WorldNetDaily columnist James Zumwalt has a definite love for fake news. He demonstrates that once again in his June 13 column, in which he responds to former Supreme Court Justice John Paul Stevens’ idea the the Second Amendment is a relic of another time. Zumwalt argues that there are times when citizens may need to lead a coup against the government, speculating on two recent examples. The first was the Watergate scandal, in which “the abuse of power during Watergate could well have led to a coup.” He then writes:
The second incident during Stevens’ lifetime involves an actual attempted coup, evidence of which we see unfolding today. It is clear, 19 months after the 2016 presidential election, that high-level U.S. government players worked to manipulate events to secure the election of Hillary Clinton and, failing to do so, manipulate the ouster of President Donald Trump. The dust has yet to settle from all the activity involved, but when it does the American public will be shocked to learn how a coup attempt may well have been imposed upon it by the Deep State. Had it succeeded, it may have been an armed citizenry left to restore liberty.
Zumwalt’s source for the “attempted coup” claim is a pro-Russia conspiracy website called WhatDoesItMean.com. It a notorious fake-news promoter that’s been busted repeatedly. The website even admits that a significant portion of its content is fake: “Some events depicted in certain articles on this website are fictitious and any similarity to any person living or dead is merely coincidental. Some other articles may be based on actual events but which in certain cases incidents, characters and timelines have been changed for dramatic purposes. Certain characters may be composites, or entirely fictitious.”
In addition to the conspiratorial ranting, the WhatDoesItMean.com article to which Zumwalt links contains a blatant bit of fake news, by including a graphic claiming that CNN used pictures of “the same girl in 3 different Refugee Crisis pictures being saved by 3 different men.” In fact, all the images are from a single incident, and there’s no evidence CNN ever portrayed them as representing anything else.
Zumwalt’s embrace of fake news simply further WND’s longstanding reputation as being a promoter of such.