Sometimes the truth is so obvious that even mainstream media
sources can no longer deny it. That was the case this week when CNN ran a
story titled “Donald Trump is turning liberals into conspiracy theorists.”
The piece by editor-at-large Chris Cillizza cites four
examples of liberal conspiracy theories that have emerged in recent weeks that
Cillizza admits are patently false, misconstrued or blown out of proportion.
These incidents include the alleged celebratory shipment of Bud Light to the Capitol
building after the House passed the AHCA, the claim that the AHCA would make
sexual assault a pre-existing condition that would cause victims to be denied
health insurance coverage, the claim that the FCC was targeting Stephen Colbert
and the claim that the White House chief usher was fired because she was a
woman.
While I applaud the fact that Cillizza realizes that
liberals are espousing conspiracy theories, a.k.a. fake news, he is off base in
his assumption that liberal conspiracy theories are a recent phenomenon that
was initiated by Trump Derangement Syndrome. To disprove Cillizza’s hypotheses,
we only need to recall the behavior of liberals during the presidency of George
W. Bush.
The granddaddy of modern conspiracy theories was the 9/11 “Truth”
movement. A Public
Policy poll on the eighth anniversary of the September 11 attacks asked the
question, “Do you think President Bush intentionally allowed the 9/11 attacks
to take place because he wanted the United States to go to war in the Middle
East?” Twenty-seven percent of liberals polled answered “yes” compared to 10
percent of conservatives and 12 percent of moderates. Liberal 9/11 conspiracy
theorists were given respectability by filmmaker Michael Moore in his 2004
film, “Fahrenheit 9/11,” a
purported documentary that won
a bevy of awards.
Not all liberals bought in to Moore’s accusations, however.
Christopher Hitchens amusingly trashed the movie in Slate.
“To describe this film as dishonest and demagogic would almost be to promote those
terms to the level of respectability,” he wrote. “To describe this film as a
piece of crap would be to run the risk of a discourse that would never again
rise above the excremental.”
A separate Public
Policy poll found that almost three out of four Democrats believed that
President Bush “intentionally misled” the public about Iraq’s weapons of mass
destruction as late as 2013. Many liberals still hold this view in spite of the
fact that the
New York Times detailed the discovery of “roughly 5,000 chemical warheads,
shells or aviation bombs” after the invasion of Iraq. The Times report detailed
how American and Iraqi soldiers were exposed to “nerve or mustard agents” as
they secured the country.
The Bush era gave birth to several other liberal conspiracy
theories as well. Among them were the claim that Dick Cheney was a “puppet
master” manipulating President Bush while Bush himself was variously seen
as both an incompetent boob and an evil genius. The Washington
Post noted in 2014 that liberals were just as likely to believe that Bush
committed voter fraud in 2004 as conservatives were to believe that Obama
committed voter fraud in 2012.
The purported conservative conspiracy about Barack Obama’s background,
championed for years by Donald Trump, has its roots with an apparent liberal as
well. Andy Martin, a failed lawyer and self-proclaimed consumer activist, allegedly
made the first claims
that Obama was closet Muslim in 2004. Martin got his start in politics as
an intern
for US Senator Paul Douglas (D-Ill.) and first ran for public office as a
Democrat. Martin ran for president in the Republican primary in 2000 where he
ran ads accusing George W. Bush of using cocaine, notes the New York
Times, another conspiracy picked up by liberals.
Liberal conspiracy theories don’t stop there. Two large
anti-science conspiracy theories are promulgated by liberals and have been for
years. Liberal anti-corporate and environmentalist attitudes come together in
conspiracies about GMOs and Monsanto. In 2014, Manny Schewitz complained on Forward
Progressives that many liberals were “denying science” and refusing to listen
to liberal icons Neil deGrasse Tyson and Jon Stewart when they ridiculed GMO
conspiracy claims.
Likewise, the Washington
Post in 2014 noted that anti-vaxxers, people who reject the science that
vaccines are safe and effective, are concentrated in liberal communities. Seth
Mnookin, a journalist who has covered the anti-vaccination conspiracy, noted
that you only had to go visit a Whole Foods to find anti-vaxxers.
No discussion of conspiracy theories would be complete
without mentioning chemtrails or the Kennedy assassination. A Public
Policy poll found that roughly equivalent percentages of Obama and Romney
voters believed that the government spread chemicals through aircraft exhaust.
Twice as many Obama voters were “not sure” and potentially open to the
possibility. With respect to JFK, the common theory that the president was murdered
by the CIA reflects a liberal mistrust of the national security apparatus.
So, when liberals go off the deep end with outrageous claims
about Republican health care reform legislation or Donald Trump, contrary to
what Chris Cillizza says, it’s nothing new. For every Jade Helm story on the
right, there is an equally outrageous and opposite belief from the other side
of the political spectrum. A major difference between the two is that right-wing
conspiracy theories and “alternative facts” are largely confined to fringe
sites like Infowars and Breitbart while liberal conspiracy theories are often
given serious treatment by mainstream media outlets.
Originally published
on The
Resurgent
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