Friends,
Note that Glenn Greenwald was paid $500,000 a year when
he worked for the Intercept. Eventually they got rid of him as he was going off
the deep end.
Remember when Reality Winner leaked an NSA Document verifying that Russian intelligence was supporting Trump. She sent the document to the Intercept, and I believe Greenwald was involved. The Intercept contacted the NSA to verify the story, and sadly the document was shown as sent. The NSA then figured out where the leak came from. This cost Winner five years of her life. She suffered from bulimia and COVID while imprisoned. A more knowledgeable media outlet would never have shown the NSA the document.
See the article below as to how low Greenwald has gone. It is difficult to explain his downfall.
Kagiso, Max
CounterPunch.org - https://www.counterpunch.org –
Apologist for Tucker Carlson’s Racism: Glenn Greenwald
By Eoin
Higgins on May 27, 2022
Drawing by Nathaniel St. Clair
There’s no plausible way to dispute that Fox News host
Tucker Carlson is spreading racist conspiracy theories, but Glenn Greenwald has
been trying anyway.
Since Greenwald—a former Salon columnist, and after that a
Pulitzer-winning reporter for the Guardian — departed from The Intercept in
September 2020, he’s become a stalwart defender of Fox, and Carlson in
particular. As Carlson has gained in viewership and impact—he’s the most widely
watched cable news host in the US—his commentary and political positions have
come under increased scrutiny. With that attention has come intense criticism.
But he has Greenwald in his corner, who has let forth a flood of pro-Carlson
arguments, primarily delivered on Twitter, his medium of choice.
Shortly before the May 14 massacre in Buffalo that left 10
dead, the alleged shooter, 18-year-old Payton Gendron, published a 180-page
manifesto online. The post explained that he targeted the Tops Market grocery
store because the neighborhood was majority Black, in an act of political
violence aimed at striking fear into nonwhite US residents. Gendron’s
ideological outlook was highly influenced by the racist conspiracy theory known
as the “Great Replacement” which holds that whites in the US are being
systematically replaced by people of color in a demographic change that’s being
masterminded by a cabal of elites.
That demographic-threat conspiracy theory has been
laundered in prime time by none other than Carlson. Using his perch atop cable
news rankings, the Fox News host has worked to spread the message of
demographic threat far and wide amongst conservatives. Gendron’s manifesto
doesn’t mention Carlson specifically, a point seized on by Greenwald to explain
away the connections between the messaging from his favorite cable news host
and the shooter. But the ideological throughline is hard to miss.
Here’s Carlson on Sept. 8, 2018:
How precisely is diversity our strength? Since you’ve made
this our new national motto, please be specific as you explain it. Can you
think, for example, of other institutions, such as, I don’t know, marriage or
military units, in which the less people have in common the more cohesive they
are? Do you get along better with your neighbors or your co-workers if you
can’t understand each other or share no common values?
Here’s Gendron in his manifesto:
Why is diversity said to be our greatest strength? Does
anyone even ask why? It is spoken like a mantra and repeated ad infinitum
“diversity is our greatest strength, diversity is our greatest strength,
diversity is our greatest strength…”. Said throughout the media, spoken by
politicians, educators and celebrities. But no one ever seems to give a reason
why. What gives a nation strength? And how does diversity increase that
strength? What part of diversity causes this increase in strength? No one can
give an answer.
Nikki McCann Ramirez, a researcher with Media Matters,
noted on my podcast last week that the interconnectedness of right-wing
messaging, from neo-Nazi chat boards to Fox News, makes drawing distinctions
between Carlson and Gendron somewhat irrelevant.
“The shooter did not cite Tucker Carlson as an inspiration
in his manifesto or as a direct source of radicalization—but what I think is
important to point out here is that this man was radicalized on online forums,”
Ramirez said. “Extremism researchers know that these white nationalist online
forums view Carlson as an ally in spreading their messaging to the public.”
* * *
Greenwald has been a Fox News partisan for some time, in
near-perfect correlation to how often he’s invited on the network. Carlson has
hosted Greenwald frequently, while gaining his unswerving loyalty.
What this loyalty has meant in real terms is relentless
pro-Carlson arguments from Greenwald. He has seldom criticized Carlson or Fox
News—as I detailed last year—and his deference has paid off with a near-weekly
slot appearing on Carlson’s primetime show. (Greenwald challenged me to come on
his show and hash out our differences. When I replied with a list of dates and
times I could do, he did not respond.)
Greenwald argues to critics that his appearances on
Carlson’s show allow him to get a pro-privacy, anti-war message out to the
network’s viewers. Yet more often than not, he’s just on Fox News to talk about
Twitter, liberals, and some aspect of the culture war.
For all of Greenwald’s claims that his presence on the show
might shift at least a few Fox viewers from rabid right-wing ideologues to
something approaching social libertarianism, his actual appearances seem to
serve mainly to support Carlson’s worldview. Greenwald doesn’t challenge
Carlson’s worldview, seldom if ever criticizes the right and generally stays in
his lane—legitimizing the Fox News narrative.
