WashPost Is Richly Rewarded for False News About
Russia Threat
By Glenn
Greenwald
January
05, 2017 "Information
Clearing House"
-
"The
Intercept"
-
In the
past six weeks, the Washington Post published
two blockbuster stories about the Russian threat
that went viral:
one on how Russia is behind a massive
explosion of “fake news,”
the other on how it invaded the U.S.
electric grid. Both articles were fundamentally
false. Each now bears a humiliating editor’s
note grudgingly acknowledging that the core
claims of the story were fiction: The first note
was posted
a full two weeks later to the top of the
original article; the other was
buried the following day at the bottom.
The second story on the electric grid turned out
to be far worse than I realized when I
wrote about it on Saturday, when it became
clear that there was no “penetration of the U.S.
electricity grid” as the Post had claimed. In
addition to the editor’s note, the
Russia-hacked-our-electric-grid story now has a
full-scale retraction in the form of
a separate article admitting that “the
incident is not linked to any Russian government
effort to target or hack the utility” and there
may not even have been malware at all on this
laptop.
But
while these debacles are embarrassing for the
paper, they are also richly rewarding. That’s
because journalists — including those at the
Post — aggressively hype and promote the
original, sensationalistic false stories,
ensuring that they go viral, generating massive
traffic for the Post (the paper’s executive
editor, Marty Baron,
recently boasted about how profitable the
paper has become).
After
spreading the falsehoods far and wide, raising
fear levels and manipulating U.S. political
discourse in the process (both Russia stories
were
widely hyped on cable news), journalists who
spread the false claims subsequently note the
retraction or corrections only in the most muted
way possible, and often not at all. As a result,
only a tiny fraction of people who were exposed
to the original false story end up learning of
the retractions.
Baron
himself, editorial leader of the Post, is a
perfect case study in this irresponsible tactic.
It was Baron who went to Twitter on the evening
of November 24 to announce the Post’s exposé of
the enormous reach of Russia’s fake news
operation, based on what he heralded as the
findings of “independent researchers.” Baron’s
tweet went all over the place; to date, it has
been re-tweeted more than 3,000 times, including
by many journalists with their own large
followings: