Ben Smith Tod Kelly Doesn’t Understand How Google Works Know How to Read
UPDATE: Ouch! In a post where I rolled my eyes at someone’s basic research incompetence, I went and totally got my Bens confused. So for the records, I would like to formally apologize to Ben Smith, formally pile on Ben Shapiro, and formally assure everyone that Bens Fold, Kweller, Cartwright and Converted Rice truly had nothing to do with the terrible Breitbart article with made up terrorist sympathize-y groups.
Apologies to the readers as well. And now if you’ll excuse me, I’m off to don my hair shirt.
A few days before he demonstrated how embarrassing little he learned about health insurance after writing about it for four years, Ben Smith apparently reported on Chuck Hagel’s alarming ties with the Muslim extremist group Friends of Hamas.
Last week over at Breitbart, Ben Shapiro reported on Chuck Hagel’s alarming ties with the Muslim extremist group Friends of Hamas.
As you can imagine, this incendiary piece of reporting – based on a thing he heard from this guy – has taken the conservative media machine by storm. The story is being carried by the National Review, Hugh Hewitt with Rand Paul, Fox News, Frank Gaffney, Mike Huckabee and PJ Media, just to name a few.
Mind you, there is one tiny little problem:
The group doesn’t seem to actually exist.
As Dave Weigel notes,
At best, it’s an organization so secret that nobody in government has thought to mention its existence. At worst, it’s as fake as Manti Te’o’s girlfriend. The Treasury Department, which designates sponsors of terror, has done so to many charities tied to Hamas. “Friends of Hamas” is not among them. The State Department doesn’t designate it, either. And a bit less holistically, a Lexis search for the group reveals absolutely nothing.
I’ve been unable to find any Senate staffer who knows where the “Friends” rumor came from, and Dave Reaboi, communications director for the (generally conservative) Center for Security Policy, shared my confusion about the alleged group. “Looking back to the 1990s, there were several groups (some affiliated with Holy Land Foundation, some not) that functioned as fund-raisers,” he said in an email. “I wouldn’t put it past these people to refer to it this way in private, but I doubt highly that they’d actually call a legit group ‘Friends of Hamas.'”
That’s probably why nobody has formed a group by that name, and why, after the Atlantic Council released a list of funders, “Friends of Hamas” was nowhere on it.
A wee, minor story for a Friday afternoon, I know. (Although really, when did we get to the point that major news organizations reporting on made up s**t was a wee, minor story?) But since this story fit so will with the Sailing to Irrelevance stories, and since Smith had already made me hit me head on my desk this week, I decided to run with it anyway.
Yup. I noted on another thread that none of the “Liberal Media” actually did the limited effort to debunk his bit of McCarthyite sleezebaggery. It was guy from Slate who did the work.Report
Slate is generally considered part of the “liberal media” even if a very small part and that they hire Matt Y.Report
Yeah okay…i’ll go with that. But NBC, MSNBC, CNN, WaPo, NYT did squat.Report
Yeah, but Weigel is hardly a liberal.Report
He was a member of the JournoList. That indicates, at least, a certain common mindset.Report
Why is that?Report
Because people of differing ideologies can’t enjoy snarking to each other.Report
*Watches the site vanish in a puff of logic.*Report
Just catching up, this was ******awesome******Report
Ezra explained as much, didn’t he?Report
Well at least this sleazy hit piece on Hagel was out in the open unlike those tricksy liberals with their fancy list servs.Report
Ezra said
As folks know, there are a couple of rules for J List membership. One is that you can’t be working for the government. Another is that you’re center to left of center,
Not “liberal”.Report
Fair enough.
Were any of Weigel’s emails made public by anybody? If so, were the comments he was found to be making on the J-list of the “center” variety or the “left of center” variety or were they generally wonky “everybody agrees with this sort of thing!” variety?Report
Relevance???Report
Remember when Nob said “Yeah, but Weigel is hardly a liberal.”?
Good times.Report
He’s not. His public writings show that. Are you asking if he’s secretly a liberal but reveals himself only on private mailing lists?Report
Now, I *WILL* say that Weigel’s bias has nothing, nothing at all, to do with the merits of the story he wrote nor with the lack of merit of the story he’s critiquing.
He’s doing work that the other parts of the media *OUGHT* to be doing. More power to him.
