And there are people who still consider this entity a journalist. As Simon Hoggart once said of him, he is "not just mistaken, but reliably mistaken."
UPDATE 1: Cartoonists Cox and Forkum recommend the blog Screw Loose Change as a comprehensive rebuttal of the conspiratorial nonsense of the misnamed "truth" movement. Backing up this recommendation, they're already onto Fisk's folly.
UPDATE 2: After thoroughly fisking Fisk with a welter of specifics (and please visit and digest before you start peddling conspiratorial crap here at this blog), Ed at the 26H blog reflects on motive:
Now that the specifics are out of the way, allow me to indulge in some conspiratorial thinking of my own: According to one Robert J. Hanlon, one should “Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity”. Wise words though they are, Hanlon’s Razor, as it is known, only goes so far. It just doesn’t seem particularly feasible, for instance, to think that an experienced journalist like Fisk could have written such a straightforwardly error-ridden and innuendo-laden article due to incompetence alone. Further, he’s also reasonably well known for both fostering and manifesting a Westerner’s self-loathing of the most wretched kind. So, it seems at least possible that Fisk wrote this piece for purely ideological reasons: To spread misinformation and doubt about the core premise for some of the United States’ least popular actions – to groundlessly and cynically call 9/11 itself into question.
2 comments:
Not sure about that Ed. According to Fisk, Jesus was born in Jerusalem, it all just fits in his usual fact absent opinion pieces.
Aren't we glad we have a newspaper, the NZ Herald, that prints all this Fisk nonsense?
There's only one thing left now for Fisk: the holocaust didn't happen. Come on Fisk, we know you think it, just say it.
Berend said...
Aren't we glad we have a newspaper, the NZ Herald, that prints all this Fisk nonsense?
I always skipped Fisk's & Gwen Dwyer perspective articles that are published in the NZ Herald. However I always like Garth Georges articles, except the titles that are related to God.
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