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How “Fact Checking” Obliterates Truth

Truth is beauty and beauty is truth and it’s really beautiful when you can manipulate the truth to suit your own ends. 

Welcome to the world of PolitiFact – and every other “fact checking” service operating today. 

To begin with, the entire premise of “fact checking” is ludicrous as it is based on the idea that media outlets do not – and do not need to - automatically start from a factual basis for their reporting. 

As an editor once said to me: “Just because someone says something doesn’t mean you have to put it in the paper.” 

If the media followed this one simple rule, there would be no need for “fact checking” at all. 

But the media does not and will not follow this rule because printing lies – as long as they are said by a government official the media likes or about an official they don’t like - is now an integral part of the industry. 

Lies from government officials and lies from non-profit and advocacy groups and non-governmental organizations (who directly pay news outlets for the “coverage” of an issue they are involved in) are all waived through as gospel. And these types of lies – lies they agree with - tend not to get “fact checked” anyway, making the entire process even more dangerously absurd. 

It’s dangerous because a “true” rating is just that: something has been determined to be true and can therefore never be questioned again or something is mostly true so any error can be tied back to an accidental misspeak. And then this “truth” can be spread as 100% grade-A verified fact, no matter whether it actually is or not. It has received an imprimatur from on high and that’s that. 

Problematic truths that are so obviously true are dealt with in a slightly different manner – they are “contexted” into being false. 

The process seems pretty simple: Person outside the power structure says X, person inside the power structure says Y, so therefore X is false. Person inside the power structure says X, person also inside, but lower down and/or “expert,” the power structure says X so therefore X is true. 

In searching through a random assortment of “fact checks,” that process appears to happen time and time again. 

Let’s start with one quick example – Money was set aside in the Biden Infrastructure bill last year to create a system that would enable your car to tell if you’re drunk (without one of those blow tubes) and not let the car start if you were. The concept was immediately criticized as being a government-mandate “kill switch” for every new car after 2035 or thereabout. 

Each of the “fact checking” services quickly and thoroughly said no, no that’s not true, it’s not a “kill switch.” And they quoted auto safety experts saying so. 

Of course, the experts were already in a partnership with the government to develop the technology in question and said that the data collected by the vehicle would “never leave the vehicle” and that the system is not currently envisioned as a law enforcement tool. 

Therefore, the “kill switch” story was false. 

It was false because the legislation doesn’t use that exact term – so what? - it was false because the people developing it said they had no plans to use it that way, - heard that before, it was false because the system would be isolated to each vehicle – impossible: does Tesla send someone to your house when they need to do an update? - and it was false because people who have a financial and political incentive to say it was false said it was false. 

In other words, you can’t call him Bob because it says Robert on the birth certificate. 

The “fact checking” process is itself inherently false because it starts with a conscious, biased choice of which “facts” to check (by the way, we reached out to PolitiFact and its parent non-profit, the Poynter Institute, and neither responded, but there is this on the website and do please ignore the actual true fact that Poynter is a hyper-progressive organization that itself has a track record of politically shading the truth, is a key player in the Censorship-Industrial Complex, and is funded by Facebook, the Newmark Foundation, and the Koch brothers.) 

Let’s say a fact checker decides to look into X which they think at the outset is false, but it turns out to be true. Does it get written up? If it helps certain people, the answer is yes – if it goes against the current thoughtcloud, the answer is no. 

In public relations there is a concept known as “third party validation.” That involves getting a very trusted someone or some group that are seemingly unrelated to whatever project or product you are pitching to say “hey – that’s really good.” The PR team can then say to the public that so and so group that “you’ve known for years - they care for sick puppies remember? - they think it’s neat we want to bury toxic waste next to the elementary school so it has to be a good idea, right?” 

The public trusts the validator so it lets its guard drop, it second guesses itself even if the truth of the matter is plain to see. 

Sometimes the third-party validator is innocent; sometimes – more often than not – they’re getting a little sumthin sumthin on the side like a shiny new building (see: environmental groups staying quiet about wind farms killing whales.) 

In a specific instance, a writer was contacted and asked to prove the main point of a very inconvenient COVID-related article. The writer sent the fact checker all of the backing material – public records, reputable studies, etc. - proving the assertion was true. 

