Taranto on Bogus AP 'Fact Check': 'Literally Doesn't Know the Meaning of the Word 'Fact''
Yesterday, Anne Gearan at the Associated Press, aka the Administration's Press, wrote what she called a "Fact Check" piece about a political promise. Really.
Two Republican presidential candidates, Newt Gingrich and Michele Bachmann, are both promising to move the US embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem if they should become the nation's next president. There's literally no way to "fact check" something that is only a promise, but Gearan wasted over 500 words pretending to do just that. She couldn't even buy a clue that her item's title ("FACT CHECK: Israel embassy promise may be empty") gives away the, uh, fact that it wasn't a "fact check" at all. Jim Taranto at the Wall Street Journal's Best of the Web minced no words in critiquing AP's and Gearan's cluelessness (bolds are mine):
Story Continues Below Ad ↓Newt Year in Jerusalem
The Associated Press literally doesn't know the meaning of the word "fact."... The trouble here is that there isn't a fact to check. Gingrich's statement is one of intent, not fact. To the extent that the headline is true, it is because it is trivial. Any promise by any politician "may be empty."
Here is the most persuasive part of Gearan's rebuttal:
THE FACTS: A promise to move the U.S. embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem has become a standard part of pro-Israel political rhetoric. Similar pledges were made during their campaigns by Bill Clinton and George W. Bush. But no administration has ever acted on such a promise once in office. . . .
A 1995 U.S. law recognized Jerusalem as the capital of Israel and ordered the U.S. embassy to move to Jerusalem from a neutral site in nearby Tel Aviv. Using their presidential power, Clinton, Bush and Obama have routinely suspended the relocation of the embassy while saying the U.S. is still committed to doing it. Apart from the bizarre reference to Tel Aviv as "a neutral site"--most Arab and Muslim countries refuse to recognize Israeli sovereignty at all, not just in Jerusalem and the West Bank--these paragraphs are factual.
... the idea that Gingrich's pledge is contrary to fact because other politicians have failed to keep the same promise is beyond ludicrous. Did the AP in 2008 run a "fact check" rebutting Barack Obama's promise to enact "heath-care reform" because so many previous presidents have futilely done so?
It gets worse. Here's another paragraph Gearan offers in support of the claim that Gingrich's promise is empty:
If the United States were to move its embassy in the absence of a peace deal, the act would be a symbolically explosive step. It would be seen as a prejudgment of those negotiations and spark anger throughout the Arab world. It also would destroy any appearance that the U.S. can be a credible and neutral mediator in peace talks.
The factual content of this paragraph is zero; it is pure speculation and opinion. It may be realistic speculation and informed opinion, but the language of certitude does not turn a statement about what may happen under a hypothetical circumstance into a fact.
... the AP published what is essentially an opinion piece, and a rather lazy one at that. ... to label that a "fact check"--as if it had some greater authority than actual reporting--is fundamentally dishonest.
That AP's labeling of the two candidates' promises as "facts" is incorrect is indeed a fact. Whether the action was dishonest, insufferably dumb, or blindly agenda-driven would be a matter of opinion.
Cross-posted at BizzyBlog.com.
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Comments
OK... So Anne Gearan is an idiot...
Submitted by The_Barrel_Guy on Fri, 12/09/2011 - 10:12pm.
THAT is a fact... Why are we wasting band width on her?
Because she and the rest of AP ...
Submitted by Tom Blumer on Fri, 12/09/2011 - 11:13pm.
... have virtually unfiltered access to the nation's news consumers, most of whom, especially the relatively disengaged, initially trust what they hear, read, and see.
I agree. It would be more appropriately labeled "Boneheaded
Submitted by Jer on Fri, 12/09/2011 - 11:56pm.
Campaign Promise Check" and about as likely to occur as President Gingrich issuing an executive order moving the Chinese capital from Beijing to Taipei.
But "Reality Check" would also work.
Jer
It should be entitled: Boneheaded Composition
Submitted by CobraMan on Sat, 12/10/2011 - 2:05pm.
It should be entitled: My Boneheaded Composition. The author repeatedly tries to use a supposition as a preposition throughout that entire article. I don't know what school the author went to, but I was taught that you're not supposed to do that. "May be" is a supposition, "fact" is a preposition. I don't care how many "examples" of pervious "may be's" you try to use, the two are NOT interchangeable! Not in the English language, anyways! And that as "real" as it can possibly get!
The Citizens of each State shall be entitled to all Privileges and Immunities of Citizens in the several States. The US Constitution
Unless you're a fetus. The US Supreme Court
Or Anwar al-Awlaki.
I eagerly await Gearan's
Submitted by motherbelt on Sat, 12/10/2011 - 8:50am.
I eagerly await Gearan's "fact check" of all of Obama's pledges to date.....
And Tom, in your last paragraph, you left out "all of the above."
sad state of journalism
Submitted by alright now on Sat, 12/10/2011 - 12:41pm.
I have wondered since these "fact checks" started appearing in newspapers: Aren't they embarrassed that they have to label a section as fact checking? Isn't that what every "news" piece should be? It's like saying: Well in this piece we really do try to be fair. We are going to actually investigate this information and let you know. That stuff on the front page . . . . not so much.
Great ...
Submitted by Tom Blumer on Sat, 12/10/2011 - 1:33pm.
... point, esp since news items carry so many statements from story subjects and supposed experts.
It's like "we'll tell you what all these people said, and maybe someday we'll get around to telling you whether or not any of it is true."
Great ...
Submitted by Tom Blumer on Sat, 12/10/2011 - 1:33pm.
... point, esp since news items carry so many statements from story subjects and supposed experts.
It's like "we'll tell you what all these people said, and maybe someday we'll get around to telling you whether or not any of it is true."
"may be" what?
Submitted by CobraMan on Sat, 12/10/2011 - 2:20pm.
"Fact Check: Israel Embassy Promise May Be Empty."= That's the title of the AP article!
So, a preposition ("fact") has become a supposition ("may be") at the AP? Wow, I didn't know English composition has changed so much lately! I seem to remember this rule about not using suppositions and prepositions to describe the same subject (in this case, an "Israel Embassy Promise"), as they tend to negate each other. When did that change?
I wonder what the editors at the AP would make of the following statement: Fact Check: The Sun May Rise Tomorrow. I know what my English teacher would say: You really need to study more! You can't use both a supposition and a preposition to define a single subject.
The Citizens of each State shall be entitled to all Privileges and Immunities of Citizens in the several States. The US Constitution
Unless you're a fetus. The US Supreme Court
Or Anwar al-Awlaki.
This is interesting...
Submitted by CobraMan on Sat, 12/10/2011 - 2:27pm.
This is interesting, as it is included as a "fact" in the AP article:
"Israel claims all of the city as its capital and maintains the seat of government there. The Palestinians claim east Jerusalem as the capital of a future state."
So, the Palestinians have "claimed" a capital for a "state" which doesn't even exist. It's a "fact" that a non-existent capitol exists for a non-existent state and this is the "cause" of a supposedly "empty" promise by someone else?
The Citizens of each State shall be entitled to all Privileges and Immunities of Citizens in the several States. The US Constitution
Unless you're a fetus. The US Supreme Court
Or Anwar al-Awlaki.