The chain (email) gang

I have some conservative relatives — I suspect everyone does — who forward on bizarre right-wing chain emails. The content usually ranges from the absurd to the offensive, but the common thread is always the same: the emails are as conservative as they are wrong. (I used to write back, explaining why the chain email is wrong, but that only seemed to encourage the misguided relatives.)

What I didn’t fully appreciate, until reading Chris Hayes’ terrific new article in The Nation, is that this is something of a cottage industry for the right these days.

[T]he e-mail forward doesn’t fit into our existing model of the right-wing noise machine’s structure (hierarchical) or its approach (broadcast). It is, instead, organic and peer-to-peer…. The smear forward has its roots in two distinct forms of Internet-age communication. First, there’s the electronically disseminated urban legend (“Help find this missing child!”; “Bill Gates is going to pay people for every e-mail they send!”), which has been a staple of the Internet since the mid- ’90s. Then there’s the surreal genre of right-wing e-mail forwards. These range from creepy rage-filled quasi-fascist invocations (“The next time you see an adult talking…during the playing of the National Anthem–kick their ass”) to treacly aphorisms of patriotic/religious uplift (“remember only two defining forces have ever offered to die for you, Jesus Christ…and the American Soldier”).

For a certain kind of conservative, these e-mails, along with talk-radio, are an informational staple, a means of getting the real stories that the mainstream media ignore…. Mike D’Asto, a 29-year-old assistant cameraman living in New York, received so many forwards from his conservative father he started a blog called MyRightWingDad.net, where he shares them with other unwitting recipients. “I suddenly have connected to all these people who receive these right-wing forwards from their brothers-in-law,” D’Asto told me. “Surprisingly, a very large number of people receive these.”

And that, of course, is the problem.

And what a problem it is. It’s difficult enough to push back against nonsense disseminated by Fox News or Limbaugh, but manufactured right-wing gossip spread via email is even more nefarious.

Hayes’ whole article is definitely worth reading, but I just wanted to highlight a couple of points. First, it’s not a bipartisan problem.

From the beginning, the vast majority of these Internet-disseminated rumors have come from the right. (Snopes lists about fifty e-mails about George W. Bush, split evenly between adulatory accounts of him saluting wounded soldiers or witnessing to a wayward teenager, and accounts of real and invented malapropisms. In contrast, every single one of the twenty-two e-mails about John Kerry is negative.) For conservatives, these e-mails neatly reinforce preconceptions, bending the facts of the world in line with their ideological framework: liberals, immigrants, hippies and celebrities are always the enemy; soldiers and conservatives, the besieged heroes. The stories of the former’s perfidy and the latter’s heroism are, of course, never told by the liberal media. So it’s left to the conservative underground to get the truth out. And since the general story and the roles stay the same, often the actual characters are interchangeable.

“A lot of the chain letters that were accusing Al Gore of things in 2000 were recycled in 2004 and changed to Kerry,” says John Ratliff, who runs a site called BreakTheChain.org, which, like Snopes, devotes itself to debunking chain e-mails. One e-mail falsely described a Senate committee hearing in the 1980s where Oliver North offered an impassioned Cassandra-like warning about the threat of Osama bin Laden, only to be dismissed by a condescending Democratic senator. Originally it was Al Gore who played the role of the senator, but by 2004 it had changed to John Kerry. “You just plug in your political front-runner du jour,” Ratliff says.

And second, remember the chain email accusing Barack Obama of being a secret Muslim? Hayes digs into that, too, and highlights the bogus attack’s origin.

On August 10, 2004, just two weeks after Obama had given his much-heralded keynote speech at the DNC in Boston, a perennial Republican Senate candidate and self-described “independent contrarian columnist” named Andy Martin issued a press release. In it, he announced a press conference in which he would expose Obama for having “lied to the American people” and “misrepresent[ed] his own heritage.”