Thus it was unsurprising that after the Buffalo shooting,
Greenwald went out of his way to make outlandish defensive claims about that
worldview. One of the main points Greenwald has hammered repeatedly is the idea
that Carlson is simply reacting to liberals, who are really the folks spreading
conspiracy theories.
“The Democrats and their leading [strategists] for years
have been arguing that immigration will change the demographic make-up of the
country—by replacing conservative voters with more liberal ones—and that this
will benefit them politically,” Greenwald tweeted on May 16.
In a lengthy screed on his Substack blog, Greenwald
expressed outrage over the very possibility that Carlson’s critics might tie
the cable news host’s rhetoric to that of the Buffalo shooter. In particular,
Greenwald found the suggestion that Carlson’s worldview was fundamentally
racist beyond the pale.
“His anti-immigration and ‘replacement’ argument is aimed
at the idea—one that had been long mainstream on the left until about a decade
ago—that large, uncontrolled immigration harms American citizens who are
already here,” Greenwald said, notably without a citation or, indeed, any evidence.
“There is no racial hierarchy in Carlson’s view of American citizenship and to
claim that there is is nothing short of a defamatory lie.”
But the very backbone of Carlson’s replacement theory talk
is, in fact, the story of racial hierarchy. Carlson doesn’t just rail at
so-called “large, uncontrolled immigration”—he targets immigration as a whole
from countries that he finds undesirable. It’s indistinguishable from the
conspiracy theories about replacement spouted off by any number of far-right
and sometimes overtly white supremacist figures.
* * *
Notably, when Greenwald is directly challenged on these
points outside Twitter, he’s had difficulty defending his claims. A videotaped
debate in late January with a young man named Nicholas provides a good example.
Nicholas, who appears to be a teenager or very young adult, challenged
Greenwald on his support for Carlson and the fact Greenwald has “never found
anything negative to highlight” about the cable news host. Greenwald retorted
that questions about the Fox News host were better directed at Carlson, since
Greenwald didn’t watch the show. It was a strange admission from one of
Carlson’s most fervent defenders.
Arguing that Carlson’s ideology is free of racism in spite
of overwhelming evidence to the contrary is stunningly brazen, even for a
provocateur like Greenwald. In March 2021, after Minneapolis Police Officer
Derek Chauvin was found guilty of murdering George Floyd, Carlson complained
that mob rule had overtaken legal justice. Finding Chauvin guilty, he argued,
was essentially giving up on the rule of law because demonstrations had
followed Floyd’s murder. “We must stop this current insanity,” Carlson
declared. “It’s an attack on civilization.”
On Sept. 18, 2021, Carlson claimed that President Biden
and the Democratic Party were attempting to “change the racial mix of the
country.”
“In political terms,” Carlson told his audience, “this
policy is called ‘the great replacement,’ the replacement of legacy Americans
with more obedient people from far-away countries.”
Yet just months later, on Nov. 22, Greenwald tweeted that
“Tucker’s view” was that the Fox News host believes “in a racially equal
society.” In a debate with YouTube personality Steven Fritts released less than
a week later, Greenwald said that, in his experience, Carlson’s views on race
were hard to square with accusations of racism.
“I have never ever, ever, ever heard Tucker frame
immigration or any other issue in the racist terms that you attributed to him,”
Greenwald told Fritts. “In fact, he believes that what is racist is liberal
discourse—the idea that we should judge people based on their race.”
It’s no longer enough to run interference for the Fox
host—now, while expressing solidarity with Carlson, Greenwald repeats the same
talking points on crime statistics and replacement theory that have been
perfected in right-wing messaging.
In late March, Greenwald approvingly retweeted a cartoon
by the avowedly neo-Nazi artist Stonetoss. An exhaustive New York Times report
last month detailing how Carlson has mainstreamed white nationalist talking
points—including 400 instances of him repeating “great replacement” language
and conspiracy theories — was dismissed by Greenwald as hyperbole.
“Conservatives know liberal outlets accuse everyone opposing liberalism of
being racist,” Greenwald tweeted, two weeks before the Buffalo massacre. Last
week, he posted FBI Black-on-Black crime statistics in an apparent effort to
disprove that white nationalist violence posed a significant threat to public
safety.
While Greenwald formerly defended Carlson while distancing
himself from the more extreme interpretations of the Fox host’s views, today he
is increasingly deploying his Twitter platform in service of spreading the
white nationalist message. These vehement defenses of the most influential
media purveyor of the racist “replacement” theory are destructive efforts to
launder hate by a once-admirable journalist.
Article printed from CounterPunch.org: https://www.counterpunch.org
URL to article: https://www.counterpunch.org/2022/05/27/apologist-for-tucker-carlsons-racism-glenn-greenwald/
Donations can be sent
to Max Obuszewski, Baltimore Nonviolence Center, 431
Notre Dame Lane, Apt. 206, Baltimore, MD 21212. Ph:
410-323-1607; Email: mobuszewski2001 [at] comcast.net. Go to http://baltimorenonviolencecenter.blogspot.com/
"The master class
has always declared the wars; the subject class has always fought the battles.
The master class has had all to gain and nothing to lose, while the subject
class has had nothing to gain and everything to lose--especially their
lives." Eugene Victor Debs
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