Jack Cashill’s new book, “Unmasking Obama,” is out now, though not at WorldNetDaily’s online store — as near as we can tell, the floundering operation has not added any new products of late beyond new monthly editions of WND’s sparsely read Whistleblower magazine. So Cashill must supply the Amazon link to the book in his WND columns promoting it. The premise of the book is that “While the major media were spinning their collective fairy tale about the Obama presidency, the alternative conservative media — America’s ‘samizdat’ — were telling the truth.”
That is manifestly false. WND spent the entirety of Barack Obama’s presidency pushing the lie that the birth certificates Obama released were inaccurate or outright faked, and Cashill himself was caught falsely claiming that a photo of Obama with his grandparents was fake because Obama was photoshopped into it when, in fact, a photo in which Obama was photoshopped out of that he portrayed was the “real” photo is actually the fake one. (It was this column, which WND refused to tell readers a correction was made on even as it scrubbed the false information from it, that caused then-editor Joseph Farah to effectively brag about how WND publishes misinformation.)
In excerpting his book in his WND columns, Cashill demonstrates once again why he can’t be trusted. On Aug. 16, he rehashed yet again his biased, racially tainted interpretation of the Trayvon Martin case, asserting that Obama’s statement that “if I had a son, he would look like Trayvon” to be the most destructive moment of his presidency.” He also rehashed the film about the Martin case made by Joel Gilbert, while making sure to hide the fact that Gilbert is a lying charlatan whose film about Obama pushed the malicious lie that Obama’s mother posed nude for Frank Marshall Davis.
On Aug. 18, Cashill ranted that “the mischief surrounding the passage and implementation of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) – also known as ‘Obamacare’ – puts Obama in the Harding-Grant strata of scandal-plagued presidencies” and tried to make Obama’s not-entirely-inaccurate statement that people can keep their doctors under the plan to be some kind of massive conspiracy.
Cashill’s Aug. 20 column totally buys into the conspiracy theory that “President Barack Obama had been using an anomalous and possibly fraudulent SSN for more than twenty years.” He made sure to elide the fact that releasing Obama’s Social Security number as one “samizdat” member did without Obama’s permission is likely illegal, despite his insistence that the random right-wing person’s poking around the number was “perfectly legal.” He bashed teh fact-checkers at Snopes for debunking the conspiracy, huffing that it”seemed to have no greater purpose during Obama’s presidency than to kill stories potentially harmful to the president.” Cashill rejected the obvious explanation — some clerk apparently mistyped Obama’s zip code so that he was given a number normally given to those who live in Connecticut rather than Hawaii, where Obama lived — instead complaining: “Journalists who shied from learning the truth about Obama’s Social Security number were not about to ask him where he was on the night the Benghazi consulate was attacked, what he knew about the IRS war on the Tea Party, or how he came to authorize ‘Fast and Furious,’ let alone what role he played in protecting Hillary Clinton from prosecution or in spying on Donald Trump’s campaign.”
Cashill also referenced Obama’s birth certificate, “whose legitimacy may never be certified.” On Aug. 26, Cashill dove into the birther issue from a different angle. He first asserted that “Barack Obama resisted sharing his birth certificate at considerable cost and very nearly to the point of political self-destruction. This much is undeniable.” This is a lie; Obama released a state-generated birth certificate in 2008 and another in 2012 only after birthers like Donald Trump repeatedly pushed the issue by falsely portraying the original certificate as somehow not authentic enough. He slagged Obama’s mother as once having “a crush on the eponymous Afro-Brazilian of the movie ‘Black Orpheus'” — apparently trying to dogwhistle to the more racist Obama-haters out there — and posited that Obama was born a few months earlier than the date on his birth certificate, arguing that “the Dunham family might have claimed a home birth and called it in to the authorities in August.”
In other words, Cashill’s book appears to be nothing more than another highly speculative hit job from a longtime Obama-hater. Treat it accordingly.