A June 2 WorldNetDaily article by Michael Thompson touts a gathering of “more than 1,000 protestors” outside the Washington-area convention center where the Bilderberg Group was meeting, “the secret conclave that gathers global leaders of finance and government.”
Getting big play in Thompson’s article his interview at the protest — embedded in his article — with Alex Jones, described only as a “radio personality” who “hosts the radio program ‘The Alex Jones Show’ and runs the popular news site Infowars.com.”
Such a benign description obscures the fact that Jones is best known for peddling wild conspiracy theories.
Jones got more WND play in a June 1 article by Timothy P. Dionisopoulos, who, like Thompson, benignly described Jones only as “the founder of the news website Infowars.com.” Dionisopoulos ignored Jones’ history of conspiracy theories, despite the headline of his article being “Who are these people protesting Bilderberg?”
WND’s public embrace of Jones is mainly the result of conspiracy theory convergence — WND has long obsessed about the Bilderbergers as well, and it sells a book titled “The True Story of the Bilderberg Group,” which calls the group ” a shadow government whose top priority is to erase the sovereignty of all nation-states and supplant them with global corporate control of their economies under the surveillance of ‘an electronic global police state.'”