It seems there’s no end in sight for Media Research Center writer Curtis Houck’s ongoing tirade of Acosta Derangement Syndrome.
In a March 18 post, Houck sneered that Acosta was an “armchair psychologist” for raising the question — “manufactured storyline,” according to Houck — of President Trump’s mental fitness after a weekend-long Twitter bender. Houck concluded with a larger anti-CNN screed, whining about “narratives” that are “manufactured to fit what CNN wants to spoonfeed to its liberal audience and poor souls at airports and doctor’s offices, which is one of fear and division.” As if Houck isn’t in the business of narrative manufacturing himself.
One of those narratives, of course, is that Acosta is a lying, unstable grandstander, and Houck manufactured that further the next day in a post headlined “MELTDOWN!” in which he asserted that Acosta offered “another lengthy diatribe and meltdown to the delight of his colleagues.” How so? By pointing out that the right-wing Daily Caller served up a “softball” to the president. Houck ran to the defense of the Daily Caller reporter, gloating about he purportedly “dropped the hammer” on Acosta by claiming that “Rather than tell the President what was happening on a particular issue, I asked him to tell me.” Houck exclaimed: “What an idea!”
If the president had been liberal and Acosta was the one to ask a similar question, Houck would undoubtedly be the first to accuse Acosta of asking a “softball” question.
Houck was further triggered when Acosta accurately pointed out that it’s ridiculous for conservatives to claim they’re being discriminated against on social media since they have such a massive presence there, led by Trump himself:
For regular or even infrequent readers of NewsBusters, alarm bells should be going off for just how idiotic of a statement this was by Acosta. The easy answer to is to go check out any of the work by our colleagues at MRC TechWatch or the Free Speech Alliance, but here’s a few specific examples of online censorship:
None of those examples, however, mentioned how social media platforms like Facebook have routinely sucked up to conservatives in response to their every little complaint, which would seem to undermine Houck’s narrative. Indeed, the MRC maintains a presence on those platforms to this very day, and no presence whatsoever on alternative platforms –perhaps because it knows that for all its attempts to rebrand them as promoting “free speech,” they’re little more than a outlet for racism and far-right conspiracy theories.
Houck handed the Acosta Derangement baton to Ryan Foley for a March 29 post complaining that Acosta asked a “leading question” of the governor of Puerto Rico regarding Trump. Instead of yet another Houck-esque rage-fueled rant, Foley merely complained that Acosta “asked an extremely weak follow-up question.”
At least someone at the MRC understands that it doesn’t look professional to act like an Acosta-hating rage-bot.