Martin raised all kinds of strange allegations about Obama but focused on him attempting to hide his Muslim past. “It may well be that his concealment is meant to endanger Israel,” read Martin’s statement. “His Muslim religion would obviously raise serious questions in many Jewish circles where Obama now enjoys support.” […]

Within a few days of Martin’s press conference, the conservative site Free Republic had picked it up, attracting a long comment thread, but after that small blip the specious “questions” about Obama’s background disappeared. Then, in the fall of 2006, as word got out that Obama was considering a presidential run, murmurs on the Internet resumed. In October a conservative blog called Infidel Bloggers Alliance reposted the Andy Martin press release under the title “Is Barack Obama Lying About His Life Story?” A few days later the online RumorMillNews also reposted the Andy Martin press release in response to a reader’s inquiry about whether Obama was a Muslim. Then in December fringe right-wing activist Ted Sampley posted a column on the web raising the possibility that Obama was a secret Muslim. Sampley, who co-founded Vietnam Veterans Against John Kerry and once accused John McCain of having been a KGB asset, quoted heavily from Martin’s original press release. “When Obama was six,” Sampley wrote, “his mother, an atheist, married Lolo Soetoro, an Indonesian Muslim, and moved to Jakarta, Indonesia…. Soetoro enrolled his stepson in one of Jakarta’s Muslim Wahabbi schools. Wahabbism is the radical teaching that created the Muslim terrorists who are now waging Jihad on the rest of the world.”

Jim Kennedy, a former communications director for Hillary Clinton, explained, “Once [the charges] are out in the ether, they are very hard to combat. It’s very unlike a traditional media, newspaper or TV show, or even a blog, which at least has a fixed point of reference. You know they’re traveling far and wide, but there’s no way to rebut them with all the people that have seen them.”

That’s apparently just the way the right-wing rumor mill likes it.

I, too, receive these emails–often from my own father. He is like Bush (unfortunately), in that he cannot admit that he was wrong, and he’ll send me chain messages that cement that viewpoint in his mind.

As was stated, these chain messages reinforce preconceptions. And they have the added bonus that, in so doing, they do not require introspection on the part of the ‘forwarder’–he/she simply clicks and forwards a neat little package of tripe someone else wrote that reinforces his/her worldview, without requiring actual engagement and/or thought, such as, say, a forum such as this wherein opposing views and alternative points can be discussed.

  • Hmmm. I’ve gotten a few of these forwarded to me here and there too, but I never really thought about it that way. Basically a whisper campaign, writ large.

  • Any sense on how wide spread this stuff is? I have never received such poilitically charged chain mail — fromn the right or left.

  • Terraformer is right above regarding the lack of effort, but there’s also the deniability involved with a forward. When I’ve replied to relatives about the falsity of material in these messages, I’ve been told: “I didn’t write it, I just passed it along because I thought you’d be interested.”

  • I too have received a more subtle form of this garbage, usually cloaked in a dripping sentimentality about how traditional ‘values’ and the good-old-days are no longer. This, of course, is aimed at an older demographic, and I have responded, quite forcefully, to my relatives to stop sending me this crap. And I’ve told them why, it won’t make any difference since I’m definitely the oddball in the family.

    It’s probably better to stay on the receiving end just to know what’s circulating around, but it’s so disgusting and upsetting to me that I prefer not to know.

  • I just received this from one of my favorite relatives. By way of background: I had wondered whether the National Guard might have helped in South California fire fighting. She emailed me the military’s press conference. I responded that I only trust retired military. AA is right-wing code for Air America.

    Well I surely don’t want to confuse you with any facts from the folks that know what is going on and have, by all reports, done a magnificent job. And it’s enlightening to know you support the troops like the rest of the Left does.

    BTW, I didn’t know AA was still on the air. What with their bankruptcy problems, dwindling audiences and cancelations in many metropolitan areas along with with the drunken stupor fall down accident of one of their “stars” Randy Rhoads who lied about the circumstances of her broken teeth in the incident. Good to know there is still an audience of at least one in the Great Pacific Northwest.

