The Media Research Center’s Tim Graham loves to complain that fact-checkers care a little too much about context for their ratings. This time around, he’s claiming a fact-checker didn’t use context at all.
In a Feb. 20 post, Graham groused about how PolitiFact went after Rush Limbaugh for saying that “I know young people, Chris [Wallace], who really think that by the time they’re 65, the country, the world is not going to be habitable because of climate change, which is another hoax! There’s no evidence for it.” Graham made sure to point out the, yes, context explaining that “Limbaugh’s quoted remarks were preceded by talk about how millennials are mis-educated” and adding: “Earth to PolitiFact: this is NOT the kind of disastrous warming that moves the political needle, and it’s not really what Limbaugh was talking about. He’s talking about using climate panic to push dramatic government intervention like the ‘Green New Deal.'”
Graham also took offense to PolitiFact responding to Limbaugh’s portraying climate change as a hoax by citing a climate scientist stating that “The Earth is now hotter than it’s ever been,” huffing, “That’s not technically true, since the record of measuring global temperatures goes back to 1880.” Of course, humans have been recording the weather for hundreds of years before that, and earlier climate patterns can be determined through paleoclimatology, but Graham doesn’t quite want to admit that.
Finally, Graham complains that PolitiFact has fact-checked too many things Limbaugh has gotten false, which “suggest an emotional investment in dragging down America’s most popular radio host as a fact-mangler.” Graham doesn’t explain why that’s not the case.