Daily Dispatch

Trump gets duped by conspiracy theorist site

-

SOME of the most incendiary claims made by Donald Trump – both before and after his election – appear to be based on a US website denounced as a purveyor of hoaxes and conspiracy theories.

The president-elect’s unsubstant­iated claim this week that “millions” of people voted illegally in this month’s election had been reported on the infowars.com website, based on a study debunked by the online fact-check group Snopes and others.

It was not the first time Trump had repeated informatio­n reported in infowars, a site operated by radio host Alex Jones, who is known for claims that the 9/11 attacks were faked by the US government.

During the White House campaign, Trump had repeated claims made on infowars that his rival Hillary Clinton was “wearing an earpiece” and that Muslims had celebrated during the September 11 attacks.

Left-leaning media watchdog group Media Matters for America has documented dozens of instances where Trump has recycled claims from Jones and infowars.

Trump has not repeated some of the most outlandish claims on infowars – that aliens from space had landed in Florida or that the mass killing of children at Sandy Hook Elementary School was faked to win support for gun control – but critics say that it would be troubling for the president-elect to rely on the site for informatio­n.

“A lot of what he [Jones] says is just pure nonsense,” said Angelo Carusone of Media Matters.

“What he is presenting is an alternativ­e universe. He is advancing a broader world view that there is a global world government and every day they are going out there to take away your power.”

Infowars has nonetheles­s amassed a significan­t reader base – with about 14.3 million unique global visitors and 75 million views over the past month, according to the web intelligen­ce firm Quantcast.

“Alex Jones is the most prolific and unhinged conspiracy theorist in America,” said Mark Potok, a senior fellow at the Southern Poverty Law Centre, a civil rights group which monitors “hate groups”.

“The fact that our president-elect treats him as if he were a serious thinker and critic is appalling. This is a man who believes, among other things, that the government is responsibl­e for the Oklahoma City bombing.”— AFP

 ??  ?? IN CHARGE: Conspiracy theorist and radio talk show host Alex Jones
IN CHARGE: Conspiracy theorist and radio talk show host Alex Jones

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa