Despite its self-proclaimed hatred of Nazi analogies, the Media Research Center has no problem busting them out when doing so suits its partisan agenda. Thus, Catherine Salgado hauled out the “digital brownshirts” smear yet again in a Jan. 3 post:
The anti-free speech Center for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH) has a slew of plans to crush speech in the new year.
CCDH, which has a long history of pressuring tech companies and government officials to silence conservative voices (including the Media Research Center), is not taking a break. It published its goals for 2024 on Tuesday, which included a plan to fight the lawsuit X owner Elon Musk’s has launched against the anti-free speech group and flagging alleged “disinformation” and “hate speech” for censorship going into the 2024 U.S. election. CCDH also boasted about its role in the passage of European pro-censorship legislation. The group has shown such a disdain for free speech that MRC President and Founder Brent Bozell previously called the non-profit “digital brownshirts.”
According to the new release, CCDH has many plans this year, which include “Producing brand new groundbreaking research on public health, kids, climate denial, reproductive rights, and of course countering hate speech and disinformation amid elections everywhere.” This appears to describe a goal to interfere in the election, along with CCDH’s usual radical pro-abortion and climate alarmist agenda.
Salgado offered no meaningful evidence that any of those positions are “radical.” In whining about it being “climate alarmist,” she simply linked to the group’s 2021 report listing right-wing climate deniers — a list that happens to include the MRC, which of course loudly whined about being included in the report while failing to substantively refute anything the CCDH said about it.
She also complained that the CCDH would fight the lawsuit Elon Musk has filed against it for exposing the hate and lies spread on Twitter/X:
The CCDH also vowed it would “Keep fighting back against Elon Musk’s X Corp ridiculous lawsuit against us.” Musk launched the so-called “ridiculous” lawsuit arguing that CCDH has falsely accused X of promoting hate speech and attempting to sabotage free speech.
Nonetheless, the group accused Musk of profiting off “the hateful anti-LGBTQ+ grooming narrative” and other supposed “hate and misinformation.”
Salgado did not explain how any of the things CCDH is fighting do not qualify as “hate and disinformation,” nor did she offer any evidence that trying to stop hate and disinformation is “censorship.” Instead, she whined that “While CCDH also tried to claim positive goals such as protecting teens and children online, the group’s track record shows blatant leftist bias trying to undermine free speech and enforce a certain ideology.” Again, she didn’t explain how fighting hate and disinformation is an “ideology,” or why her own efforts to smear anyone trying to stop hate and disinformaiton as “censors” is not part of her own right-wing ideology.
And, of course, Salgado refused to justify her “digital brownshirts” smear in the face of her employer denouncing such Nazi insults — which leaves the possibility that the MRC remains petulantly butthurt that the CCDH called out its misinformation.
Speaking of hypocrisy, Nicholas Fondacaro hypocritically played it in a Jan. 9 post:
He’s back!
On Tuesday, ousted CNN host Don Lemon announced that he would be attempting to break out of his newfound obscurity and irrelevance with a new show on X (formerly Twitter). The X Business account also said that in addition to Lemon, former Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard (D-HI), and veteran sports commentator Jim Rome would also be getting shows. But Lemon’s willingness to jump at a new gig on X had a strong dose of hypocrisy since he’s previously been very critical of the platform and owner Elon Musk.
“I’ve heard you… and today I am back bigger, bolder, freer! My new media company’s first project is The Don Lemon Show. It will be available to everyone, easily, whenever and wherever you want it, streaming on the platforms where the conversations are happening,” he boasted in a post.
[…]But Lemon’s excitement for his new show on X was steeped in hypocrisy seeing as, during his time at CNN, he had flaunted an obvious disdain for the platform and its new owner.
In December of 2022, Lemon had a bit of a meltdown when then-Twitter banned a handful of far-left journalists after they doxxed Musk’s location by sharing the location and traveling information of his private jet. Lemon described< the punitive actions the platform undertook as “madness” and “crazy.”
Lemon also didn’t seem to think the platform was a bastion of free speech at the time, asking: “Is it a free speech issue or is Elon Musk just on a power trip right now?”
Of course, Musk was and is on a power trip. Meanwhile, being the liar that he is, Fondacaro couldn’t be bothered to justify his claim that any of the reporters were “far-left”– they actually all worked for mainstream media operations — and he didn’t disclose that the creator of the jet-tracking account was a fan of Musk who used publicly available information to track his jet. Fondacaro also censored the fact that Musk backtracked on his own promise to leave the tracking account alone — so much for Musk’s dedication to “free speech.” Fondacaro also didn’t mention that Musk reportedly paid Lemon “a pile of money” upfront for the privilege of X hosting his show.
Given Musk’s longtime enthusiasm for suspending (or shadowbanning) the Twitter/X accounts of any journalists who don’t fawn over him the way the MRC does, he appears to be the hypocritical one for giving Lemon a platform. But Fondacaro isn’t going to mention that either — or that he and his employer would be more than happy to censor Lemon and for Musk to ultimately deny him a platform.