In a June 7 MRC NewsBusters post, P.J. Gladnick bashed CNN’s Jim Acosta as “a pedant on steroids” for pointing out that President Trump didn’t get his facts quite correct when he said to Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau that Canadians burned down the White House during the War of 1812. Gladnick was quick to declare that “Trump was right” — even though he also conceded that Canada was not an independent country at the time and the White House was burned by British-led troops. Still, he felt the need to rail against “over-zealous fact-checkers.”
Speaking of pedantic, overzealous fact-checkers, Gladnick appears not to have noticed that his NewsBusters colleague, Tom Blumer, was exactly that a couple days earlier. First, he complained that the Associated Press said the Supreme Court “narrowly” ruled in the case of a Colorado baker who refused to bake a cake for a same-sex marraige, asserting that, since the vote was 7-2 and not 5-4, “the justification for this characterization is thin”– even though the ruling applied only in this particular case and refused to address the larger issue of discrimination for religious reasons.
Blumer then went even more pedantic by attacking the AP for describing said narrowness by writing that “”the big issue in the case, whether a business can refuse to serve gay and lesbian people,” has not been decided:
The AP wants readers to believe, based on its use of “whether,” that it’s likely that future courts will rule that providers of good and services can never refuse to serve gays and lesbians under any circumstances. The Court has clearly stated that “religious and philosophical objections” represent clear and legitimate exceptions to that otherwise true statement, allaying fears that its 2015 Obergefell v. Hodges same-sex marriage ruling might be used to banish any right to exercise those objections, or even express them, out of the public square.
The AP should have written that “the big issue in the case, when (i.e., under what circumstances) a business can refuse to serve gay and lesbian people on religious and philosophical grounds,” remains undecided. It appears that the degree to which those objections can be “limited” is far smaller than state and local so-called “civil-rights” enforcers had assumed.
Blumer apparently won’t admit that discrimination on religious and philosophical grounds is still discrimination, and that the AP’s wording, while a little too broad for Blumer’s taste, is accurate.
So it seems pedantry is perfectly fine at the MRC — as long as it’s done in service to its ideological agenda.