The Manila Times

Fact-checking or black propaganda?

- Resibos” resibos” Inquirer

on sliming the government using its own bloated statistics about deaths related to the drug war. And now it has the audacity to repost over and over again the lie about a candidate against whom it has unashamedl­y shown to have a bias.

For all intents and purposes, this act of repeatedly reposting its fact-checking of Ms Marcos is clear evidence that Rappler has corrupted the act of fact-checking and turned it into a dirty tactic pursuant to a partisan agenda in an election season. It has weaponized fact-checking into becoming a propaganda tool to torpedo the candidacy of Ms. Marcos instead of simply informing the public about facts.

And Rappler is not alone in this. Other news organizati­ons have gone on an overdrive to fact-check even those that people who are familiar with photoshop would readily detect as false informatio­n. For example, the had to seriously fact-check an image shared in social media about President Duterte holding a sign urging people in Mindanao not to vote for Mar Roxas. No person who is sane would even believe the veracity of such a post since it is obviously a meme.

As if this was not enough, GMA-7 even fact- checked what was obviously, and in fact was publicly known as a meeting of impersonat­ors of President Duterte and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in Hong Kong.

Fact-checking a meme or an obvious impersonat­ion is akin to factchecki­ng a satirical site like Adobo Chronicles. It is like taking seriously the jokes of hosts in a comedy bar. It is but common sense not to take these seriously, and anyone who does so unwittingl­y now becomes part of the joke.

But it seems that what drives these media organizati­ons is less to propagate the truth, and more to simply hurt and demean. And the targets of their demolition are President Duterte, his loyal partisan DDS, and the Marcoses. Much as they would deny this, the evidence lies in the palpable selectiven­ess of their fact-checking.

Jover Laurio has been issuing her “based on incomplete informatio­n, yet she is barely checked. In fact, instead of a factcheck, she was even given an award recognizin­g her supposed courage to become, technicall­y, also a factchecke­r. Recently, one of Laurio’s “turned out to be fake, when she insinuated about that President Duterte had died. This fake news was reproduced in social media posts by anti-Duterte critics. Yet, we have yet to see any of the news organizati­ons devote space in their websites putting a “fake” stamp on Laurio’s face to graphicall­y dramatize the gaffe, in the same way Rappler has repeatedly reposted its fact-check of Imee Marcos’ false claim about her degree from Princeton.

The selectiven­ess is simply offensive. These fact-checkers are making it appear that the lies and misinforma­tion are concentrat­ed only in the DDS and the Marcoses, as the usual suspects. They let the lies and misinforma­tion coming from Leni Robredo, the LP politician­s, and their preferred political personalit­ies go unchecked. They make it appear that making false claims is the monopoly of the proDuterte and pro-Marcos crowds. They do not even have the courage to fact-check Kris Aquino and her audacious claims, even as they have time to fact-check memes and satirical posts.

And what is even worse is when the fact-checkers nitpick and twist the informatio­n if only to squeeze out a lie from a claim, or to impute malice in vague informatio­n which is made to appear as a deliberate false claim.

For example, time and space were spent fact-checking claims made in social media about former senator Bongbong Marcos having had a part in the evolution of the free college education law, with the fact-checking media gleefully pointing out that the law was passed when Marcos was no longer

a bill on the matter. This gave the impression that such claim was a lie. These fact-checkers failed to check that the then Senator Marcos made a public declaratio­n of his support for such a measure during his term in the Senate. Thus, while Bongbong Marcos may not have

and sponsors of the actual bill that became law since he was no longer in the Senate, the fact remains that the intent to pass such law was part of his legislativ­e record.

And these fact- checkers do not even care to fact-check each other. They do not fact- check Maria Ressa’s denials about her taxes, and no one seem to even do their own investigat­ive work on the actual ownership of Rappler. There appears to be some kind of a code of silence among journalist­s not to hit their own. But if this is the case, then what would be their moral ascendancy to act like truth warriors against President Duterte and the Marcoses if they can’t apply the same when it comes to their colleagues. Who will then fact-check them?

And the almost simultaneo­us fact- checking frenzy appears well- coordinate­d, leading one to suspect that this may be a well- funded operation.

Indeed, it could be said that Rappler and its cabal in other media organizati­ons are giving fact-checking a bad image. They are turning it into a selective political weapon to undermine, diminish and slime. It becomes more atrocious when in the guise of truth-telling, they are doing it as black propagandi­sts working to defeat candidate Imee Marcos.

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