning strike caused a small kitchen fire that “was under control in 20 minutes.” Jill is obviously fine.) Point being, the grandkids aren’t the only family Biden habitually talks and lies about. It’s a compulsion.

“Joe Biden’s mantra has always been that ‘the absolute most important thing is your family,’” Dowd wrote. “It is the heart of his political narrative. Empathy, born of family tragedies, has been his stock in trade. Callously scarring Navy’s life, just as it gets started, undercuts that.” Dowd continued:

What the Navy story reveals is how dated and inauthentic the 80-year-old president’s view of family is. Once you could get away with using terms like ‘out of wedlock’ and pretend that children born outside marriage didn’t exist or were somehow shameful. But now we have become vastly more accepting of nontraditional families. We live in an Ancestry.com world, where people are searching out their birth parents and trying to find relatives they didn’t know they had.

Dowd is right that Biden’s view of family is “inauthentic.” You can’t be simultaneously “very proud” of your son and also deny the existence of his daughter. But there’s more.

Penile Privilege

It’s pretty handy for Hunter and Joe that they each have a Y chromosome and thus can easily sweep an unintended pregnancy and unwanted child under the rug. If male privilege exists, this is its quintessence.

Women — and their fathers — don’t have that luxury. For the maternal half of the doing-it duo, it’s a little harder to escape those doctors’ visits and cravings and pains and episodes of vomiting and the oh-so-conspicuous bump. And that’s just before the child is born. Once he or she enters the post-amniotic world, that child is attached to its mother in a million ways that can’t just be undone by omitting one little red-and-green stocking at Yuletide.

It should go without saying that under the Biden prescription for unplanned pregnancy, Navy wouldn’t exist today at all; abortion is a cure-all for exactly these inconvenient situations. That perhaps helps explain why Joe and the rest of the Biden dynasty can so easily discard her existence in practice, if not in reality.

Speaking of dynasty, there’s another one that’s taken a very different approach to unexpected fatherhood — and put the Bidens to shame. Just a few years ago, Phil Robertson, the then-74-year-old patriarch of the “Duck Dynasty” family, learned he had a 45-year-old daughter — the product of an affair early in his marriage before he converted to Christianity. When the woman, Phyliss, reached out to a member of the Robertson clan, Phil took a DNA test and learned he was a 99.9 percent match. As Today reported:

He said he didn’t hesitate to want to contact her. The family has quickly embraced the daughter and sister they didn’t know they had. … Phil Robertson’s wife, who is known as Miss Kay, also graciously accepted Phyliss despite learning she was the product of an affair.

Unexpected pregnancies offer plenty of other broader, enduring lessons about marriage, sex, fatherhood, and child-rearing. But the undertow here, as in all of life’s imperfections, is that when mistakes are made, decent people own up to them and bear the consequences — especially when those missteps profoundly affect someone else’s life.

Responsibility Untaken

Navy knows who her father is. She knows who her grandfather is. But the powerful Biden men have never wanted to meet her. Instead, their own flesh and blood has had to settle for a couple of Hunter’s lousy paintings and some child support he’s negotiated down. Navy isn’t even allowed to have the Biden name.

Her father, however, apparently considers everything squared. As Hunter wrote in his memoir, he doesn’t remember his tryst with Navy’s mother at all. “That’s how little connection I had with anyone. I was a mess, but a mess I’ve taken responsibility for.”

Wrong. He absolutely hasn’t. And his father aids and abets him. As Dowd wrote, “the president can’t defend Hunter on all his other messes and draw the line at accepting one little girl.”

Navy bears exactly zero responsibility for the circumstances of her birth. You can’t keep a little girl out of the family just because her daddy couldn’t keep it in his pants. Talk about toxic.


Hope on the Horizon: Detransitioners Challenging 'Gender-Affirming Care' in Court

The effort to trans children has been aggressive and well-supported by members of the progressive intelligentsia. It seems that those pushing transgender ideology in classrooms and medical facilities are winning. For those working to oppose it, the situation can sometimes seem hopeless.

However, recent developments have given me hope. One of the most important factors in the fight against “gender-affirming care” is that many who have fallen victim to it are using the legal system to fight back.

In recent years, the push for “gender-affirming care” for transgender individuals, especially among children and adolescents, has sparked debates and controversies. However, a growing number of detransitioners, individuals who choose to reverse their medical gender transition, are now taking legal action against doctors and medical facilities they believe rushed them into irreversible treatments. These lawsuits are shedding light on the pitfalls of progressive ideas on gender care and raising questions about informed consent, medical ethics, and the protection of vulnerable young individuals.

