Chelsea Schilling complains in a Nov. 17 WorldNetDaily article:
The mainstream media are going wild circulating a viral list of so-called “fake news” websites – and the list includes established news sites like WND, Breitbart, Red State, the Daily Wire and Project Veritas – but WND has found a leftist, Trump-bashing assistant professor in Massachusetts who specialized in “fat studies” is behind the effort to target and discredit legitimate news organizations.
[…] [Melissa] Zimdars published and circulated a list of “fake, false, or regularly misleading websites that are shared on Facebook and social media.” She said she began writing the list because she didn’t approve of the sources her students were citing.
The problem?
In addition to some satirical and bogus sites, her list attacks the credibility of well-established news organizations such as Breitbart, BizPac Review, Red State, the Blaze, the Independent Journal Review, Twitchy, the Daily Wire, WND and James O’Keefe’s Project Veritas. In many cases (such as with her WND listing), she offers no explanation for why the news organizations were included on the list.
WND’s complaining about appearing on that list might be a bit more believable if it didn’t have a lengthy history of doing what the list claims it did — publish fake news.
The most obvious example of this is WND’s multiyear birther crusade, which Joseph Farah and Co. pursued for the sole purpose of waging a war of personal destruction against Barack Obama –if WND was genuinely concerned about constitutional eligibility for the presidency, it would have pursued the eligibility case against Ted Cruz with the same vigor, which it didn’t. Or when any of the numerous allegations it promoted regarding Obama’s eligibility were discredited, which it never did. WND turned its birther crusade into fake news, and that alone earns its inclusion on the list.
Also of note is perhaps the most notorious spasm of fake news WND perpetrated, if only because it actually suffered legal consequences for it. Before the 2000 election, WND published a series of articles attacking Al Gore, several of which made thet claim that a Tennessee car dealer was involved in drug dealing. The car dealer sued WND and related people and entities for defamation; the lawsuit dragged on for years, with Farah asserting that “this lawsuit would be dropped in a flat second if Al Gore wanted it to be dropped,” until just before the case was to go to trial seven years later, when WND abrtuptly settled the suit out of court for terms that still haven’t been disclosed. As part of the settlement, though, WND admitted that what it published about the car dealer was not true and that “the sources named in the publications have stated under oath that statements attributed to them in the articles were either not made by them, were misquoted by the authors, were misconstrued, or the statements were taken out of context.”
While WND appended the settlement statement to several articles in the series, all of those articles are still live on the WND website despite no apparent effort by WND to fact-check the other claims made in the articles. But if one significant part of the series has been found to be a lie and its reporters exposed as engaging in sloppy reporting, there’s no reason to believe the rest of what was written (though WND’s lies arguably had their intended effect of keeping Gore from getting elected).
Let’s not forget that Farah is weirdly proud of the fact that WND publishes “misinformation” (read: lies) and that his own record of writing is strewn with falsehoods. Heck, even Schilling’s own body of work at WND is similarly falsehood-laden.
And justlast week, WND republished an article from another right-wing website about anti-Trump protesters that is totally false — and the article is still live and uncorrected at WND.
Schilling’s record of mendacious reporting continues in this article. She found the most unflattering photos of Zimdars she could find to accompany her article and attacked her academic record, emphasizing that she has done research in “fat studies,” published a paper on “fat acceptance TV” and she “enthusiastically declares that she’s ‘less self-conscious of my own rear end than I used to be.'”
The fact that WND uses its “news” pages to carry out personal vendettas against its critics is just another reason nobody believes it — and another reason it indisputably earned its place on that fake-news list.