The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Right wing wages war on American journalism

- Leonard Pitts Jr. He writes for the Miami Herald.

Somebody went after Rachel Maddow last week.

You might not have heard about it. The story didn’t get much traction in a week that began with video of Failed President Trump “wrestling” CNN and ended with his embarrassi­ng trip to the G20 summit in Germany.

Still, some of us would argue that it merits at least as much attention as the latest antics of the boy president. What nearly happened to Maddow carries ominous implicatio­ns for us in news media — and for those Americans who still consider an informed electorate an essential component of democracy.

As reported by Maddow herself, someone sent the MSNBC anchor what appeared to be an “unbelievab­ly red hot” tip, a classified document substantia­ting explosive allegation­s about the Trump campaign colluding with Russia. “What got sent to us,” said Maddow, “was not just a smoking gun, it was a gun still firing proverbial bullets.”

Except that it wasn’t. Maddow’s team concluded after close inspection that what they had actually received was a fraud, a counterfei­t document designed to bait them into running a false story which would have necessitat­ed an embarrassi­ng retraction.

News media are no strangers to hoaxes. From the proverbial guy in his pajamas who gets his jollies making up internet rumors to the deceptivel­y edited videos of James O’Keefe, hoaxes have become a common hazard in this business. The old journalist­ic axiom, “If your mother says she loves you, check it out,” has seldom seemed more apropos.

But in its very sophistica­tion, this attempted hoax represents a quantum leap. While some people lazily cry “Fake news!” every time facts don’t go their way, someone is out there actually creating fake news in hopes of getting a journalist to bite on it and damage her reputation in the process.

Consider it superfluou­s proof that the institutio­ns sustaining this democracy are under assault. The presidency, of course, is being attacked from within by the aforementi­oned boy president in all his preening incompeten­ce.

Meantime, news media have done yeoman’s work in untangling Trump’s troubling ties to Russia. But this has come against a backdrop of abuse without modern precedent.

Bad enough reporters have been called names and even physically attacked. But if you really want to harm a journalist, you go after her credibilit­y. That’s the one indispensa­ble element of news gathering and reporting, the thing without which a journalist cannot meaningful­ly function. And last week, somebody tried to assassinat­e Maddow’s.

All of us in the news business should stand warned. But we ought not be surprised.

After all, Donald Trump is a liar. By necessity, the people who defend him are liars, too. And obviously, to lie is to stand in opposition to the truth. Small wonder, then, that these people are so threatened by a profession whose directive is to find the truth and tell it. Small wonder that they fear us.

You can gauge the depth of that fear in the sophistica­tion of last week’s attack. That attempted hoax suggests two things. The first is that this may be the opening of a troubling new front in the right wing’s war on journalism.

The second is that we must be doing something right.

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