Currently, there are at least three high-profile cases illustrating the struggle of detransitioners and their pursuit of justice.

The first is Prisha Mosley, who is suing doctors and medical facilities in North Carolina. Mosley, a 25-year-old woman, filed a lawsuit against doctors who prescribed her testosterone when she was a minor and later performed a breast removal surgery when she turned 18.

She alleges that the doctors committed fraud and medical malpractice, manipulating her vulnerable state by claiming gender-affirming treatments would alleviate her mental health problems. Mosley’s mental issues persisted even after starting testosterone, but doctors allegedly failed to address the possibility of stopping the treatment or informing her of potential side effects. Now, facing irreversible physician and mental consequences, she is seeking compensatory and punitive damages.

Next is Chloe Cole, a California teen who identified as transgender at a young age and underwent several gender change therapies, including puberty blockers, hormones, and a mastectomy. She later realized that her transition was a mistake and detransitioned back to being a girl.

She alleges that doctors failed to provide sufficient psychological screening and proper informed consent, rushing her into the gender transition process as is the case in many instances involving so-called gender-affirming care. Her lawsuit seeks unspecified damages, arguing that she suffered severe regret and emotional wounds due to the alleged negligence of medical professionals.

Lastly, we have the case of Kayla Lovdahl, who, at just 18 years old, has already experienced a full gender transition which she later came to regret. Kayla claims that doctors did not adequately evaluate her psychological condition and “rushed” her through gender treatment, leading to emotional and physical harm. She is now taking legal action against the hospital and doctors involved, seeking redress for the consequences of her transition.

One can easily see a common thread in each of these stories. The victims of these medical hacks were never fully informed about what they were getting themselves into. Even further, they were deceived into accepting puberty blockers and undergoing surgical treatments. Two of these individuals were minor children when this happened. Those who pay close attention to this issue have seen this same story play out the same way in numerous stories.

Fortunately, the detransitioners have discovered what will likely be a key component to ending this destructive movement: Lawfare. It is a term coined from “law” and “warfare” and refers to the use of legal action and lawsuits as a strategy to address social issues or advocate for specific causes. In the context of detransitioners’ lawsuits, lawfare is becoming a powerful tool for victims of “gender-affirming care” to seek accountability and bring attention to questionable medical practices.

Also, when detransitioners pursue legal action against medical professionals and facilities, it serves several critical purposes. They bring attention to potential flaws in the “gender-affirming care” system, including inadequate psychological evaluation and informed consent processes. These lawsuits emphasize the importance of proper informed consent, especially for young individuals who may not fully comprehend the long-term implications of medical gender transition.

Accountability is also essential. Detransitioners’ lawsuits challenge medical professionals to exercise greater caution and adhere to ethical standards when treating children who might be suffering from gender dysphoria. If these professionals know they could face consequences for advocating for this type of “care,” they might be discouraged from pushing it on their patients.

Legal actions can also prompt policymakers to review and strengthen regulations surrounding gender-affirming care for minors, ensuring better protection for vulnerable individuals. All in all, lawfare is a necessary and effective strategy to protect these children from the effort to attack them through gender identity.

Detransitioners’ lawsuits are shedding light on the complexities and potential harms associated with the push for “gender-affirming care” among children and adolescents. As more individuals seek legal recourse for their regretful transitions, it becomes increasingly crucial for medical professionals, policymakers, and society to engage in a nuanced conversation about the best practices for supporting kids who are dealing with various mental health issues. When these folks know that their pocketbooks and reputations will suffer, perhaps they will take a different route.



Bud Light Regional Sales Pattern – California Sales Minimally Disrupted by Boycott, While National Sales Drop 34.2%


Finding solid information, accurate data, to update the perspective of the ongoing boycott of Bud Light products is a little challenging. You would think the data would be easily found; alas, in this era of hyper partisanship, data that would reflect the truth of the situation is less visible. Go figure.

That said, this market share report from Union does give us a little more perspective on the outcome.  According to the market share report, the decline in Bud Light sales overall is 34.2% over the past six months.  Interestingly, some regions have much larger declines than others. For California, “Union reported only minor changes in market dominance in the state. Bud Light’s sales share in California slid by 0.8 points to 6.6%, while Miller Lite’s sales share increased by 1.7 points to 12%.”

(Via MSM) – The hospitality consumption data platform Union reported a significant decline in Bud Light’s sales share in the Carolinas. From April through June 30, the brand’s sales share dropped by 6.9 points, falling from 19.4% to 12.5%. This decline has been attributed to the fallout from Bud Light’s partnership with Dylan Mulvaney, which sparked controversy and calls for a boycott.

