WaPo After Free Republic Again, Now Over Barack-is-a-Muslim Email

The Washington Post published a June 28th piece geared to protect Barack Obama from the nagging rumors that he is a secret Muslim, rumors that have been circulating since 2004. The Post's Matthew Mosk penned an attack on Free Republic, based on an Obama flak who claims she has somehow discovered that Freepers are to blame, if not initially responsible, for floating the Barack-is-a-Muslim chain email that so many millions of Americans have found in their email boxes over the last four years. But, the Washington Post's article is so filled with assumptions and a singular desire not to really investigate the matter that it boggles the mind. Naturally, all the journalistic missteps serve to shield Barack Obama from any controversy and make all opposition seem nefarious or unhinged.

The Obama flak in question is one Danielle Allen of the Institute of Advanced Studies at Princeton. Mosk wishes to assure us that she is one smart cookie, apparently. To settle any question to the contrary, we are treated to some earnest, if over-the-top, adulation for good Doctor Allen. Allen is called a "razor-sharp, 36-year-old political theorist," that she's "gained valuable insight into the way political information circulates," and that she works at the institute "most famous for having been the research home of Albert Einstein." Mosk tells us that Allen "boasts two doctorates, one in classics from Cambridge University and the other in government from Harvard University." The Post tells us that one winter morning Allen was "studying in her office at the Institute for Advanced Study, the renowned haven for some of the nation's most brilliant minds." Mosk also tells us that Allen "works alongside groundbreaking physicists, mathematicians and social scientists. They don't have to teach, and they face no quotas on what they publish. Their only mandate is to work in the tradition of Einstein, wrestling with the most vexing problems in the universe."

Jeeze, next Mosk will be telling us that Danielle Allen is the virtual reincarnation of Einstein himself!

Byron York saw how silly all this puffery was, too. Over at NRO's Corner Blog, York takes a jab at those vaunted “vexing problems in the universe” and succinctly sums up the big nothing that is the real underlying conclusion of the Washington Post's extensive four-page story.

And one of the most vexing problems in the universe, which Allen has decided to pursue in the tradition of Einstein, is the origin of a number of e-mails claiming that Barack Obama is a Muslim. Using the advanced research tools at her disposal, the razor-sharp Allen found…a couple of posters on the Free Republic website, plus a former political rival of Obama's who sends out zillions of e-mails to reporters every day.

The piece goes on and on in grave tones about the chain email that seems to have first surfaced sometime in 2004. Allen "obsessively" worries about such things as chain emails we come to discover. Allen tells the Post, "I started thinking, 'How does one stop it?'" She then informs Mosk that the whole mysterious, shadowy email has a nefarious and unidentified genesis. Mosk assures us that this email is the "modern version of a whisper campaign," and worries about the "secret identities" of the Freepers that Allen reveals to him.

We are dealt the conclusion that all this email and Freeper stuff is… well, dontcha know it's scary, kids? I wondered if Mosk wanted his Mommy to keep the nasty Freepers away from him by the end of this curious piece?

So, what about this email saying that Obama is a secret Muslim? Where did it come from? Matthew Mosk doesn't know and neither does his main source, the brilliant Doctor Allen. But they are both sure it has something to do with the website Free Republic. Or maybe a perennial candidate from Illinois named Andy Martin... or a guy in Philadelphia who operates a website and posts on Free Republic... or maybe not. But whatever the case, Matthew Mosk of the Washington Post just took the word of open Obama supporter Danielle Allen as gospel, assuming that her "research" was indisputable.

Allen began her "investigation" by using key phrases that appears in the email and Googling them to see where else they appear. As a result, she found Andy Martin of Illinois.

Back in 2004 in Obama's hometown, Chicago, a fellow named Andy Martin was attempting to launch his own attempt to become Obama's opponent for the Senate. Martin is a political gadfly and perpetual candidate in Illinois who has never been elected to much of anything, the sort of guy who has been hanging on the fringes for decades without ever getting much traction. To be sure, he was an actual candidate in the last primary to determine who will be the poor GOP sacrificial lamb to face Dick Durbin in the coming general election, so he did get on a ballot for a change. One thing is for sure, that Martin is tenacious and knows how to publicize himself is beyond doubt.

