More about the fake blog of the day: I'm not buying it
SquareState, among others, has linked to a brand-new blogger who takes responsibility for the disgusting site I wrote about here and here. The blogger claims to be a left-wing college student who doesn't think Ed Perlmutter is anti-Iraq War enough.
As of this moment, I'm not buying this story. Partially because Perlmutter is anti-Iraq War. Very.
But I may be wrong. I am cynical because the Colorado GOP has a history of using the blogosphere to pull deceptive stunts like this. Starting with Students for Beauprez. Including the Beauprez Witness. And continuing all the way up to Colorado GOP chair Dick Wadhams. (Who, incidentally, I never asserted had any hand in this specific dust-up.)
My guess is that something fishy is going on. If the actual blogger wants to out himself or herself by name, I will post a retraction.
The incident points out a fundamental flaw of the blogosphere. To the unsavvy, anonymous bloggers who post lies and conjecture appear to have the same credibility as pseudonymous bloggers who link to sources, provide analysis, and mark rumors as such.
Even those of us who spend a large amount of time blogging get swept up in the story of the day. Overall, this is a good thing. We jump into the line of fire, so that our candidates don't get Swiftboated. But sometimes we get hit, tricked into perpetuating a story that has no merit.
Perhaps this is one of those days.
UPDATE: Both blogs discussed have either been deleted or made private.
As of this moment, I'm not buying this story. Partially because Perlmutter is anti-Iraq War. Very.
But I may be wrong. I am cynical because the Colorado GOP has a history of using the blogosphere to pull deceptive stunts like this. Starting with Students for Beauprez. Including the Beauprez Witness. And continuing all the way up to Colorado GOP chair Dick Wadhams. (Who, incidentally, I never asserted had any hand in this specific dust-up.)
My guess is that something fishy is going on. If the actual blogger wants to out himself or herself by name, I will post a retraction.
The incident points out a fundamental flaw of the blogosphere. To the unsavvy, anonymous bloggers who post lies and conjecture appear to have the same credibility as pseudonymous bloggers who link to sources, provide analysis, and mark rumors as such.
Even those of us who spend a large amount of time blogging get swept up in the story of the day. Overall, this is a good thing. We jump into the line of fire, so that our candidates don't get Swiftboated. But sometimes we get hit, tricked into perpetuating a story that has no merit.
Perhaps this is one of those days.
UPDATE: Both blogs discussed have either been deleted or made private.
Labels: blogging and blogs, Dick Wadhams, dirty tricks

2 Comments:
great job.
ha, looks like you scared potestaspopuloamerica into deleting their hot new blog.
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