Hambone wrote:Alex Jones' Infowars web site has nearly 100 links to, or articles from the American Free Press. The American Free Press is run by Willis Carto who also runs the revisionist The Barns Review. The Barnes Review has articles defending and even praising Hitler as well as articles denying the holocaust. While the questioning of facts surrounding the holocaust can certainly be considered reasonable inquiry for legitimate historians, the work of The Barns Review and the American Free Press is questionable at best and appears to me to be nothing other than racist and anti-jewish propaganda.
Do links from the Barnes Review appear at infowars? If the only "link" between the two web sites is Carto, the man, I can see where there would be a problem, but still this is not the same as having web hyperlinks between them.
As far as infowars goes, I don't fully trust Alex Jones' judgement and pronouncements, even if I admire his enthusiasm. OTOH, whatever his web site associations may be, he sometimes has great guests, such as Ray McGovern. (The same is true of Jeff Rense, who carries all kinds of crap, and uses the word "Zionist" to describe groups with agendas that, for the life of me, I can't see what they could possibly have to do with Zion.)
Unfortunately, as 911 is a bit of a fringe area, there typically not a large number of main stream sources one can go to for 911 news and opinion. Likewise, what mainstream source carried Ray McGovern's warnings about a possible false flag attack, designed to precipitate war with Iran?
The new film, "Fabled Enemies" by Jason Bermas, is produced by Alex Jones and thereby connects Jason Bermas to racist and anti-jewish factions.
Alex Jones and Jason Bermas should be called to the mat to answer why they maintain these associations and why, by association, they support these organizations and their ideas.
Do you really believe that Jason Bermas "supports these organizations and their ideas"?
If you answer "yes, by way of association", consider: The NY Times published Judith Miller's crap, which helped paved the way for the deaths of over a million Iraqis. Some people, like Gary Null, have argued that Miller should be brought up on war crimes charges. Gary Null, by the way, has an encyclopedic mind, and has made a particular study of Nazi history. I'm sure that includes their war crimes trials.
Now, if I make a movie with a NY Times news reporter, by such logic I am now 'linked' to an anti-Semitic organization. The Semites, in this case, are Iraqi Arabs. Does that make me an evil person, or somebody that supports the NY Times in all areas, or somebody that supported the specific propaganda efforts which led to the unnecessary deaths of so many innocents in Iraq? Even "by association"?
A similar argument could be applied to the left gatekeeper media, of which I'm not aware of a single one which sponsored serious research into 911. Amy Goodman did some interviews of 911 Truthers, but did she ever authorize money to be spent to track down Mohammed Atta's non-Middle Eastern drug friends?
Since she's (normally) a good journalist, we can't expect her to go to press with information that has not been verified. But if she completely failed to 1) even
try to do so, within the confines of her Democracy Now organization and 2) call other journalists to account about their failure to try, should we now conclude that she is a racist, who doesn't mind Arabs being blamed when there is likely evidence that they were the patsies in a larger nexus of a group involving non-Arabs and non-Muslims?
Should we be sufficiently horrified to not reference anything from Democracy Now? In this case, Democracy Now's sin is more one of omission than commission, but I don't think that distinction is all that important, morally.