In the run up to the 2004 election, Martin admitted to the Post's Mosk that he had circulated the claim that since Obama was born to a Muslim Father, Barack himself would be considered a Muslim by birth to any other Muslim. Martin also pointed out that the Obama campaign then, as now, rejects any claims that Barack is now or ever has been a Muslim. Martin was quite upfront that he believes that Obama is not being truthful over the whole Muslim question.

But, it is also completely obvious that Martin did not write the original email nor that he is a member of a secret anti-Obama conspiracy. Martin’s activities are well known to many and are completely out in the open.

On top of all that, there is no indication that Doctor Allen ever contacted Andy Martin during her "investigation."

Next Allen found some similarities in the posting of Andrew Walden, founder of an alternative newspaper in Hawaii. Then it was on to one Ted Samply. Allen informs Mosk that she saw an "important pattern" with each of these sources, too. The same info appeared on Free Republic almost immediately after the web articles appeared.

From here we get the ominous revelation that about "23 Freepers" were "among those engaging in regular discussions about Obama's religion." Freepers Beckwith and Eva are focused upon as chief culprits. Allen tells Mosk that she has "identified" the key phrases of the Barack-is-a-Muslim story in these Free Republic postings. Mosk "outs" these two Freepers giving their names and places of residence and highlight how they post under "secret" names on Free Republic.

Yes, it's all so nefarious.

So, what is the conclusion of all this "investigating"?

"What I've come to realize is, the labor of generating an e-mail smear is divided and distributed amongst parties whose identities are secret even to each other," she says. A first group of people published articles that created the basis for the attack. A second group recirculated the claims from those articles without ever having been asked to do so. "No one coordinates the roles," Allen said. Instead the participants swim toward their goal like a school of fish -- moving on their own, but also in unison.

In other words, even this Obama flak is unwittingly admitting that there really is no grand conspiracy here and that this rumor, like all rumors in every area of human interaction, was started somewhere -- no one knows where -- and then took on a life of its own as people of like mind came to the story entirely on their own.

In other words, for all the supposed "investigating" there is no secret, shadowy group pulling the strings as this entire piece tries to make the reader believe there is. So, what IS the point to this article? Byron York thinks the subtext is that the Post and the Obama supporter might be trying to promulgate the idea that the Internet needs to be "controlled," presumably by government.

But the article has a pretty clear subtext, and it is that the exchange of such information on the Internet should be controlled. "I started thinking, 'How does one stop it?'" Allen told the Post. "Citizens and political scientists must face the fact that the Internet has enabled a new form of political organization that is just as influential on local and national elections as unions and political action committees…This kind of misinformation campaign short-circuits judgment. It also aggressively disregards the fundamental principle of free societies that one be able to debate one's accusers."

Personally, I think it is less the Washington Post, writer Mosk and Obama supporter Allen suggesting that there needs to be some sort of control on the Internet than that they are suggesting that any opposition to Obama is only made by what they consider to be fringe political candidates, conspiracy nuts, and Freeper nutcases. I think the purpose is to discredit Obama's detractors far more than to attempt a silencing of the Internet.

Still, there is another aspect to this story that impugns Matthew Mosk's journalistic integrity. He seems to have done little real investigating himself and merely took the word of our purportedly purely motivated Dr. Allen. Worse, Allen's "investigation" seems to consist of a bunch of print outs from webpages she tracked down and little else.

For instance, Freeper Beckwith posted a response to the Washington Post story at his The Obama File web page, and he informs us that Danielle Allen never contacted him during her so-called investigation.

The first thing I have to say about "An Attack That Came Out of the Ether," published by The Washington Post on June 28th, is that at NO time was I ever contacted by this woman, Danielle Allen. I spoke to two male Post reporters, who spoke to me over the phone for a period of months. The first contact was in the fall of 2007. They told me they were trying to track down the source of emails they considered negative to the Obamamessiah.