    I don’t consider the Lt Gov anything but a whining little twit who will use half his state aflame as an opportunity to bash Bush instead of actually working to help those folks like everyone else.

    PS Maybe Stephanie doesn’t know her history and Tweetie’s work history for one of the most powerful Dems in Congress. Hardly a right wing stooge.

    As we know, it takes critical thinking — i.e., wondering about things — to be a progressive/liberal. It used to require the same, laced with occasional wit, to be a conservative (think Wm. F-Buckley). All it takes to be conservative anymore is adherence to the party line, primarily through forwarded emails.

  • An interesting phenomenon I’ve been seeing over the past few years is this:

    Some right-wing nutcase will copy one of these e-mails, word for word, and send it to the local paper, where it will appear as a “letter to the editor.” (This has happened on at least two occasions recently.) It took me all of about fifteen seconds of Googling in each case to confirm that the items were simply cut-and-paste jobs from anonymous e-mails. Since the paper’s letters policy clearly states that “submissions must be your own creation,” I routinely write the editors to complain about this, but they still do it.

  • My 83 year old Mom gets these, and forwards the most ridiculous to me, as a joke.
    I thank my lucky stars that she’s intelligent enough to sort through this crap.

  • Here in The OC, this is indeed a very important staple of the right wing noise machine, and it also links with the social networks of the fundamentalist churches. There is a complete cycle of non-traditional meetings, reinforced in prayer groups, by email, by talk radio and Fox, all with common threads of xenophobia, victimization, and exceptionalism.

    The emails are the most virulent part of the message, with a confidential tone, and guarantees that “This is something you won’t see in the liberal media”.

  • I applaud all of you who acknowledge and communicate with your right-wing family members. As far as I am concerned, any of my right-wing family (and I grew up in Indiana, so there’s a lot of them) who support Bush and this war simply don’t exist.

    They can talk about how awesome the war is all they want in between their excited ravings about what an amazing coincidence it is that they all wore NASCAR shirts to Thanksgiving dinner.

    When NASCAR apparel makes up 98% or your entire wardrobe, it’s not a coincidence.

    I recently tried to explain to my aunt why this war was illegal, but it was clear to me after 3 seconds that she thinks the President is a king, so I gave up.

    Evil triumphs when stupid abounds.

  • “Any sense on how wide spread this stuff is? I have never received such politically charged chain mail — from the right or left.”

    I envy you. I have two dear friends (very devout, but I like them anyway) who forward the most egregious of all these varieties from the right, often with either a highly indignant or a treacly intro. I ignore them (once I’ve reattached the top of my head), unless I find a Snopes rebuttal, in which case I return only the link without comment. It seems that my friends who are very religious will believe *anything* without questioning it.

  • I remember the last one of these I got – from a (no longer) friend – writing to tell us all, from his perch down in southern Orangutang County, how we in Los Angeles had a District Attorney’s office that was spending 70 percent of its resources on the prosecution of illegal immigrants, who were 50 percent of the murder defendants.

    And when I “replied all” and let these morons know that my ex-girlfriend who now runs the Major Cases Unit of the L.A. District Attorneys Office had informed me that illegal immigrants were less than 2 percent of their prosecutions and that only one illegal immigrant had been arrested for murder this year, the replies were that she obviously had to hide the truth, since it would “create a revolution” if “real people” knew about this.

    We aren’t going to be running re-education camps in 2009 – we’re going to be running education camps. These people are so far gone they really do live in an alternate reality. It’s far worse than Southerners who believe in the goodness of the “Lost Cause.”

  • Even though it wouldn’t stop the right-wing destructionists from bringing lawsuits against people who tell the truth just to create trouble, I’ve thought that perhaps political campaigners of both stripes ought to pull out the old libel, slander, and defamation laws and liberally use them against everyone who presents malicious lies as truth in the political arena. Have one campaign staff member just for this and pursue every email forwarder, every radio talk person, every columnist, every blog, that presents lies as truth.

