Last November, we noted how CNSNews.com touted a meaningless petition demanding that Nancy Pelosi be impeached for “treason” launched by a Georgia woman named Marjorie Taylor Greene, whom CNS blogger Craig Bannister lovingly described as “a business owner, wife and mother” and whom, it just so happened, “has launched a campaign to become the Republican House candidate for Georgia’s 6th district.” Bannister, of course, didn’t tell his readers that she was a notorious enough far-right activist to earn her own profile from the Southern Poverty Law Center.
Well, Bannister kept writing about her as her primary race drew closer and she pulled a big publicity stunt. He wrote in a June 2 post:
“I have a message for ANTIFA terrorists,” Marjorie Taylor Greene says while holding a semi-automatic rifle in an 18-second video on her Congressional campaign Twitter page.
Greene’s message to domestic terrorists: “Stay the hell out of northwest Georgia. You won’t burn our churches, loot our businesses or destroy our homes”:
“President Trump declared ANTIFA a domestic terrorist organization.
“I have a message for ANTIFA terrorists: stay the hell out of northwest Georgia. You won’t burn our churches, loot our businesses or destroy our homes.
“I’m Marjorie Greene and I approved this message.”
Bannister didn’t indicate whether Antifa was ever a threat in northwest Georgia. Instead, he promoted her campaign and once again plugged her anti-Pelosi petition.
Bannister was also pretty giddy in a June 10 post, touting that “Marjorie Taylor Greene, whose video campaign ad featuring her holding a semi-automatic rifle while warning Antifa terrorists to ‘Stay the hell out of northwest Georgia’ was banned from Facebook, handily garnered the top vote total in Tuesday’s Georgia 14th district GOP primary.” Not only does Greene not even live in the district (moving there only after she filed to run there), she didn’t even fully win the primary; she’s slated for a primary runoff with the second-place finisher in August.
Bannister obscured that fact, but he completely censored Greene’s far-right extremism, which was further revealed after the primary. Turns out Greene made a series of racist, Islamophobic and anti-Semitic videos that she posted on Facebook, and is also an avid believer in fringe QAnon conspiracy theories, which has caused prominent Republicans to withdraw their support of her campaign.
Bannister, meanwhile, hasn’t breathed a word of this at CNS. They’re not terribly interested in reporting the truth when it’s inconvenient to their pro-Trump, pro-Republican agenda.