How much "investigating" could Allen have done if she never even actually talked to and interviewed the people she claims are at fault for this whisper campaign against Obama? It looks increasingly like all she did was Google stuff, use a printer and let it go at that. Voila… “proof” of her “investigation.”

The story also seems to have some misconceptions that result from Mosk merely taking Allen’s word as gold or not doing enough fact checking. One falsehood that Mosk hands us shows that Mosk didn't seem to do much by way of fact checking. "Beckwith said he built a Web site that features hundreds of pages of material intended to undermine Obama," Mosk wrote. Turns out that Beckwith only has 18 pages of web material at his Obama Files website.

18. That's a tad less than "hundreds."

Mosk also repeats the claim that Beckwith had an "unnamed 'colleague' in Europe" as if Beckwith had some secret source for some of his anti-Obama claims. But, according to Beckwith, there is no "unnamed" to it because the "colleague" is fellow Freeper ExpatGuy who runs a website called An American Expat in Southeast Asia. Not very secret, that.

What I am pointing out here is that Danielle Allen and the Washington Post is building a case of some underlying conspiracy with "secret" names and "unnamed" sources, but in reality it's all pretty easy to discover the who, what, and where of the anti-Obama blogosphere. It's all readily available right out in the open on the Internet for all to see.

In other words, it ain't very secret.

It is also sad that if Beckwith is telling the truth when he said that the Post contacted him way back in 2007 about this story and THIS is all they could come up with after all that time then there is no hope for the Post at this point.

So, what we can take away from this is that the Post and Allen are all up in arms about this darn rumor mongering, I guess? Of course, it all makes one wonder how upset they were at their own paper, the Washington Post, when the rumor mill was buzzing and the Post was printing stories about the rumored cocaine use of George W. Bush back in 1999? Or how about the fake-but-true story of Bush's supposed AWOL status from the Texas Air National Guard? Bet neither Mosk nor Allen were much worried about THOSE rumors being bandied about, eh?

Naturally, as is his penchant for dirt slinging, the redoubtable Andy Martin is positing that if Danielle Allen is using her tax exempt facilities to do Barack Obama's dirty work she might be breaking the law. Martin is also alarmed by the possibility that writer Mosk was "steered" to Allen by the Obama campaign in a back door effort to defame Martin and to further promulgate lies about Barack’s Muslim past.

And what of Allen's real association with the Obama campaign, anyway? For one thing, Beckwith helpfully tracked down the fact that Allen donated $2,700 to the Obama campaign. And, it seems to me that Allen is a bit less of a mere "Obama supporter" as Mosk says in his piece and a bit more of an active player in his campaign, at least tangentially. Allen is a bit higher up the food chain than simple "supporter" as her April 6 Philly Inquirer pro-Obama editorial proves. Ties to Obama’s campaign might be even closer, but who knows?

Finally, perhaps Byron York isn't too far off the mark when he says that the "subtext" of the piece is that the Internet needs to be controlled. Take a look at one of the last paragraphs of this exhaustive piece.

"Citizens and political scientists must face the fact that the Internet has enabled a new form of political organization that is just as influential on local and national elections as unions and political action committees," she says. "This kind of misinformation campaign short-circuits judgment. It also aggressively disregards the fundamental principle of free societies that one be able to debate one's accusers."

Who doesn't know that those "unions and political action committees" of which Allen speaks are entities regulated by the Federal government? Who could easily miss that Allen must think that the Federal government should regulate political free speech on the Internet just as it does the political actions of PACS and unions? Allen seems overly worried about the "secret" identities of Freepers, but curiously hasn’t seemed to have become alarmed about a similar situation at the Democratic Underground website or the Daily Kos which also routinely allows users to use kitchy screen names instead of their real identities.

So, York could be right. Perhaps Allen does think we should outlaw anonymous free political speech? At least where it concerns the speech at Free Republic and other conservative sites, Allen seems to be saying.