[…] Local bar owners in the Carolinas have also reported a significant impact on Bud Light’s sales. For instance, Chris Dimattia, the owner of Recovery Room Tavern in Charleston, SC, mentioned that he used to sell 10 cases of Bud Light each week, but now only sells one to three cases of the boycott brew, resulting in a 70% to 90% drop in sales. At Blind Tiger Pub, another Charleston bar, Bud Light sales are described as “almost non-existent” by general manager Clayton Dukes. Dukes expressed his concern that the boycott may persist for an extended period, prompting him to replace Bud Light draft with Michelob Ultra due to the low sales.

The negative impact on Bud Light’s sales was not limited to the Carolinas. In New York and New Jersey, the brand also lost ground to its rival, Miller Lite. The combined sales share of Bud Light in these states fell by 5.1 points, while Miller Lite’s sales share increased by about two points.

Similarly, in Texas, where Bud Light faced significant challenges after the controversy, Miller Lite now holds a commanding 12% sales share, more than double that of Bud Light’s 5.6% share.  Surprisingly, the boycott’s impact on Bud Light sales was negligible in California, where Mulvaney hails from. Union reported only minor changes in market dominance in the state. Bud Light’s sales share in California slid by 0.8 points to 6.6%, while Miller Lite’s sales share increased by 1.7 points to 12%.

[…] Bud Light’s significant sales slide by 34.2% over the past six months has put the brand in a challenging position. The fallout from Mulvaney’s controversial posts and the subsequent partnership has evidently had a negative impact on the brand’s sales and reputation. (full article)

It would be interesting to map out the percentage change in Budweiser market share and overlay with a comparative map of regional political affiliation.

Regardless of the company ability to overcome the challenge, a total decline in sales of 34.2% over the six-month period would indicate the brand will not soon recover position.   Going woke has consequences.


The Disinformation Police Are Even More Incompetent and Dishonest Than You Imagine

The Federalist was asked by NewsGuard to respond to its concerns we are ‘inaccurate and misleading’ — so we did. Proudly and publicly.



In America, we have the First Amendment and have long prided ourselves on having a free press, but the reality is that it’s becoming harder and harder to exist as an independent publication on the internet. One major reason for this is that lots of bad actors are trying to weaponize concerns over “misinformation.” While misinformation is a problem, in practice the attempts to police it are often wholly incompetent and even more damaging than the alleged misinformation being addressed. Above all else the goal is to keep people from saying things that undermine the authority of America’s obviously foundering left-leaning institutions.

Anyway, The Federalist recently got an email from “NewsGuard Technologies” — a relatively new service that’s popped up in the last few years that purports to rate websites on their credibility based on some established criteria. It then sells its ratings services to schools, various corporate entities, and advertisers looking for someone to tell them what news outlets they can supposedly trust or what websites they don’t want to advertise on for fear of damaging their brand.

So how does NewsGuard go about making those ratings for websites? Well, it starts with firing off a series of hostile questions to the editors of a website about weirdly specific aspects of its coverage and demands you answer them in a vain attempt to improve whatever rating NewsGuard’s going to give you. Now it’s bad enough that this is an extortion racket, but it’s downright insulting to see NewsGuard’s team wheel around a website that publishes over a million words a year, cherry-pick some example of what they think is problematic coverage, and still demonstrate an inability to think critically or fairly about what they’re reading. If it questions a dominant narrative, it does not compute with these people. Anyway, let’s take a look at what we’re dealing with.

My name is Chiara Vercellone and I’m an analyst at NewsGuard Technologies, a service that reviews news and information websites based on a set of credibility criteria, and monitors misinformation trends online.

I am reaching out because we are in the process of updating our analysis of TheFederalist.com and I have a few questions about the content published on the site. I am also attaching our currently-published analysis of The Federalist for your reference.

Just for reference, Vercellone apparently has a graduate degree in journalism from Northwestern, which generally vies with Columbia for the best journalism program in the country. Previously, she worked as a “fact checker” for USA Today. I used to work at a publication that, like USA Today, was also a participant in Facebook’s fact-checking program. Facebook funds the fact-checking programs at these publications, even though these same publications are often required to cover Facebook and Mark Zuckerberg objectively in their news pages despite being financially compromised by this.

Facebook/Meta then brags that when a “fact checker” it helps pay for rates a story as false, it uses that rating to downrank and kill 80 percent of the internet traffic to that story. That’s what it says in its own corporate communications. Given how often we’ve seen Facebook-funded fact-checkers produce politically distorted nonsense, the power given to these people ought to be alarming.

