Republicans Rely On Lies

Filed in National by on April 29, 2010

One of the most frustrating things about being a blogger is the constant smacking down of mistatements, rumors and outright lies coming out of the rightwing. J.L. Bell at Salon noticed a constant stream of rumors being examined by the Snopes.com website and did a count to see what was happening.

After eight years in the White House (with Snopes.com around all that time), George W. Bush has been the subject of 47 internet rumors. After less than two years in office, Barack Obama has been the subject of 87, or nearly twice as many.

Even more telling is the relative accuracy of those stories. For Bush, 20 rumors, or 43%, are true. Only 17, or 36%, are false. The remainder are of mixed veracity (4), undetermined (4), or unclassifiable (2).

In contrast, for Obama only 8 of the 87 rumors, or 9%, are true, and a whopping 59, or 68%, are whoppers. There are 17 of mixed veracity and 3 undetermined.

I delved down to the stories that the site designates as a mixture of truth and falsehood. For Obama, in many cases the truth is innocuous while the lie reflects poorly on the President, particularly photographs that are misrepresented or show behavior that produced no complaints when his predecessors did the same. In contrast, in this mixture of truth and falsehood about George W. Bush praying with an injured soldier, the lie reflected well on that President from the perspective of the religious person spreading it.

I think this story makes things a bit clearer. It’s the telephone game version of Fox News and apparently the dominance of Fox News is not enough to keep conservatives from spreading these rumors through other means.

Personally I find some of the so-called reasonable conservatives as the most dishonest of the bunch. These are the people that will say things like “I believe Obama was born in the U.S. but if he’d just show his birth certificate it would all go away.” They are reinforcing the crazies and just because they’re not carrying Obama = Hitler signs that doesn’t mean that they’re not equally responsible for spreading the falsehoods.

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Opinionated chemist, troublemaker, blogger on national and Delaware politics.

Comments (4)

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  1. cassandra m says:

    “I believe Obama was born in the U.S. but if he’d just show his birth certificate it would all go away.”

    I don’t think that this even counts as “reasonable”. Reasonable would be telling people the truth of the matter — that the birth certificate has been examined over and over again, exists in pdf form at Factcheck who got to see the thing in person and has been seen and examined more than any President’s birth certificate in history. Reasonable would be urging people to smarter battles than this.

    But as for the proliferation of Obama rumors, you can’ be too surprised at this when the wingnut entertainers are making alot of money to make up this crap and spread it around. And then their acolytes repost that stupidity here.

  2. Scott P says:

    The overriding mantra of the right these days seems to be “I reject your reality, and substitute my own.” If you don’t like the facts — make up your own! If this didn’t work, Frank Luntz and Matt Drudge would be paunchy middle-management schlubs somewhere. (No offense intended to actual paunchy middle-management schlubs)

  3. Miscreant says:

    “… The overriding mantra of the right these days seems to be “I reject your reality, and substitute my own.”

    Sounds like something I heard during the 60’s… from Hippies.

    Did I say “Hippies”? It’s been a while since I’ve heard/used that word.

  4. D.C. says:

    ZZZZZZZZZZZ.