Joseph Farah has taught his daughter well — she’s spewing the same right-wing hatred her father does.
A June 5 WorldNetDaily article by Alyssa Farah is an incredibly lazy affair, uncritically regurgitating by the Young America’s Foundation on Supreme Court nominee Elena Kagan and serving as YAF’s public relations agent for its upcoming “Keep Out Kagan Day.”
After attacking Kagan as “anti-military” — which is demonstrably false — Farah regurgitates a YAF claim that Kagan has “disregard for students’ rights” and “has come out as a proponent of censorship of student publications.” How so? Farah can’t be bothered to tell us. Needless to say, the opposite appears to be true: the Student Press Law Center states that Kagan’s academic writings “suggest that she appreciates the need for robust constitutional protection of speech on campus, even when the words may be hurtful or offensive.”
Farah also offers up a lazy, less-than-factual version of Kagan and military recruitment:
Additionally, Kagan was “deeply distressed” over the fact that military recruiters are able to be present on college campuses.
During her time as the dean of Harvard Law School, Kagan implemented a system barring students from having access to military recruiters at the Harvard Office of Career Services.
Kagan also authored an amicus brief pushing for the Supreme Court to overturn the Solomon Amendment, which was designed to protect military recruitment on college campuses.
In fact, Kagan did not “implement” a ban on military recruiters — the non-discrimination policy by which Harvard Law School actually barred military recruiters from the career (for only a single semester, which Farah conveniently fails to mention) was first implemented in 1979. Also, claiming the Solomon Amendment was “designed to protect military recruitment on college campuses” is overly generous (which is to say, biased); the amendment specifically cut off federal money to schools who barred military recruiters.
Such lazy reporting wouldn’t cut it for a day in the real world of journalism, but it’s good enough for WND. Especially when your dad’s the boss.