Fake News Propaganda from Media

Mainstream media often bash conspiracists who expose government, agendas, and conspiracy as disinformation. The Biden Administration announced a need for a “Disinformation Governance Board” so they can tell you what is fake or not. However, it is the mainstream news giving you their false narrative of the incidents in a way they want you to know. Many times they stir your emotions by fake news to get your approval of government action.

In the Congressional Board a record shows a statement from February 9, 1917 by Oscar Callaway in which he told that in March 1915 the J.P. Morgan interests and their subsidiary organizations got together 12 men high up in the newspaper world and employed them to select the most influential newspapers in the United States and sufficient number of them to control generally the policy of the daily press in the United States. These 12 men found that it only took selecting 179 newspapers, then began, by an elimination process, to retain only those necessary for this purpose of controlling the general policy of the daily press throughout the country. They merely only needed to purchase 25 of the greatest papers, in which according to an agreement, an editor of their choice was furnished to each to supervise the information regarding setting the foundation for their propaganda in the interest of the purchasers, which continues to this very time. (1)

Some time before the destruction of the battleship Maine in the harbor of Havana, giant publisher Randolph Hearst of the New York Journal sent his illustrator Frederic Remington to Cuba to remain there until the war began. Remington reported back, “Everything is quiet. There is no trouble here. There will be no war. I wish to return.” Hearst ordered him to remain and said, “You furnish the pictures, and I’ll furnish the war.” (2)

Newspapers printed stories on fabricated German atrocities, that they were cutting the hands off Belgium boys and raping Belgium women, to gain support of the citizens for war. They gave citizens a feeling that we had a moral obligation to intervene with war.

So as you see from these examples, we cannot take face value what we are told in the media about pandemics, crises, shootings, or war. They just very well may be fabricated or exaggerations for the sake of disseminating propaganda. And they call what we tell “fake news?”

Sources:

1 [Congressional Board, second session, Sixty-Fourth Congress, Vol. LIV p 2947-48]

2 [Creelman, James. On the Great Highway: The Wanderings and Adventures of a Special Correspondent, Boston Lothrop, 1901]

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