New York Times reporter Alan Feuer made the front page Wednesday with his investigation of a former Army colonel who wrongly thinks Donald Trump was robbed of reelection by voting machines in 2020: “Phil Waldron’s Unlikely Role in Pushing Baseless Election Claims.”
The byline would make it a heated expose on a unproven conspiracy theory of conservatives. You see, Alan Feuer once reported more favorably on a convention of 9-11 Truthers and rehashed their crazed convictions the Bush administration had murdered thousands of its own citizens as a pretext for….something. These two stories are a stark example of the double standard.
This is available starting in 2021
A few days after President Biden’s inauguration put to rest one of the most chaotic transitions in U.S. history, a former Army colonel with a background in information warfare appeared on a Christian conservative podcast and offered a detailed account of his monthslong effort to challenge the validity of the 2020 vote count.
Phil Waldron is a former Texas officer who speaks in a friendly Texas accent. They told hosts stories that were almost unimaginable: how a cabal of bad actors, including Chinese Communist officials, international shell companies and the financier George Soros, had quietly conspired to hack into U.S. voting machines in a “globalist/socialist” plot to steal the election.
Normal times would have dismissed a story like this — filled with wild and unsubstantiated claims — as conspiracy theories …..
Compare that with Feuer’s report from June 2006, “500 Conspiracy Buffs Meet to Seek the Truth of 9/11,” which respectfully covered a conference dedicated to the proposition that the Bush administration either knew or was actually instigated the 9-11 attacks that killed over 3,000 Americans. According to the textbox, this conference was:Participants see an American tradition that questions concentrated power..”
Feuer oozed congeniality.
This was also the moment when the “9/11 Truth” movement emerged. A society for scientists and skeptics Many believe that the government was complicit with the terrorist attacks. In chat rooms and colleges. These disbelieversHas been trying to show that 9/11 was an inside job for many years.
No matter what one thinks about the assertion that the state will plan and then execute a scheme for thousands to kill its citizens, There was something about the fact that over 500 people, from Northern California to Italy, gathered at the O’Hare Internationa Hotel near O’Hare International Airport for the weekend.l. It was, in tone, half trade show, half political convention….
Feuer considered these conspiracy theorists to be merely colorful:
Mr. Berger (40) is one of the 9/11 Truthers This group includes: professors, teachers, mother-engineers, fathers, and chain-saw operators. It also contains activists, used book sellers, pizza deliverymen, and college students., a fringe candidate for the United States Senate, and a man with long hair named hummux (pronounced “who-mook”) who lived for fifteen years in a cave.
Feuer even found some polling data to support 9-11 Truthers. Feuer applauded the polls that showed many Republicans believed Trump had stolen the 2020 election.
Even the Truthers might not be the only ones who believe that the truth is not out. A poll released last month by Zogby International found that 42 percent of all Americans believe the 9/11 Commission “concealed or refused to investigate critical evidence” in the attacks….
Today, millions believe Donald Trump was robbed in 2020. Do you think the TimesThey believe it gives their beliefs credence. What would a TimesReporter ever suggested that the “whole truth” hasn’t been revealed regarding the previous election?
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