Comic Strip of the Day Editorial cartooning

CSotD: Lügenpresse, California Style

Pat Bagley expresses the situation well: As firefighters struggle to control the wildfires in Southern California, the press also struggles with disinformation about those wildfires.

The press wouldn’t be stuck with a mere squirtbottle if the only problem they faced were the normal flow of rumors and misconceptions that plague every major news event.

But in the past, theories about grassy knolls and second shooters were promoted, if not by the obvious crackpots who denied the moon landings or the death of Elvis, at least by marginal figures whose credibility was compromised.

Granted, the government hasn’t always been honest with us. The fanciful tale about the alleged attack on the Turner Joy and the Maddox in the Gulf of Tonkin was an excuse for American troops to actively enter the Vietnam War, while the Bush/Cheney administration lied about weapons of mass destruction to promote their invasion of Iraq.

Perhaps the ease with which people accepted tales of a connection between Iraq and 9/11, and believed in magical disappearing weapons of mass destruction was part of a general slide into misplaced loyalty.

So I suppose we shouldn’t be surprised at semi-official lies about the wildfires, but our divisions over Vietnam were an unintended result of the lies eventually unearthed in the Pentagon Papers.

We’ve now got purposeful lies and accusations in which dividing the American people against each other is not an accidental by-product but the purposefully intended goal, and, as Tom the Dancing Bug suggests, the paper that once unveiled the corruption of Watergate is not fighting the effort:

For those too young to remember, there were major newspapers that went along with the dismissal of Watergate as a “third rate burglary,” even after evidence of payoffs and widespread corruption went far beyond the break-in at Democratic headquarters. And there were people who believed them.

But the oft-forgotten part of both Watergate and the Pentagon Papers was how the New York Times and the Washington Post competed to put the truth in front of the American people.

Meanwhile, the papers that actively backed Nixon’s version of events were not hard to dismiss as, if not crackpots, at least unreliably partisan. As facts emerged, their influence waned.

Nixon famously hated the press, and his speechwriter, Pat Buchanan, came up with clever, insulting phrases for VP Agnew to throw out about “nattering nabobs of negativity” and so forth.

But Nixon let Agnew play the bad-boy role, compiling his enemies list in private.

Trump is under no such restraints, as Michael de Adder depicts it, openly calling the press not just wrong or prejudiced but the enemy of the people, and encouraging his followers to hate and threaten reporters. He even jokes about the shooting of reporters.

It is reminiscent of when the Third Reich weaponized the German term “lugenpresse” — lying press — to strengthen their grip on the Official Truth.

In 1992, I toured the Washington Post with a group of newspaper educators, and they brought us to a conference room with famous WashPo quotes on the wall. I said to myself, “I know one that won’t be there,” but there it was: “Katie Graham’s gonna get her tit caught in a big fat wringer if that’s published.”

Perhaps you had to be there. The Post is now in a new building, Katharine Graham has been dead for two decades and her old newspaper is hemorrhaging both talent and credibility at a prodigious rate. And it’s not alone.

Not only is our new version of Nixon bolder in his willingness to say anything and do anything to gain power, but our new media, as Ella Baron points out, is acting as his collaborators rather than our watchdogs. And it’s not just Zuckerberg and Musk, but the owners of the Post and of the LA Times that have decided to cooperate with, or at least not to oppose, the government.

Juxtaposition of the Day

Kevin Kallaugher — AMS

Steve Kelley — Creators

Dana Summers — Tribune

Note that it’s easy to explain Kallaugher’s cartoon, given the more than 30,000 lies Trump told in his first administration and the transparent lies about water supplies, as well as the childish nicknames, he has hurled at the Democratic governor of California in the midst of a tragedy.

Kelley faces more of a challenge, because what Newsom has said about the fires has been verified, and he has even set up a page to help people wade through the misunderstandings and outright lies being told about the wildfires.

That page even addresses, and dismisses, the false information about delta smelt that Summers capitalizes on: The steps taken to preserve endangered species have been happening somewhere else. California is a large state with many rivers, not all of which flow towards Los Angeles.

Politifact not only backs up Newsom’s defense of water supplies and forest management, but notes that Trump also spread lies about Democratic responses to hurricanes in Puerto Rico and North Carolina.

However, to be fair, he did fly down to Puerto Rico to toss paper towels at hurricane victims.

MeidasTouch Network refutes more MAGA lies, including that the LA Fire Chief is a DEI hire and that the LA fire department budget had been cut, and provides a list of MAGA legislators who voted against fire prevention proposals but are now crying crocodile tears over the fires and blaming Democratic policies.

Meanwhile, Bill Bramhall takes a wider view of the growing tragedy, pointing out that denial of the obvious is not simply dishonest in the present but represents a refusal to make moves on behalf of generations to come.