Do we have to point out that one of the most important American political documents ever published was written under the pen name Publius? In fact, it was decades before it was generally known that James Madison, Alexander Hamilton and John Jay were responsible for writing the Federalist Papers. Even more to the point, the three authors were so secretive that there is still some debate as to which of the three wrote some of the papers.

It all begs the question: in the minds of the Washington Post and the Obama campaign is anonymous political writing good for the Founders but to be forbidden to us now?

Maybe one bit of "change" the Obama campaign wants is to outlaw political opposition ala Mugabe or Chavez? That would be "change," indeed.

(Photo credit: Princeton University)

Be sure and Visit my Home blog Publius' Forum. It's what's happening NOW!

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King George III has dispatched me

to ascertain the identity of anomymous pampleteers in the American colonies responsible for speading vile, untrue rumors about His excellency the King. Upon finding the true names of these malcontents I shall have their names and addresses published in the royal newspaper so that my loyalist allies can ensure they are intimidated from publishing this tripe ever again.  

The unexamined question of Barack Obama's real roots

A month ago, the press ran with the Obama's 'fightthesmears' website, pushing the Obama press release as a 'news story'. The subtext, that any criticism of Obama was illegitimate and wrong, was clear, and made clearer when Obama himself paired critiques of his inexperience with racism. Now we have a further attempt to in effect demonize the right as an 'innoculation' on the expected "Swiftboat" attack. By "Swiftboat"  they mean when a right-wing source 'smears' them, ie, outs the liberal Democrat candidate for faking his biography. The worst crime you can commit is apparently the crime of undermining a liberal's campaign narrative.

There is no secret conspiracy to push the question of Obama's whitewashed bio, it's out in the open:

http://www.spectator.co.uk/melaniephillips/765631/obama-and-the-giant-bl...

All Allen had to do was look up Barack Obama's first autobiography, and you'd find the *REAL* source of the Obama-Muslim links. His Muslim father, muslim step-father, muslim half-brother, muslim step-sister, his account of making faces during Koranic studies as a child growing up in Indonesia.  You can then see the trajectory through this Nick Kristoff piece:

"He once got in trouble for making faces during Koran study classes in his elementary school, but a president is less likely to stereotype Muslims as fanatics — and more likely to be aware of their nationalism — if he once studied the Koran with them. Mr. Obama recalled the opening lines of the Arabic call to prayer, reciting them with a first-rate accent. In a remark that seemed delightfully uncalculated (it’ll give Alabama voters heart attacks), Mr. Obama described the call to prayer as ‘one of the prettiest sounds on Earth at sunset.’ " - Nick Kristoff

(dont ask how Kristoff got be a frist-rate evaluator of Arabic accents; it sounds like he gate Obama a big wet kiss for the sophisticated white liberal looking for Mr International; now he's got to get those mainstreet USA votes, this will be quietly snuffed out.)

http://www.spectator.co.uk/melaniephillips/771896/princess-obama-derange...

Melanie Phillips could have been interviewed. Daniel Pipes could have been quoted.

They could remind you that - according to muslims, if you say the call to prayer, you *are* a muslim. It's like a man reciting the Nicene creed or the Lord's prayer. It makes you go, hmmmm.

Especially when Obama has also said: "I've always been a Christian" yet his own bio shows no Christian affiliation (his white mother was a leftist secular type) until he was 30 years old and got hooked on Rev Wright's Black Liberation fulminations (hardly orthodox Christianity, and from a good friend of Farrakhan no less).

Now Barack Obama is not a Muslim. He is not, even though he ancestry is such and his blood relatives on his fathers side are. Just as the issue in John Kerry's case was not "did he serve with honor in Vitenam?"  but more about how Kerry used one narrative way back when as a war protester and a wholly different narrative in 2004, so too is Obama doing the same. Black Liberation African-roots soul-searching in "Dreams of My father" has been white-washed into ads that tout his "Typical White Person" grandmother's influence and "Kansas values" and deny the Muslim roots.