I remain irritated at them what were JournoListers, however, and the argument that Weigel ain’t a Liberal brought that bubbling back up.Report
Mike, I’m more saying that what you say when you think you aren’t being heard in public is probably more representative of who you really are than what you say when you know you are.
I’m sure that you don’t need my help coming up with examples of people saying one thing in public and another in private and that demonstrating a great deal about who they really are, deep down.Report
Weigel got in trouble for saying vicious things on JournoList about guys like Limbaugh and Drudge. I don’t think that’s in any way at odds with his self-description of “libertarian with left-leaning tendencies”. Of course, I don’t think that would be at odds with “journalist of any stripe who really cares about what’s happened to journalism”.Report
Dude, really?
Here’s Pareen’s great summary of the Weigel incident.
http://www.salon.com/2010/06/25/david_weigel_resigns/
If Weigel counts as liberal, then I would imagine Jason and Jaybird do, too.Report
What exactly is your beef with JournoList? Should JournoList have not existed? Why?Report
I mean, on the outside chance there was ever once a listserve group of conservative journalists who talked to each other about politics and policy and other journalisty stuff, I honestly don’t know how I would go about starting to figure out how to object to that.Report
“If Weigel counts as liberal, then I would imagine Jason and Jaybird do, too.”
I am pretty sure that neither Jason nor Jaybird would particularly oppose being called “Liberal” though they would want to put some finer points on it.
My irritation at Journolist have to do with the suspicions that the journalists were co-ordinating messages in order to push a somewhat common ideology and fight against a somewhat common adversary. You know how you see “Fox News” as different from the NBC/ABC/CBS Nightly News? (Well, do you see how *SOMEONE* might?)
Well, if Journolist was going to be used to co-ordinate messages in order to push a particular policy, it’d indicate that they aren’t that different after all.
Now, I do not object to Fox News at all. I just try not to have any illusions about what it’s attempting to do.Report
“I am pretty sure that neither Jason nor Jaybird would particularly oppose being called “Liberal” though they would want to put some finer points on it.”
If this is true in both cases, or even just one, let me express my great excitement that it is the case!Report
I’m sure one of the finer points would be “now, I’m not *PROGRESSIVE*…”Report
A few things.
First, let’s set Fox to one side. They’re kind of unique. Let’s compare apples to apples, approximately: say, National Review and The American Prospect (which is, after all, I believe, the common origin for a number of JournoList members). I would have no problem equating those two publications. And indeed, I don’t believe the members of JournoList were ever pretending to be anything other than what you’d expect to be current or past fellows at The American Prospect to be. So in that sense, it’s not clear that there was trrickeration going on.
After their American Prospect/National Review phases, I believe it is the case that journalists frequently go on to better-paying gigs at the mainstream outfits you mention. I’m not sure what organizations were represented contemporaneously on the JournoList roster, but let’s assume that at least some mebers had made the major-outlet leap while it was still active. I can understand not liking this behavior to continue past that point, but only in the sense that I force myself to “understand” viewpoints I still think are wrong. Do we think that writers who previously were successfull at places like the National Review or The American Prospect simply take of the stripes when they get big gigs at more major outlets? If we do, I don’t understand why. Journalists get to have political viewpoints, don’t they? Indeed, they get to allow those viewpoints to color what stories they choose to write and how they write them. Why? because ultimately the results are transparent: we can all judge what eventually gets written and observe whatever bias occurs. And no one thinks that all newspaper writing eschews a political viewpoint, do they? Perhaps the absolute straight-news reporters work ostensibly does. Did JournoList members get those jobs, or did they mostly to end up in positions more or less identified as news-with-a-view-type columns – a la Ezra Klein. No one can read Ezra Klein today and come away thinking that he’s nto overtly saying “This is my policy preference; here’s why I have it; think what you want.”
So the question becomes, should journalists like this not communicate with each other about these views and exchange ideas for how to advance social change they favor like normal citizens – or, should they not do it using a tool like a listserve? I can’t tell you shouldn’t think they shouldn’t, but when for the most part their writing product is more or less already explicitly labeled as them telling the public exactly what those preferences are directly, I don’t see the reason for them not to be communicating with each other about those preferences. Nothing about doing that takes away our ability to judge for ourselves whether they give the policy cases for opposing preferences to their unduly short shrift in their work.