That fact check – on an important subject directly related to public health dangers - never appeared. 

Because they couldn’t dare to call it false – there was a paper trail – and they couldn’t call it a truth because it just didn’t fit. 

And the public wonders how so many in the media can willfully not see the truth staring at them in the face – that’s how it’s done (if you don’t want to lose your job.) 

On a personal note, that particular fact check reminds me of a time when I was mayor of Lake Elsinore, Cal. and asked my City Manager how much the minor league baseball stadium that was built before I was elected cost. He gave me a figure and I noted that didn’t appear to include a certain related property transfer. 

He responded by saying I had previously asked how much the stadium cost, not the stadium project (roads, sewers, land, etc.) in total. The difference was about $14 million dollars. 

Lesson: always ask the right question. But I digress. 

This approach is standard for “fact checkers” as most turn to “experts” who have financial, political, and cultural purchase reasons to say what they say. The “fact checkers” know in advance what the “experts” will say because of who they are and what they do; therefore all you have to do is call the right one that will agree with your desired rating outcome and that’s that. 

And never ever call someone who might say something you may not want to hear. 

And it doesn’t matter how often they have been wrong in the past – see Dr. Peter Hotez and COVID - just stay with them to make sure you get the answer you want (bad reporters do this, too.) 

The COVID-related examples of fact checkers being aggressively, dangerously wrong are too numerous to mention. However, these past three years have revealed a corollary matter: fact checking tends to involve asking a liar if something a connected person said is a lie and declaring it the truth when the second liar says its true and occasionally a few more liars are thrown in the mix to add weight. And it involves asking the same liars to judge an actual truth of something coming from somewhere else or someone outside the “properly thinking” incestuous oppression bubble now floating over the globe. 

It is a vulturous circle. 

The record of the fact checking industry during the pandemic is not only abominable, it made everything much much worse. Everything - and everyone -outside the approved script was vilified, lives were upended, jobs were lost. 

It turned out – of course - that most everything the fact checkers deemed false was in fact true and that everything they deemed true was in fact false. 

Even further, the idea that the "vaccines" were not properly tested and might – just might – not be called for for everyone was treated as being on a par with assertions like “Jews can’t see fuchsia” and “hats were invented in Tunisia in 1743.” 

This leads to the matter of falsehood by association. 

The recent terrible fires in Maui launched many, many absurd claims on to the internet. Laser beams started the fire, Oprah started it to buy land, etc. Other obviously not “facts” checks include Trump said Biden is an extraterrestrial, Hilary Clinton was executed, Michelle talked about Barack being gay, and on and on. This Weekly World News kind of stuff appears often, right alongside serious and debatable topics. 

Recently, GOP presidential candidate Vivek Ramaswamy’s “pants on fire” rating for saying climate policies kill more people than climate change appeared right next to another “pants on fire” saying that, no, the assistant director of FEMA had not been arrested. 

Giving an equal rating to a legitimate political concept and to a typical example of internet malarky makes the origins of both equally untrustworthy in the public’s mind. 

In other words, the intentional point is to make Ramaswamy look just as nuts – and untrustworthy in general - as the people who think Hilary was executed five years ago or that hats were invented in Tunisia in 1743 or that Jews can’t see fuchsia. 

It is somewhat akin to the intellectual destruction wrought by the term “denier.” The word is used to shut down debate and to implicitly tar the “denier” as being like people who deny the Holocaust occurred because that’s where the use – appropriately in that case – of the term originated. 

If you “deny” climate change it’s just as bad as denying the Holocaust; if you’re considered as wrong as a flat earther, you must be wrong about everything. 

For “fact checking” to have any legitimacy whatsoever, it needs to ditch rating the crazies. It also should start each week with releasing a list of 20 items, check each of those, and then write about all of them, true or false. At the very least, the public would know the fact checkers aren’t hiding facts they don’t like. 

Truth is not always beautiful; in fact, it typically is not. It is hard and cold and sterile and unflinching and stares back at you until either you acknowledge it or you become terrified and have to look away. 

Looking at truth, finding truth, speaking truth - all are acts of real courage. 

And the truth is: fact checking is a lie.