After the recent terror attack in New York City, WorldNetDaily couldn’t wait to brand the perpetrator a jihadist, serving up an etymology of his Muslim-y name and complaining that authorities were bothering to investigate the crime at all when all they had to do is look at his name and simply declare him a terrorist.
But when a white guy kills three times as many people as the guy in New York did, WND suddenly wants to tap the brakes.
WND’s first story on the church massacre at Sutherland Springs, Texas, — perpetrated by the decidedly non-Muslim-y sounding and looking Devin Kelley — included a quote it felt was so important that it was made the article’s subhead:
Jim Richards, executive director of the Southern Baptists of Texas told Fox News: “This tragedy is just incomprehensible.”
“They’re wanting to see lives transformed. And just to have such a demonic attack. It is a spiritual war we’re involved in.”
“The motive is irrelevant,” he continued. “It is evil. We live in a fallen world. All of us have a propensity toward evil …”
Funny how motives in violent crime matter to WND only if the perpetrator isn’t white.
And remember that article WND published after the Las Vegas massacre insisting that massacre perpetrators are either Muslim or on drugs? Well, WND took the latter approach to deflect hard questions about Kelley in a follow-up article, in which Bob Unruh played up an unverified claim by someone claiming to be “Kelley’s former classmate” saying that “I know his parents had him on heavy doses of meds in middle school.” That quote also graduated to the subhead.
WND really hasn’t published much about the shooter and his motives since. Figures.