I’m not clear what the basic professional expectation they are failing to live up to by communicating in this way with (more or less) like-minded journalists is. Fundamentally, how is what they are doing different from what jason does when he coordinates with other libertarians about how best to advance the (a) libertarian position on some given issue, unless perhaps some member of JournoList was a straight-news reporter while actively participating in the listserve? For the most part, these people’s work has always been more or less clearly identified in a way that is similar to how Jason’s wok is: policy analysis and even advocacy from a more-or-less clearly identifiable political viewpoint. Such work can very clearly exist under the umbrella of an organization that claims a broader neutrality (viz. Krugman at NYT or Jennifer Rubin at WaPo).Report
Absolutely. My pet project here is to effect a realization that damn near all of us are liberals, and not just in a “if I’m liberal, then you definitely can’t be liberal where liberal has the same definition for both of us” kind of way, i.e., meaning not just where someone says, “Sure, I’m a liberal, but only if liberal is defined as classical liberal, which based on your stated views most definitely excludes you,” but in a much broader way, that, I ultimately hope people accept is the right understanding of the term in the American context. This would be a meaning of “liberal” that allows for a ton of disagreement among its adherents about all different kinds of things, but that entails a common acceptance of a certain basic core beliefs about the relationship between the state and the people in a society.
This project most definitely does not to try to say that we’re all progressives, for, within the above version of an inclusive American liberalism, the label of “progressive,” in addition to other specific identifiers, would serve as primary means of distinguishing between more specific belief sets that fit (more or less comfortably) within that broader “liberal” umbrella.
So, unless the finer points are such that they are defined where absolutely unmistakably you and I cannot both be included in the sense in which you say you’re okay being called, then yeah, I’m definitely happy to hear that. (But really even if it is defined that way, I’m still happy with it, because it would still be a development that brings that vision of understanding liberalism closer to reality here. In other words, whatever you mean by it, I think the fact that you’re going out of your way to say it is something I can work with. At least it’s not, like, the last thing you’d ever be willing to say about yourself. I can potentially be flexible enough on my end to make this a positive development from the perspective I lay out above, depending on what you might have to say in response.)Report
I mean, on the outside chance there was ever once a listserve group of conservative journalists who talked to each other about politics and policy and other journalisty stuff, I honestly don’t know how I would go about starting to figure out how to object to that.
That’s essentially how right wing hate radio came into being, though. Most of these guys’ “show prep” amounts to cribbing from 3-4 of the big names’ daily newsletters.Report
well, he is into prog rock.Report
By the New Republic did you mean that National Review?Report
DAMNIT!!!
I mean, thanks.Report
Yeah…in fairness to TNR, after Peretz was shown the door, they’ve actually turned a relatively new leaf.Report
About which Peretz is not happy.Report
I feel almost guilty about being so gleeful reading that.Report
Your link is to a piece by Ben Shapiro (a Breitbart staffer), not Ben Smith.Report
Apparently, the Brietbart site is living up to the mission of its deceased creator– destroy all liberals even if you have to lie to do so. Facts be damned. I’m sure Brietbart is looking out from his perch in hell smiling proudly.Report
You know all the ridiculously paranoid fantasies about the Right Wing Noise Machine, how its entire purpose is to invent lies and distortions, turn them into talking points, and then have every single member repeat those same talking points endlessly?
They’re true.Report
Much as I loathe Ben Smith’s quasi-stenography, Mike is right and this is a piece by Ben Shapiro, who is an even more loathesome brand of propagandist.Report
Yeah, I’m not a huge Ben Smith fan, but I thought he was above this sort of stuff.Report
Yeah. I’m pretty red faced about that.Report
Everybody who blogs long enough does a faceplant.
It’s how you respond to the faceplant that says whether or not you’re worth reading.
You’re still worth reading, T-bone.Report
Dear Senator Cruz and Mr. Shapiro
Joe McCarthy called, he’d like to have his schtick back.Report
I’m confused. The Ben Smith link doesn’t even mention the word “Hamas”, so who is the original source for this?
