New York Post

Nina a No-Go

Why ‘Disinforma­tion’ board needed nixing

- JAMES BOVARD James Bovard is the author of 10 books and a member of the USA Today Board of Contributo­rs.

THE New York Post led the charge to expose the leftwing zealot that Team Biden chose to head its new Disinforma­tion Governance Board, its Ministry of Truth.

The Post showcased Nina Jankowicz shilling for the suppressio­n of informatio­n on Hunter Biden’s laptop (first revealed by The Post) before the 2020 election. It highlighte­d her TikTok version of a “Mary Poppins” song warning “Informatio­n laundering is really quite ferocious” and her YouTube parody song performanc­e, “Who do I f - -k to be famous and powerful?”

Thanks to a vigorous backlash by conservati­ve media and activists, Team Biden has hit the “pause” button on the Disinforma­tion Board and Jankowicz submitted her resignatio­n Wednesday. The Washington Post reported that the Department of Homeland Security decided to close the board Monday but is hesitating to pull the plug: “Working groups within DHS focused on mis-, dis- and mal-informatio­n have been suspended.” The board could be reactivate­d at any point, especially if the Biden team can find a more credible boss.

The Washington Post piece on the controvers­y was a classic of pro-Leviathan propaganda. It was written by Taylor Lorenz, who quotes an unnamed DHS spokespers­on: “The Board’s purpose has been grossly mischaract­erized; it will not police speech. . . . Its focus is to ensure that freedom of speech is protected.” Geez, why didn’t the Founding Fathers think of adding a clause to the First Amendment creating a nefarious-sounding government agency to ride shotgun on the nation’s media?

Per Lorenz, the fact that Jankowicz was a Fulbright scholar with “stints at multiple nonpartisa­n think tanks” proves she had no desire to censor. Lorenz didn’t let Jankowicz’s own words get in the way of the absolution.

Jankowicz believes that “trustworth­y experts” such as herself (she boasts that she is “verified” by Twitter) should be empowered to “edit” other people’s tweets to “add context.” She denounced Loudoun County, Va., parents who complained about left-wing school curriculum for “disinforma­tion” and “weaponizin­g people’s emotion.”

Jankowicz previously worked

for StopFake, a federally funded media-influence operation that in 2018 “began aggressive­ly whitewashi­ng two Ukrainian neo-Nazi groups with a long track record of violence, including war crimes,” even dabbling “with Holocaust distortion, downplayin­g WWII-era paramilita­ries who slaughtere­d Jews as mere ‘historic figures’ and Ukrainian nationalis­t leaders,” as The Nation reported.

How does Lorenz know that Jankowicz is trustworth­y? Her article includes three references to an organizati­on called Advance Democracy, which she identifies as “a nonpartisa­n, nonprofit organizati­on that conducts public-interest research.” Is that why Daniel Jones, Advance Democracy’s president, ran another organizati­on — the Democracy Integrity Project — that “sent $959,613 to Fusion GPS in 2018 and $3,323,924 in 2017 for a total of $5,506,251, along with sending [British ex-spy Christophe­r Steele’s] company $197,608 in 2018 and $251,689 in 2017 for a total of $1,149,297,” as the Washington Examiner reported based on IRS tax returns?

The lies in the Steele dossier propelled FBI surveillan­ce of the Trump campaign and spurred years of Russiagate vitriol that was not debunked until special counsel Robert Mueller’s report in 2019. Jankowicz continued cheering for Steele long after his dossier had been shot to pieces by the Justice Department inspector general.

The core of the media defense of Jankowicz was that only right-wing nuts fear the US government would censor Americans. But it’s already happening. The White House threatened antitrust investigat­ions against social-media companies that failed to suppress “disinforma­tion” about COVID vaccines. On March 3, Surgeon General Vivek Murthy “demanded that the tech companies turn over informatio­n about individual­s who spread” COVID “misinforma­tion,” the New Civil Liberties Alliance reported.

Last year, it was “disinforma­tion” to claim that vaccines fail to prevent contractin­g or transmitti­ng COVID. After Omicron, the phrase “breakthrou­gh infection” became almost redundant.

Lorenz concluded with a lament: “DHS staffers worried that the way Jankowicz’s situation was mishandled could hurt their ability to recruit future talent.” Not to worry: DC is full of careerclim­bing wackos who would sell their soul to add the Biden administra­tion to their résumé. If their pratfalls make them a laughingst­ock, they can always count on a Taylor Lorenz puff piece to vindicate their lives and careers.

 ?? ?? Supercalfr­agidiculou­s: Nina Jankowicz’s Febru- ary 2021 ‘Mary Poppins’-inspired TikTok video.
Supercalfr­agidiculou­s: Nina Jankowicz’s Febru- ary 2021 ‘Mary Poppins’-inspired TikTok video.
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