Vercellone and everyone else involved in these rackets have convinced themselves they’re performing a valuable public service fighting “misinformation” that nearly always conveniently aligns with ideological priors, but I’m not sure they’ve had anyone be blunt: Between her time as a “fact checker” and her new gig at NewsGuard, Vercellone is a censor pure and simple. The business model she’s participating in is to make a profit by narrowing the range of acceptable opinions.

Anyway, keep all that in mind when we delve into the quality of analysis that she expects The Federalist to respond to. She gets right into it.

For instance, we recently found some articles that further false or misleading information. For example, this article repeated claims that the IRS was hiring “a new army of IRS agents that will be used to audit middle-class Americans.” However, the Inflation Reduction Act roughly allocated $80 billion to the IRS over 10 years, and most of the new hires would fill customer service and technology roles — not IRS agent positions.

OK, so the Inflation Reduction Act allocated $80 billion to the IRS, and $45 billion of that was specifically allocated for tax enforcement, including “litigation,” “criminal investigations,” “investigative technology,” and “digital asset monitoring.” The IRS has pledged to use that money to hire 87,000 new people. Most of the money is going to tax enforcement, so why wouldn’t most of the hires being made be related to tax enforcement in some way? Is it just that we’re hung up on the precise definition of “agent” in this context? Fine, we’ll assume the IRS is going to hire some agents specifically for auditing. What number specifically constitutes an “army,” which last I checked, does not have a precise numerical definition?

Let’s say they hire 10,000 agents for auditing and the remaining 77,000 are IT and answering phones. Well, 10,000 people is enough for an infantry division … is that comparable to an “army”? It’s even dumber than that sounds because the original Federalist article NewsGuard is singling out specifically linked to another article about how the IRS is currently advertising for jobs that require IRS agents to be “[carrying] a firearm and [being] willing to use deadly force, if necessary” when it referenced an “army” of IRS agents. The IRS currently employs more than 2,000 people that carry firearms. Is that an “army”? By the way, there are more armed federal bureaucrats now than U.S. Marines — is THAT fair to compare to an army? Or is NewsGuard engaged in a really stupid semantic debate?

What happened was this: Republicans were opposed to Democrats’ Inflation Reduction Act, and one of the criticisms they leveled was against its provision beefing up tax enforcement, which is politically unpopular. Republican leader Kevin McCarthy went out and said, “Democrats in Washington plan to hire an army of 87,000 IRS agents so they can audit more Americans like you.” Fearing that this criticism might resonate with the public, “fact checkers” immediately sprung into action and tried to establish a counter-narrative quibbling with McCarthy’s use of the word “agents.” (See herehereherehere, etc.) Note that The Federalist article being singled out by NewsGuard did not specify how many agents were being hired or make a specific numerical claim related to the bill like McCarthy did. It just said that an “army” of agents was being hired.

The Federalist was not misleading. What’s really misleading here is supposed fact-checkers running PR campaigns for the IRS and Democratic legislation and leaving people the false impression that spending $45 billion on tax enforcement is just going to result in IT and customer service hires, not more audits of middle-class taxpayers.

These two articles claim that Jacob Chansley, commonly known as the QAnon Shaman, was escorted throughout the U.S. Capitol by Capitol Police on Jan. 6, 2021. However, Chansley’s guilty plea agreement states that he was repeatedly ordered by police officers to leave the Capitol. Moreover, in court filings related to the trial of other alleged Capitol rioters, prosecutors stated that the televised footage by Tucker Carlson showed Chansley’s movements from four minutes, which did not accurately depict Chansley’s behavior.

Is she under the impression that the first two sentences above are mutually exclusive? There is video footage of at least nine Capitol Hill police officers escorting Chansley around the Capitol peacefully. Maybe they did ask him to leave and Chansley was clearly breaking the law — but the footage does not show Chansley rampaging or acting violently. He got 41 months in prison.

But “prosecutors stated that the televised footage” that undermines their case wasn’t accurate? Do journalists always show such deference to the word of federal prosecutors? Or regard plea agreements, which are often coerced or signed under duress, with such factual deference? Especially when there’s four minutes of video evidence blowing a hole in their presentation of facts?

The Federalist made no claims that the footage exonerated Chansley. But given the hyperbolic media narrative that surrounded the Jan. 6 riot and the clear prosecutorial double standards for violent left-wing protesters, the American people deserved to see this footage, and The Federalist was right to present and amplify it.

This article claims that New York Mayor Eric Adams would place caps on the amount of meat and dairy served by city institutions. However, Adams did not propose banning meat or dairy in his April 17, 2023 announcement. Furthermore, a City Hall spokesperson said these claims are “100 percent false.”