I’d also note that “friends of Hamas” is much more likely to be a notation next to a group’s name than the name of a group, much like “friends of the Koch brothers” or “affiliates of the Muslim Brotherhood” would be scribbled next to an organizational name to clarify what the organization is or where its loyalties lie.Report
Other than the last sentence in the first paragraph, which concludes
one of the names listed is a group purportedly called “Friends of Hamas.”Report
And there’s the rub. The original source of the story is reporting what he was told. That sentence has two different readings, depending on who is doing the calling in the “is called” phrase, and how capitalization and quote signs were spoken verbally to the reporter.
If the group was really called “Friends of Hamas” then the sentence could simply read “One of the names is ‘Friends of Hamas’.”
If that’s not meant to be the name of the group then the sentence would be clearer as “One of the names listed is a group said to be friends of Hamas,” or even “One of the names listed is a group purportedly called friends of Hamas,” where the “called” refers to our own government, our intelligence agencies, or some other Senators, not the Arab group itself.
Given that the last version of the sentence, when spoken, is the same as the version being derided, I’d suggest sitting on the story until something more comes out. This could be a case of madly Googling a turn of phrase instead of an actual name.Report
If you’re saying that Shapiro shouldn’t have “reported” something he couldn’t possibly verify, we’re in complete agreement. And if you’re saying further that the right-wing sites who couldn’t wait to link to it should have tried to verify it first, we’re still in complete agreement. But you deal with the right-wing noise machine you have, not the one you might want or wish to have after hell freezes over.Report
You know it seems to me they give these terrorist sympathizers now-a-days very peculiar names, like the first one, Who, are friends of Hamas.
The first one are named “Friends of Hamas”.
“Who.”
I mean the group’s name.
“Who”.
&etc.Report
who’s exploded first?Report
I think you’ve got it.
It’s far more likely that he infered a capitol F and wrote it up that way, than that someone made up an entirely new terrorist group with a bizarrely peculiar name knowing that the full story would probably land within the week. It also seems likely that the original source was not naming names, just hinting at what was about to be discovered, in which case it would actually be unlikely that they’d go ahead and name the name of the organization instead of describing its associations.
Once a reporter puts it in print, everyone else is free to run with it. I don’t know of many bloggers or journalists who wait to verify a press story that was based on a leak, since they can’t gain direct access to the leaker. Instead they run with it and hurl questions at the unfortunate politicians caught up in the mistake.
If my theory is right, then Ben Shapiro’s screw up was probably misunderstanding what was being said or implied, and then not double checking to see if the organization he assumed existed did in fact exist. The bloggers screw up was also not checking to see if such an organization existed, and whether “Friends of Hamas” was more likely to be a description or a slur than the name of a registered charity or a non-profit corporation. The left-wing screw up was reflexively forming a circular firing squad around a bizarre McCarthyite conspiracy theory instead of wondering if maybe Shapiro simply misunderstood whether his source was annunciating a capital F or a small f, and whether perhaps Hagel really has been taking money from a group that’s friends with Hamas, which isn’t the least bit unlikely depending on how widely you want to stretch the term “friend.”Report
Oh please. He’s a writer for Brietbart.com. These people are known for pulling stuff out of their asses if they think it will reflect badly on some political enemy. I doubt Shapiro’s motives were pure. These guys are McCarthyites.Report
Wasnt that the site that was had an entire “sting” planned around a boat full of dildos?Report
No, that was the site full of dildos that was had an entire “sting” planned around a boat.Report
Awesome.Report
And you were so cose to making sense.
Pointing out that so much of right-wing punditry is pushing a baseless smear is not a screw-up. It’s a fact.Report
Plus One Fishing Infinity for the Ben Kweller reference. I saw him in DC about 10 years ago opening for Jeff Tweedy. It was a great show.Report
How can you not love a man who pens the line, “Sex reminds her of eating spaghetti?”Report
that was a solid apology/re-edit there, mr. kelly.Report
Okay, so they don’t exist. But maybe the unnamed source actually said Frenemies of Hamas? It could be confusing because they’d look like a Hamas supporting group, but perhaps they make cutting comments that undermine Hamas’s self-esteem. They could be on our side. I’m just saying let’s not rule anything out.Report
I tried to watch Friends of Hamas, but it got too depressing after “The One Where They Send a Suicide Bomber Into Central Perk”.Report
I always knew Gunther was wound way too tight.Report
By the way, this same Ben Shapiro is scheduled to give the keynote speech at the next GOP Republican convention (replacing Karl Rove). We wish them all godspeed on their headlong dash to irrelevance.Report