Thanks to Trump, fringe news enters the mainstream
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Thanks to Trump, fringe news enters the mainstream
By Paul Farhi December 11 at 6:51 PM
@farhip
Alex Jones may be Americas most successful conspiracy theorist. On his website,
Infowars.com, and his daily radio program heard on more than 100 stations nationwide, Jones regularly promotes a variety of beyond-the- fringe ideas: alleged government conspiracies in the Oklahoma City bombing in 1995 and the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001; fluoride-in-the-water health scares; suspicions that the moon landings were faked; doubts about President Obamas place of birth and birth certificate.
Jones, in short, may be Donald Trumps kind of guy.
The ranting radio host and the leading Republican candidate shared a microphone, and some common ground, last week in what may have been a dubious first the first time a leading presidential candidate has been interviewed by a media figure from the far extremes. Your reputation is amazing, Trump assured Jones, after Jones assured Trump that most of his listeners supported his candidacy. I will not let you down.
Trump finding common ground with Jones is in keeping with Trumps own rocky relationship with facts and credible information during the campaign. Many of Trumps more controversial assertions since he declared for president have come from the murky swamp of right-wing, libertarian and flat-out paranoid sources that have proliferated and thrived as the Internet and social media have grown.