The left-wing organization Media Matters (MMFA) appears to have been
caught red-handed in an ugly and false smear attack against Cliff
Kincaid, editor of Accuracy in Media (AIM) and president of
America's
Survival, Inc. In
an
August 19, 2005, item entitled,
"AIM's Kincaid posted 'letter' from Afghan ambassador
thanking him for petition to extradite Newsweek's Isikoff," Media Matters clearly implies that Kincaid
fabricated a letter from an Afghan ambassador. However, every
indication reveals that Kincaid did no such thing.
`
Media
Matters posted the following in the item's first paragraph:
Accuracy in Media (AIM) editor
Cliff Kincaid has posted a "letter" on his America's Survival
Inc. website that he claims to have received from Afghan
ambassador Said Tayeb Jawad. The "letter" thanks Kincaid for
sending a petition to the ambassador calling for the extradition
of Newsweek investigative correspondent Michael Isikoff to
Afghanistan. But the "letter" from the ambassador, which makes
reference to "the over six hundred supporters" who purportedly
signed petitions calling for Isikoff's extradition, bears all
the hallmarks of a do-it-yourself, cut-and-paste job.
By putting
quotation marks around the word letter, by saying the "letter"
was one that "he claims to have received," and by asserting that it
"bears all the hallmarks of a do-it-yourself, cut-and-paste job," the
implication from Media Matters could not be more clear: Kincaid posted a
bogus
letter. Another paragraph also analyzes the formatting (i.e., html, gif) of the letter.
The
truth? Less than one day later, Kincaid posted scanned images (.pdf) of
the
actual letter and the
actual envelope in which it was received. Kincaid also posted
a
public statement denouncing Media Matters for their "false and
defamatory charge."
Media
Matters' belief that the letter was bogus appears to be based on an
HTML/"electronic collage"
(MMFA's words) of the letter that Kincaid had originally posted. The
original contained Kincaid's home address, which he wished to redact.
The webmaster "also converted the letter to HTML for easier reading"
(Kincaid). Simple enough.
What's
astonishing about their ugly attack, as Kincaid points out, is that
Media Matters could have verified the authenticity of the letter with
one simple phone call or correspondence. Instead, they simply
went out and besmirched the guy!
This shameful
episode reveals a vicious and callous nature of the people at Media
Matters. It also obliterates any remaining shred of the organization's
credibility.
TheMediaReport.com says ... This episode
is very reminiscent of the episode in which Al Franken claimed in his
Lies book that Bill O'Reilly was not really from Levittown, New
York, as he says he is. But Bill posted the
actual deed from his boyhood home that clearly has the words
"Levittown, New York" right on it! O'Reilly totally exposed Franken's
lie.