As Melanie Phillips says: "The issue is NOT Obama’s religion, now or in the past. It is the many questions which need to be answered about a) why he has sought to conceal his early background; b) why he has so many indirect associations with radical Islamism; and c) whether these two questions are in some way related."

We have a man who grew up in Hawaii and Indonesia, yet has a vague and dishonest ad that speaks of growing up with Kansas values. None of the current campaign Obama comes through in the "Dreams of My Father" Obama of 1995. Obama's own autobiography is a different story:

From Dreams Of My Father, “NEVER EMULATE THE WHITE MEN and brown men whose fates didn’t speak to my own. IT WAS INTO MY FATHER’S IMAGE, THE BLACK MAN, SON OF AFRICA, THAT I’D PACKED ALL THE ATTRIBUTES I SOUGHT IN MYSELF”.

From Dreams Of My Father:
“THAT HATE HADN’T GONE AWAY,” he wrote, BLAMING “WHITE PEOPLE— some cruel, some IGNORANT, sometimes a single face, sometimes just a faceless image of a system claiming power over our lives.”

From Dreams Of My Father;
“There were enough of us on campus to constitute a tribe, and when it came to hanging out many of us chose to function like a tribe, staying close together, traveling in packs,” he wrote. “IT REMAINED NECESSARY TO PROVE WHICH SIDE YOU WERE ON, TO SHOW YOUR LOYALTY TO THE BLACK MASSES, TO STRIKE OUT, AND NAME NAMES. “
From Dreams of My Father, “ I FOUND A SOLACE IN NURSING A PERVASIVE SENSE OF GRIEVANCE AND ANIMOSITY AGAINST MY MOTHER’S RACE”.

From ‘Dreams of my Father’, “THE EMOTION BETWEEN THE RACES COULD NEVER BE PURE...THE OTHER RACE WOULD ALWAYS REMAIN JUST THAT; MENACING, ALIEN AND APART.”

Quote from Barack Obama’s book, Dreams Of My Father:
“THE PERSON WHO MADE ME PROUDEST OF ALL, though, was [HALF BROTHER ] ROY .. HE CONVERTED TO ISLAM” .

In that book, Barack Obama found his identity in his own father: A Socialist economist in the Kenyatta govt, a member of the Kenyan elite who was also a Muslim and polygamist. There is no discernable trace of Christian upbringing.

All that the Free Republic internet poster did was to recite these above particulars, and do it  sooner than anyone else did. "Expat Guy", a blogger out of Indonesia, added some additional flavor by bringing up some quote from friends of "Barry Sotero" (his name back then) to fill in the gaps.Really, Allen and the Washington Post need not have dug so hard and so far to find a trail that really starts at Obama's own words and history. Instead, they should be examining the unexamined question of Barack Obama's real roots, real sentiments and real theology.

It is perhaps the keenest indication that there is something "there" to observe how the Obama camp and their proxied (like Allen, who gave Obama a max contribution), are despereate to get such questions and issues labelled as 'smears' and 'swiftboating'. They are unintentionally signalling the importance of this issue with their hype-concern.

http://www.spectator.co.uk/melaniephillips/765631/obama-and-the-giant-bl...

http://no-bama.blogspot.com

http://travismonitor.blogspot.com

 

Let's imagine that in 1960

The Republican candidate for President was a Senator from Illnois named Ivan Vladimir Putin, born in 1918 from a short lived marriage between an American grad student mom and some Ukrainian socialist dad. The couple had lived briefly in Kiev before the divorce and the son attended classes at a collective farm taught by a low level commisar. After the divorce, young "Van" attended high school near his grandparents in Seattle, went on to Ivy League colleges, and settled in Chicago, where he joined the Republican party and practiced law for some multinational corporations. While in Chicago, he returned to the name "Ivan" so as to campaign and win a local legislative seat in the heavily Eastern European northwest side 

Think the Democrats would have been above making this guy sound like the Manchurian candidate? Please.  

