Nothing we've ever seen in the history of
presidential campaigns can compare to the sheer volume and mendacity of the
smears being used in the 2008 campaign, and Barack Obama, the first
African-American candidate of a major party, is the primary target of these
lies.
To show how common the lies about Obama are, I put together a
website called TruthObama.com and compiled
a list of 1,117 lies and smears spread about Obama.
The lies against Obama began with a series
of chain emails accusing him of being a secret Muslim (he's not), claiming that
he was educated in a madrassa in Indonesia (it was a public school), even
asserting that he took his oath of office on the Koran (it was a Bible).
Obama's distant connections with 1960s radical William Ayers have become
an overwhelming focus of both the McCain campaign and the media. On October 5,
2008, Sean Hannity on the Fox News Channel even presented Andy Martin (infamous
for his anti-Semitic legal filings and the originator of the madrassa myth) as a
credible source for the latest absurd rumor, that Bill Ayers had recruited Obama
at Columbia University to go work as a community organizer as a test of his
allegiance to Ayers and their secret plot for revolution.
Jerome
Corsi--a conspiracy theorist who believes that the Twin Towers fell on 9/11 due
to "controlled demolition," that George W. Bush is part of a global plot to
destroy the United States and merge it with Canada and Mexico, and who claims
that Obama's birth certificate is a fabrication--even rose to the top of the
best-seller list with his book attacking Obama, despite making numerous errors
and ridiculous smears.
Barack Obama has said, "If they lie about us,
we'll correct the record." But sometimes correcting the record isn't
enough. The lie accusing Obama of being a Muslim has been disproven over and
over again, by Obama's campaign, by reporters, even by most of his critics. Yet
according to a Newsweek poll, the proportion of Americans who incorrectly
imagine Obama to be a Muslim has grown as the campaign progressed.
Although right-wing writers and talk show hosts have spread many of the
smears against Obama, perhaps the most surprising development of the 2008
campaign has been the willingness of McCain himself to spread lies about Obama.
Back in May, Cindy McCain declared: "My husband is absolutely opposed to
any negative campaigning at all." John McCain himself promised to run an
"honorable" campaign. But political expediency proved to be a more powerful lure
than honor.
Joe Klein wrote in Time (Sept. 29, 2008), "McCain's lies
have ranged from the annoying to the sleazy, and the problem is in both degree
and kind. His campaign has been a ceaseless assault on his opponent's character
and policies, featuring a consistent–and witting–disdain for the truth."
In September, Don Sipple, a Republican advertising strategist, told the
New
York Times, "The last month, for sure, I think the predominance of liberty
taken with truth and the facts has been more McCain than Obama."
McCain's propensity for deceit in this campaign has statistical
documentation. PolitiFact.com, a nonpartisan project of the St. Petersburg Times
and Congressional Quarterly, has examined more than 150 statements from each
candidate for their truth value (as of Oct. 30). ObamaMcCain
had seven statements so completely false that they were put in the "pants on
fire" category, compared to only two for Obama. Altogether, 69 of McCain's 153
statements were deemed "barely true" or worse, compared to only 45 of Obama's
156 statements. Obama's statements were 60% more likely to be true than
McCain's; McCain had 54% more statements than Obama that were less than
half-truths.
The number of smears and lies is so vast and so often
repeated that it overwhelms the ability of the Obama campaign and the press to
refute them. Even if they did, it would be almost impossible for any voter to
keep track of all the false accusations and separate delusion from reality.
I've utilized many of the excellent fact checkers out there to help
assemble this list:
had 49 statements
deemed "true," compared to only 30 for
Media
Matters
Snopes
FactCheck.org
Politifact
Washington
Post Fact Checker
Urban
Legend
Obama's Under
the Radar
Obama's Fact Check
Stop the
Smears
Lies are the primary hope for the McCain
campaign during a time of declining poll numbers, economic crisis, and
widespread dissatisfaction with Republican politicians. Perhaps it's possible
these smear campaigns will work once again, as they did in 1988 and 2000 and
2004. Yet I have hope that the American people will refuse to vote based on a
series of lies. That might be an audacious hope for reason to prevail, but it's
the only hope we have.
However, we need to educate people about the
misinformation that's out there. So here are the thousand points of lies: www.truthobama.com.
Authors
Website: www.obamapolitics.com
Authors Bio: John K. Wilson is the author
of five books, including "Barack Obama: This Improbable Quest" (Paradigm
Publishers, 2008), www.obamapolitics.com, and "Patriotic Correctness: Academic
Freedom and Its Enemies" (Paradigm Publishers, 2008). He is the founder of the
Institute for College Freedom (www.collegefreedom.org,
collegefreedom.blogspot.com).