The week in whoppers: Brian Stelter bizarrely spins Harris’ Fox interview, Kamala denies Blinken’s threats to Israel are . . . threats and more

Diary of disturbing disinformation and dangerous delusions

This spin:

“Viewers are going to come away saying, ‘Wow, she’s willing to do [the Bret Baier interview]. That’s a sign of toughness.’”

— Brian Stelter, CNN, Wednesday

We say: Give us a break!

Harris’ dodge of every question Bret Baier asked in Wednesday’s interview was a sign of weakness, not “toughness.”

Viewers could plainly see she was wholly unable to defend her record. Nor did her go-to response — Trump bad — hide that.

Too bad for Stelter and the left that Americans aren’t as dumb as they’d like them to be.


This excuse:

“The incidents were limited to a handful of apartment complexes.”

ABC’s Martha Raddatz, Sunday

We say: Raddatz struggled to pooh-pooh Venezuelan gang takeovers of apartment complexes in Aurora, Colo., claiming they were limited to just“a handful.”

But she sounded like those idiotic TV reporters labeling the George Floyd riots “mostly peaceful” even as viewers watched buildings burn in the background.

When Americans watch videos of entire buildings in the grip of migrant gunmen, they know they have a problem. 


This denial:

“I don’t believe that’s what the letter said.”

— Kamala Harris, Wednesday

We say: Asked if she backed the letter to Israel from Secretary of Antony Blinken threatening to halt US arms unless it lets more aid into Gaza, Harris simply denied that’s what the letter said.

Here’s the letter’s verbatim language: “Failure to demonstrate a sustained commitment [to increase aid] . . . may have implications for U.S. policy under NSM-20.”

What does President Biden’s National Security Memorandum 20 say? That without sufficient “assurances” on aid, the “transfer of defense articles . . .  shall be paused.” QED. 


This claim:

“Illegal crossings have gone down every year for three years.”

— Bill Clinton, Sunday

We say: Sorry, Bubba. Customs and Border Patrol figures show a massive increase in “enforcement encounters” — from about 600,000 to nearly 2 million — from Fiscal Year 2020 to 2021; up again, to 2.8 million in 2022; and higher still, at 3.2 million, in 2023.

The number didfall in 2024 to 2.8 million, but even that’s nearly five times higherthan during Donald Trump’s last full fiscal year, and doesn’t account for the hundreds of thousands administratively “legalized” by the Biden-Harris team. 

Compiled by The Post Editorial Board

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