Why do Liberals Consistently Trample Free Expression & Privacy?

Freedoms Truth's analysis is so complete that I won't bother to add to it, except to say thanks for the links to the Melanie Phillips (author of Londonistan) piece in Spectator - this is the first time I'd seen her weigh in on the topic. 

What I will do is raise a sub-topic and ask why so-called liberals are so extraordinarily critical of FISA, the Patriot Act and other "unconstitutional atrocities" of the present administration to violate individual privacy when they have absolutely no problem violating Freedom of Expression and individual privacy rights themselves?  We see this happen time and time again from The New York Times, Google and Yahoo search engines, Nancy Pelosi's campaign to implement The Fairness Act, and now this from the Obama campaign:

From here we get the ominous revelation that about "23 Freepers" were "among those engaging in regular discussions about Obama's religion." Freepers Beckwith and Eva are focused upon as chief culprits. Allen tells Mosk that she has "identified" the key phrases of the Barack-is-a-Muslim story in these Free Republic postings. Mosk "outs" these two Freepers giving their names and places of residence and highlight how they post under "secret" names on Free Republic.

How do these individuals dare reveal the personal identities and addresses of any citizen of the United States of America which might subject that citizen to retributions against their property, persons, family, pets, or workplace because someone sympathetic to Barack Obama decides to involve themselves personally in extracting revenge against someone who has not been formally accused, tried or convicted of any actual wrongdoing?  I'm afraid that they dare because they assume that Freepers members are white, and are not the beneficiaries of a protected minority status. 

Now that we've finally begun to attain a post-racial society, the formerly oppressed, spurred on and encouraged by radical academic institutions and liberal media in the spirit of Ward Churchill's "Little Eichmanns" and the "chickens coming home to roost" trope, are making a conscious decision to become, themselves, the oppressors.  Interestingly, Paulo Freire, a Brazilian educator who worked among the poor and illiterate and embraced a form of what might be considered liberation theology, was imprisoned later as a traitor by a military coup and wrote this about the nature of oppression:

Because it is a distortion of being more fully human, sooner or later being less human leads the oppressed to struggle against those who made them so. In order for this struggle to have meaning, the oppressed must not, in seeking to regain their humanity (which is a way to create it), become in turn oppressors of the oppressors, but rather restorers of the humanity of both. (Freire, 1993).

A social psychologist, Gustav Le Bon, wrote in his book “The Crowd” of how an individual in a crowd becomes psychological transformed.

Le bon posits a “psychological crowd.” Within this dimension the collective mind takes control of the individual.  Anonymity, suggestibility, and contagion contribute to this transformation. This individual is irrational, fickle, and suggestible. The submerged person is capable of being a mindless puppet controlled by the leader, and performing any act whether heroic or atrocious.

Perhaps Mosk and Allen feel that their behavior toward the "outed" Freepers is "fair" and "equitable".  Perhaps they are caught up in the psychological crowd of Obama supporters.  Perhaps both.  But regardless of their feelings on the matter, this type of "outing" behavior is still unconstitutionable and unethical, and should be called out as such by all who love liberty, freedom of expression, and the right to privacy.  Many good people have given their lives over the course of this nation's history to ensure these rights for people of all political persuasions.  This type of activism is going in a very Orwellian direction, and should be adamantly rejected and opposed by both Barack and Michelle Obama.  Not only do two wrongs most assuredly do not make a right, but Mosk, Allen and others risk the very same dehumanization that they claim to reject from the so-called oppressive Freepers - without any proof that (a) the Freepers are actually being oppressive, and (b) that the claims themselves of Barack Obama's Muslim origins are incorrect. 

And this leads back to a question that's been asked previously on this site, which is why should it even be considered a smear that Barack Obama is a Muslim?  Is there something inherently wrong with being a Muslim?  What's the real problem with that, anyway?  Methinks everyone in the Obama camp is protesting way, way, way too much on this particular subject.  If I were a Muslim, I'd be sitting out this election if I couldn't bring myself to cast a vote for John McCain.