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by garanduss
3429 days ago
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>Then, deploying the rhetorical jujitsu Frank Luntz was so successful at popularizing on the right, Trump co-opted the term. "Fake news" wasn't webspam sites filled with literal manufactured news having no connection to reality or for that matter physics, but instead any news a partisan disagreed with. No, the foodfight started when two things happened. Liberal pundits began blowing fake news' impact out of proportion and suggesting that it swung the election. They also began casting it as a characteristically conservative problem and put legitimate right-wing news outlets like Breitbart on lists of fake news sites. We right-wingers then began using the term tongue-in-cheek and people got all worked up thinking it was some kind of propaganda technique. It's just lighthearted needling/trolling. Remember that right before "election hacking" became the only election topic discussed among Clinton supporters, it was "fake news". |
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If you care to check (you can just take my word for it), I've been pushing back on the idea that Breitbart is fakenews, from the jump.
I find Breitbart abhorrent, though. My conservative friends are sheepish about it. Do you get much value out of it? Could you explain it to me? I'm not a conservative, but I respect a lot of conservative ideology (Hayekian bottom-up economical thought, strong emphasis on the private sector, maintenance of the Pax Americana, &c). Am I crazy to think that Breitbart is a parody of serious conservative thinking?