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October 13, 2008 4:03 PM PDT

Days of rage on the Internet

Posted by Charles Cooper
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Must be the special circumstances regarding current events, but folks again are losing their minds in very public fashion--on the Internet.

(Credit: CNET News)

Monday's New York Times ran a piece detailing how a fringe activist has helped spread the rumor that Barack Obama is a Muslim.

The press release was picked up by a conservative Web site, FreeRepublic.com, and spread steadily as others elaborated on its claims over the years in e-mail messages, Web sites, and books. It continues to drive other false rumors about Mr. Obama's background.

(And while I write these words, another e-mail arrived, asking in the subject line: "Does Obama fulfill Muslim prophecy?" and linking to one of the more insane videos that I've seen devoted to the topic.

I'd like to give my follow countrymen credit for being more discerning than to trust everything they read or view on the Internet as fact. (Although I'm still not sure what to make of the fact that the movie Beverly Hills Chihuahua is No. 1 at the box office.) Well, we are in the midst of the political silly season and you can discount some of what's going on as part of the quadrennial nonsense that gets tossed around during any presidential campaign.

But the tone of the junk mail flooding in the last couple of weeks is boiling over with rage--and it's not just directed against Obama's supposed effort to conceal his "real" identity.

In the aftermath of the market meltdown, the Anti-Defamation League reports a "dramatic upsurge" in "the number of anti-Semitic statements being posted to Internet discussion boards devoted to finance and the economy."

Here's a sampling of some of the pearls of wisdom the ADL found posted:

•  "(Jews have) infiltrated Wall Street and government and have ruined our country."

•  "What is a GS Jew? Goldman Sachs? Jews are greedy, rotten slime balls."

•  They (Jews) love money nothing else, no faith or religion can be so heartless to their victims."

•  That's how they work, they short the stock all the way making billions and then cover right it up sell (sic) and then taxpayers to the rescue and it is true all those institutions are ran by Jews ....

This is of a piece with the post-September 11 rumors about the Mossad reportedly issuing secret instructions to Jews not to go to work on the morning of the attacks on the World Trade Center. The latest story line focuses on the collapse of Lehman and "Jewish control of the banking industry and suggestions that Jews hold complete power over government and the financial services sector," according to the ADL..

It's easy to blame a lot of this on the spillover of rants commonly associated with Internet forums for white supremacists and neo-Nazis, making their way into more mainstream venues. Extremists always shout loudest during times of political or economic crisis. So it is that the latest conspiracy making the rounds details how "senior Jewish officials at the Lehman Brothers investment bank passed their clients' money on to three Israeli banks, with the intention of then escaping to Israel to enjoy the take without fear of extradition."

The stock market's sharp rebound on Monday notwithstanding, this remains a lousy economy and people are rightly scared. And with another couple of weeks to go before the nation chooses its next president, there's a lot more bile waiting to be spilled. Before we lapse back into something resembling normalcy, I fear that there are more days of rage ahead.

Charles is an executive editor with CNET News. He has covered technology and business for more than 25 years. A graduate of Queens College and Columbia University, Cooper began his career in journalism at the Associated Press before moving to technology coverage. Before joining CNET News, he worked at Computer & Software News, Computer Shopper, PC Week, and ZDNet. He received the Excellence in Journalism award from the Northern California branch of the Society for Professional Journalists for column writing. In addition to his blogging and podcast appearances, he is a co-host of the CNET News Daily Debrief. E-mail Charlie.
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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 10 comments
by Psalm88 October 13, 2008 5:39 PM PDT
A few friends who pass along this raging insanity about Obama, now say that they are sick of it and want to hear more about what both candidates will do. That's a healthy sign.

As for the looney-toon video about being a Muslim. What branch of Christianity espouses such nonsense and tells people who profess Christianity that they aren't? Are you sure this video isn't a joke?
Reply to this comment
by holyhope October 14, 2008 11:43 AM PDT
This new era of reply possibility, (the internet), lets those so inclined to state on the larger stage their views. Instead of hiding behind a bush and shooting, they are able to produce a force of communication to the bigger world. I find it cathartic for those low sick individuals who have no voice and know the politicians are out for self agrandiesment rather than for any communal good. Let those smaller voices sing out for a healthier populace, to grow into a better community not clinging to their religion and guns out of sight.
by Solaris_User October 13, 2008 6:13 PM PDT
Oh we KNOW what Obama and McCain are going to do.. that is why I can't vote for either of them.
Reply to this comment
by Moozle October 13, 2008 6:49 PM PDT
@ Psalm88:

"What branch of Christianity espouses such nonsense and tells people who profess Christianity that they aren't?"

