Joseph Farah begins his Aug. 24 WorldNetDaily column with a disingenuous claim: “WND provides what I believe to be the broadest forum of political commentary anywhere – not just on the Internet, but anywhere.”
In fact, that’s true only if your idea of “broad” is right-wing to far right-wing. As we’ve noted, nearly all of the three dozen or so regular writers on WND’s commentary page are conservative, conservative Christian or libertarian — in practice, there’s little real distinction between them — with only Ellen Ratner and Bill Press as token liberals.
This was the dishonest pretext for defending WND against Ann Coulter’s criticism of WND for its birther obsession, which in Farah’s words “included what I consider to be scathing personal indictments of me and the company I direct.” The criticism that appears to have hit home for Farah is Coulter’s claim that WND is “pushing it to get website hits”:
To suggest we did this – that I did this – “to get website hits” and “that no sane person could believe it,” is really hitting below the belt. I have grown to expect that sort of insult from the insanely jealous Michael Medved and the delusional Keith Olbermann, but not from Ann Coulter.
Does Ann Coulter think Rush Limbaugh is insane? How about her friend Sean Hannity? While neither has pioneered the story or pursued active investigations, both high-rated talkers, and good friends of Coulter, have skewered Obama about his refusal to release his birth certificate.
But Farah really doesn’t respond to Coulter’s accusation — perhaps because it’s true.
As we’ve detailed, WND has positioned itself to profit from the birther story, and getting website hits is a key part of that strategy. That’s why WND was so quick to embrace the “Kenyan birth certificate” without bothering to vet it first — a decision likely driven by a desire to drive traffic as much as Farah’s obsessive hatred of Obama. When the certificate was discredited, what little credibility WND has took a hit as well, and Farah has nobody but himself to blame for that.
Rather than complaining about “below the belt” hits from Coulter — does she do any other kind? — Farah needs to apologize for his website’s excesses and embrace of false claims and decide whether he wants to be a journalist or an activist.