The Federalist article in question did not say Adams was going to ban meat. It did say that, under Mayor Adams, an evangelistic vegetarian, the city would “place caps” on the amount of meat and dairy. It linked to a New York Times article headlined “Why New York’s (Mostly) Vegan Mayor Wants to Cut the City’s Meat Budget.” It also linked to the city’s own website about the city’s plans to reduce the city’s “food emissions” by 33 percent. The carbon emissions linked to food sources are disproportionately related to meat production. Under Adams, city schools have instituted an optional “plant-powered Friday” menu.

Adams took a lot of public criticism when this plan to cut the meat budget was announced, so of course his spokesman was doing damage control. Regardless, when the mayor’s spokesman said that the accusations against Adams were “100 percent false” he was specifically referring to the claim that Adams was going to ban meat. That was not a claim The Federalist article ever made, and even The New York Times agrees the city’s plan is to limit the amount of meat the city serves.

This article stated women who have abortions are at a higher risk for breast cancer. However, large studies and established organizations have found no direct link between developing breast cancer and having an abortion.

Who could argue with “large studies and established organizations”? Well, for starters, pro-life activists have long complained, with good reason, that many “established organizations” that report on and do research on these issues are themselves pro-abortion activists. The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, for instance, has an entire page on its website about how “abortion is essential health care” and offers resources and training for abortion activism.

In any event, the Breast Cancer Prevention Institute compiled a list of 74 studies done between 1957 and 2013 on the link between breast cancer and abortion — 53 of those studies showed a positive correlation. I’m sure there are abortion activists that want to argue the individual methodology of each of those studies, but it’s not unfair to assert a link, and I seriously doubt anyone at NewsGuard knows what they’re talking about here.  

 

These articles claimed that a California bill would legalize, or decriminalize, infanticide. Several news reports have shown that the misrepresentation of the bill came from the measure’s language referring to “perinatal death.” However, the bill was amended to clear up that the bill’s immunity provision is intended to apply to a perinatal death after a live birth when the cause of death is directly attributable to pregnancy.

Let’s get this straight. The California bill didn’t allow post-birth infanticide except the language had to be revised to … not allow post-birth infanticide? And in doing so, the need to amend the bill essentially validated the original concerns it would allow infanticide?

We’ve also seen that articles generally embrace a conservative agenda, which is not disclosed on the site. And articles not categorized as “Opinion” often feature opinionated language. For example, this article stated, “Every week, the president of the United States says something completely bonkers, and everyone goes on with their day. We’re not talking about his propensity to lie about politics or his blustery lifelong fabulism. … We are talking about his inability to articulate simple ideas without notes – and often with notes.” The article’s categorization as “Politics” may not convey to readers that the story is opinionated in any way. Why aren’t articles categorized as opinion, when applicable, in a clear way so that readers may be aware of the content? Similarly, does The Federalist agree that it regularly embraces a conservative perspective? Why isn’t it disclosed somewhere accessible on the site so that readers are aware?

The Federalist is a conservative, right-leaning news and opinion website. This is not being hidden from anyone. The article quoted above is headlined, “Joe Biden Is Not OK.” If you stumble across this website randomly and you are persuaded of something, well, that’s great. But there is no intentional deception involved. Anyone staring at the home page with a few brain cells to rub together can deduce this quickly, and this is a ridiculous criticism. Does The New York Times openly declare it is a leftist paper somewhere? Or are we still laboring under the delusion it is objective?

Speaking of the Times, I would also note that in recent years, the vaunted “paper of record” has defended itself in two separate libel lawsuits by asserting that its reporters can insert their opinions into news stories, without labeling or distinguishing the opinion from fact — even though this is against the Times’ own internal policies. Last I checked, The New York Times had a perfect 100 percent rating from NewsGuard. The Federalist was given a score of 12.5 out of 100, even though we’re far more transparent about our ideological perspective.

We see that the site has left numerous inaccurate or misleading articles on the site uncorrected, despite having a practice of publishing corrections as notes at the end of articles. Does The Federalist have a corrections policy in place? If so, why are articles with inaccurate claims left on the site unchanged?

Well, so far NewsGuard hasn’t provided any persuasive evidence of any, let alone “numerous,” inaccurate or misleading articles. Has the Stephen Brill, the founder of NewsGuard, admitted he was wrong to go on TV and dismiss the reporting on Hunter Biden’s laptop as “misinformation” right before the 2020 election? Let us know so we can update The Federalist’s rating of NewsGuard. It’s currently hovering around zero.