And Cathy Wilcox suggests that whatever damage is being done by the wildfires, and however many lives are being lost, the real destruction is of truth and facts and a willingness to make appropriate decisions.

There is this, however: As de Adder shows, Canadian water bombers are on the scene, and social media has also been full of pictures of Mexican firefighters who have come to help. So much for xenophobia.

Moreover, Jen Rubin has quit Washpo and set up a superstar Substack to counter the coming flood of lies and the acquiescence of cowardly media.

It’s one example of an emerging samizdat which may get us to the midterms.

At which point, voters will become either firefighters or arsonists.

Your choice.

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Comments 15

    1. I haven’t forgiven the WashPost for firing you, but, given the path they have chosen, you would probably have resigned along with Ann Tenaes and Jennifer Ruben. Who’s next?

      1. Thank you! Honestly, I would have left months earlier than now, but not for any altruistic reasons. The new management was making my life increasingly difficult, even reneging on parts of my contract. When it finally ended, I could breathe again—literally. I started sleeping properly and haven’t stopped since.

        Now, I’m with Canada’s equivalent of The New York Times—The Globe and Mail. I’m happier, earning more, and no longer facing the daily stress of being axed twice or even three times a day. It’s like night and day.

        I feel like I have the best of both worlds: a thriving Substack account and a position at a newspaper that stands firm against undemocratic forces.

  1. So now I have to decide about continuing my subscription to the WashPost. The level of intellectual quality and integrity in the Post keeps sinking lower, day by day.

    The TechBros, in their undiluted arrogance, are shredding US society at a great rate, and the thought that we are inaugurating Trump (Muskrat) on Martin Luther King Day is appalling. At least flags will still be at half-staff in honor of Carter, a man of unimpeachable integrity.

    1. My wife and I are conflicted about this as well. It’s our local paper and I feel it’s important to keep supporting journalists as long as possible. They still have many excellent reporters, and with a new publisher, could revive respect fairly quickly. That said, I’ve been giving money to the Wash City Paper (no longer printed), Arl Now, and the Falls Church News Press to keep them covering local issues, which the Post has largely abandoned.

      1. Mike, same here. The WaPo is a shadow of what it once was, but it still has some local news and the Wednesday food section. It’s a matter of time before we cancel our subscription, though.

    2. Not in Texas. God knows what other “patriots” will follow Greg Abbott’s despicable example.

      1. Didn’t take long. From a /NYT/ article posted this afternoon:

        “Speaker Mike Johnson on Tuesday announced that American flags at the Capitol would be temporarily raised on Monday for President-elect Donald J. Trump’s inauguration, effectively defying a presidential order put in place last month to mourn the death of former President Jimmy Carter.”

    3. Speaker Johnson has ordered Capitol Hill flags raised to full staff for the duration of the swearing in ceremony.

  2. In December, 2021, the “Marshall” fire blew up in Louisville/Superior Colorado in 60-100mph+ winds . 1084 homes and structures were destroyed and I believe 3 deaths resulted. Two sources, 500 yards and an hour apart were found to be the cause, both occurring because of the high wind event. Colorado’s diverse and cooperative communities and government came together and recovery has come quickly to the area, still rebuilding. Lessons learned and new protocols and policies were initiated, but everyone realizes that these extreme circumstances will happen with increased frequency.
    Now insert childish and evil-minded political agendas and we will contrast and compare the two tragedies.

    1. Suggest you insert them and explain how they caused the disaster. I haven’t seen any legitimate examples. And add proof of “evil” intent.

      1. I think he’s referring to the Magas in DC threatening to not help and blaming the local leaders. I also think that such despicable behavior encourages arsonists to continue exacerbating the situation.

  3. An NPR interviewer pointed out that what’s happening currently in California in not a “wildfire” (a fire that starts on wild lands) but rather a “conflagration,” an urban house to house fire spread by extreme winds (think the great Chicago and S.F. fires of 100 years ago).

    It has nothing to do with land management policies and everything to do with whether or not we can control urban fires in the presence of extreme weather.

  4. I wonder if the Washington Post, rapidly descending into mediocrity (thanks, Jeff Bezos), will keep tabs of Trump’s lies in his second term of office.

    I have my doubts.

  5. Pulitzer winner Devin Barrett and a lot of the other top talent have fled the Post for the New York Times. It’s my local and I had a hard time cancelling, but the Ann Telnaes incident put me over the edge. I now subscribe to her substack, the NYT, and Andy Borowitz. Let’s see what happens at the Post in the next few years. I hope I’ll re-subscribe one day and until then The Borowitz Report will help ward off the despair!

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