Max Blumenthal at Salon.com declared James O’Keefe to have a “race problem,” which are just code words for being a racist.
Blumenthal’s story was based on allegations which appeared in a blog almost no one had heard of before.
The gist of Blumenthal’s story was a now familiar allegation of someone, in this case O’Keefe, attending a supposed “white supremacist” conference.
Taking it one step further, Blumenthal alleged that O’Keefe manned a table full of racist literature, and used a photo which purported to show O’Keefe doing such.
Since this story fit right into the favorite narrative used to attack conservatives, numerous blogs jumped on the bandwagon. (Memorandum thread in image is here.)
The story turned out not to be true, and the photo was a PhotoShop version in which O’Keefe’s head shot was pasted onto another person’s body. I’ll leave the full take down to Big Journalism, which has refuted the story and now is demanding retractions from those who jumped on the bandwagon:
It would be easy to write this off as just another false allegation of racism. But that would be a mistake, and Big Journalism is doing the right thing in attacking the false allegations.
The “smear by association” is a favorite tactic. The tactic characterizes a conference or person attending a conference as a “white supremacist” or “white nationalist” based on exaggerated or strained reasoning; anyone who attends the conference must, therefore, be a white supremacist.
The tactic, if used against Obama supporters, would take the carrying of a Soviet flag at an Obama victory rally (see photo) and use that photo to claim that every person at the rally was a communist.
I am glad that Big Journalism has the wherewithal to take on these smears. Unfortunately, most people do not have those resources, and the smears stick.
Update: Max Blumenthal, Equal-Opportunity Hater
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