Sarah Palin's branch, apparently. A local TV station referred to her as Wasilla's "first Christian mayor," even though Stein (the previous mayor) and his predecessors were also Christian. Stein, IIRC, was a Lutheran which, I guess, doesn't count - let alone Catholics.
Reply to this comment
by Rick_Shaw October 13, 2008 6:57 PM PDT
"Jewish control of the banking industry and suggestions that Jews hold complete power over government and the financial services sector," according to the ADL.."

And we all know what a bunch of stand-up guys the ADL are. They've been busted for spying on Americans how many times?

If the ADL is trying to back someone up, you can rest assured they're crooks.
Reply to this comment
by Psalm88 October 13, 2008 8:00 PM PDT
This is half Gulliver's travels "off with their heads because they break their eggs on the wrong end", and Dr. Seuss "The North-Going Jax and the South-Going Jax". Unfortunately, it's apparently stimulating our native insurgents like those who blew up the Kansas City Federal Building-- or has that been deleted from our memory? What was their religion, their race, how trust-worthy were they, what was their allegiance to -- what God, which people, what country?
All this questioning is a sham - we know it? Let's just try not to have another civil war in the next 20 days, just be civil and go and cast our votes.
And if there are reports of illegal rejections and intimidation of certain voters from the polls, you'll find me in Washington DC demonstrating for the first time in my long life the very next day with a few hundred thousand from all around the country, making sure that this time voter suppression is treated publically as a crime in our country for the first and very last time.

Our only responsibility out of all this is just to vote, expect to be respected and protected, not intimidated, threatened or rejected, and to go home, turn on the TV and find out who won.
Reply to this comment
by Penguinisto October 14, 2008 6:23 AM PDT
Psst! Oklahoma City, not Kansas City. Also, the folks who were behind it were more anti-government than anything else; certainly no religion or particular ideology was involved.
by Penguinisto October 14, 2008 6:27 AM PDT
The funny thing is, such animosity is being fueled by a media who believes that generating such drama leads to profit (which in many cases they turn out to be right...) Then again, Yellow Journalism has been around ever since someone dragged America's first printing press over the Atlantic to the original colonies.

@Charlie: Dude, this is tame. Seriously. Calling Obama a Muslim is nothing compared to the 18th Century tactics of claiming political opponents to be adulterers, drunkards, and blasphemers. As a political people, it's kind of who we are.

/P
Reply to this comment
by Len Bullard October 14, 2008 7:07 AM PDT
And of course citing the Obama examples, Charlie, you feed back information into the rage generator. Was it a peace rally to accuse Sarah Palin of forcing a boy to marry her pregnant daughter or to make claims that the Downs syndrome child was the daughters?

Spy vs Spy, Charlie. You know it and I know it. Anyone with a background from the radical days of the Sixties knows to start a riot you get ten people to toss bricks in a crowd of 1000. If you don't want the riot, everyone is told to sit down and offer no resistance.

It's your karma, Dude.
Reply to this comment
by meh130 October 14, 2008 1:40 PM PDT
You forgot to add the hate-filled DailyKos and Huffington Post to your list. Those two sites promote more hatred than any other mainstream political sites on the net. Add my.barackobama.com to the hate mongering sites, where recently someone posted a picture of themselves wearing a shirt which said in large letters "Sarah Palin is a C*nt". tucc.org was another site known to promote hatred and racism in the past.

Meanwhile, elected thugs seek to stop political speech in Missouri. The same politicians who refused to regulate Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac now claim they were the ones who were trying to regulate it, and claim those who sponsored increased regulation were instead in favor of deregulation. A political video explaining the economic meltdown, and peppered with a few short excerpts of popular music, is removed from YouTube due to specious claims of music copyright violation, while tens of thousands of videos with copyrighted music remain untouched. A bill to strip workers of their right for a secret ballot in a unionizing vote is called the "Employee Free Choice Act". And a political phone worker calls Secret Service on a citizen she called when the citizen dared to speak her political opinion. The only thing missing are jack boots and goose stepping. Eight years ago lawyers for a presidential candidate specifically targeted members of a particular group for intentional disenfranchisement by challenging their ballots based on who employed them.

We are devolving towards Europe, where in The Netherlands someone was criminally charged for suggesting people write "Thou Shalt Not Kill" in chalk on their doors as a memorial to someone who was murdered, because such a message incited hatred.

We have arrived at George Orwell's 1984, albeit 24 years later. Tolerance is intolerance. Compassion is hatred. Freedom is slavery.
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About Coop's Corner

Charles Cooper has covered technology and business for more than 25 years. A graduate of Queens College and Columbia University, Cooper began his career in journalism at the Associated Press before moving to technology coverage. Before joining CNET News, he worked at Computer & Software News, Computer Shopper, PC Week, and ZDNet. He received the Excellence in Journalism award from the Northern California branch of the Society for Professional Journalists for column writing.

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