Media Research Center writer Nicholas Fondacaro has a bad habit of spreading lies and conspiracy theories, in part on his faulty definition of what a “lie” is. He did it again right in the headline of a June 25 post that screamed: “Nets Conceal Biden’s LIE: ‘Over 120 Million’ Americans Are ‘Dead from COVID’.” In the post itself, he whined:
At a campaign event Thursday, former Vice President and presumptive Democratic nominee Joe Biden mislead [sic] the public about how many Americans had died from the coronavirus, claiming “over 120 million dead from COVID.” In reality, there have been over 120 thousand Americans killed by the virus, which meant Biden’s claim was 1,000 times larger. That gross miscalculation went completely unreported by ABC, CBS, and NBC’s evening newscasts, which all boasted about Biden calling Trump a “child.”
At no point in his post did Fondacaro back up his headline claim that Biden’s statement, while false, was a “lie.” The dictionary defines a lie as “a false statement made with deliberate intent to deceive; Fondacaro offers no evidence that Biden misstated the number of COVID victims deliberately.
Fondacaro also censored the fact that Biden immediately corrected himself to accurately state that there were 120,000 deaths. That’s why the networks didn’t report on this — it’s a non-story. But then, if Fondacaro had told the whole truth, he wouldn’t have an item.
Still, Fondacaro spent most of his item complaining that the networks didn’t report a right-wing attack claiming that a cancer research initiative spent much of its money on salaries. That’s a reminder that Fondacaro is a pro-Trump partisan and not an impartial “media researcher” whose work can be trusted.