Susan Jones writes in a Nov. 2 CNSNews.com article:
Rep. Mike Quigley (D-Ill.) made himself the arbiter of “fake news” on Wednesday, pointing to an InfoWars article on the New York City terrorist attack and asking a Twitter executive, “what’s your responsibility to set the record straight so that the people who saw this know that it’s fake news?”
The InfoWars article in question was titled, “Imam: I Warned DeBlasio About NYC Terror; He Was Too Busy Bashing Trump.” For a while on Wednesday, that story was trending at the top when Twitter users went to #NYCTerroristAttack.
But is the report fake news? And who gets to decide?
Speaking at the same hearing of the House intelligence committee, Rep. Chris Stewart (R-Utah) said, “We all recognize that fake news is in the eye of the beholder many times.”
While some news reports “are demonstrably untrue,” Stewart said, “the vast majority” of reports are combinations of “opinion and reality.”
That’s right — CNS’ Jones is effectively defending the honor of Infowars, run by conspiracy theorist Alex Jones. Instead of reflexively taking the side of a website with a long history of false and outrageous claims just because a Democratic congressman justifiably impugned its credibility, Jones could have, you know, looked into the article in question to evaluate its veracity.
Yes, a self-proclaimed imam named Mohammad Tawhidi did make the claim that Infowars reported, but Infowars reporter Paul Joseph Watson — a major generator of fake news — doesn’t appear to have attempted to verify any of Tawhidi’s claims.
It turns out that Tawhidi is kind of a shady character. Based in Australia, he has claimed to be both an imam and shiekh, claims actual Muslim religious authorities in Australia don’t recognize, calling him a “fake sheikh.” He’s earned the approbation of right-wingers by pushing fears of an Islamic caliphate and demanding that certain Islamic texts be banned, thus making him the equivalent of a Fox News Democrat. In reality, he’s a Shia extremist who’s battling majority Sunnis in Australia.
In other words, he’s a fraud. It wasn’t that hard to figure out using just a few minutes of online searching.
Yet Jones wants us to treat this Infowars report as credible, for the sole apparent purpose of trying to counter a Democratic congressman trying to expose fake news. This is clear, since the headline on Jones’ article makes the point that Quigley is a “Democrat [sic] Lawmaker.”
But still, Jones has to know what Infowars is, and defending it damages her own credibility. That’s the price of being a pro-Trump shill, apparently.