    Isn’t it odd how Ann Richards somehow became a lesbian in Texas when running against GW Bush, and John McCain became the father of an illegitimate black child when running against GW Bush, and Al Gore became the inventor of the internet when running against GW Bush, and John Kerry awarded himself all his VietNam medals when running against GW Bush. So what’s ole’ Turd Blossom doing these days? Running email scams is about his intellectual speed, I’d say.

  • Kafka Lives (#12),

    I do the Snopes.com thing, too. It seems to work. I say “seems” because it usually terminates any further prating, on that topic at least. Never, of course, an admission of error or even a Thank you for the enlightenment. Still, considering the usually shrill right wing, “silence is golden”. And, even if they can’t translate it, Qui tacet consentit.

  • terraformer said “he/she simply clicks and forwards a neat little package of tripe someone else wrote that reinforces his/her worldview, without requiring actual engagement and/or thought”

    So they are, basically, dittoheads?

  • I’ve got several right-winger clients [I work in advertising] that think absolutely nothing of forwarding this type of crap to me. Some gems I’ve gotten include:

    All of the anti-John Kerry pieces
    The Clinton’s legacy of murder rap sheet
    Stories of who children are being robbed of their souls by “government schools” that don’t allow you to mention God in school, but make you learn about Allah and Buddha
    The “gay agenda”
    And the ne plus ultra: a doctored photograph of Hillary Clinton with a penis

    I’ve always been tempted to go straight to Snopes, copy and paste the link to a page that thoroughly discredits the e-mail, and do a “reply all” so that all my client’s conservatives friends could see what a load of horse shit it all was. But, with them being clients it’s kind of like when you want to make a liberal comment on a conservative website — typically you have to sign-up and pay five dollars first.

    Whether Rush Limbaugh started it with the “dittohead” movement, or if it’s straight from Bible verse recitation, the conservative mind is fed exclusively on the fat of drag-and-drop hearsay and myth, without a lean morsel of truth.

  • Using e-mail as a kool-aid dispenser. How clever.

    Right wingers are like drug addicts — they have to keep getting their fixes to stay in a right wing stupor or else they’ll come down and have to deal with reality.

  • I sometimes get these from my brother-in-law. I’m often impressed by how, if you think about them at all skeptically, they instantly dissolve. But, I’m an old hand at the Internet, and expect most of what I read, especially in chain email, to be crap. I expect that, for many, the fact that it was forwarded from someone they know actually INCREASES its credibility. So, people who typically aren’t very skeptical about right-wing claims are actually even less skeptical when it comes to these anonymous, but forwarded from a friend or relative, emails.

    If I’m not busy, I usually do the snopes reply, otherwise I just try to remember that my sister loves him, he’s a nice guy and he works hard to provide for his family. He just has a slight political impairment.

  • Hmmmn.

    Sometimes I get petitions sent from my left-wing friends that ask me to forward the petition to five more friends….

    But most that cross my path are of the “how tough it is being a mom” variety. I was once a member of a mom’s club where a member sent around one of these that included stuff about how great it was when children didn’t talk back and when they got spanked for “misbehavior.” I fired off an email to the group suggesting that while I could understand how this kind of thing makes people feel good, some of the ideas may have a political agenda and should be looked at with caution (this was me being discreet — my first inclination was just to say the whole thing was crap.) Anyways, I received a bunch of angry emails from members of the group asking how I could be so mean to the original sender. (Whose email address I didn’t recognize.) Everyone seemed to agree that I had been wrong, despite the fact that further research revealed that the original version of the “poem” had included stanzas about not letting my kids march in anti-war rallies, etc. So there you go. Liberal women apparently don’t join moms groups. Which is perhaps why I haven’t been able to make any friends here in southern California.

  • The one I saw lately was a retarded rant by a right wing moron which was falsely attributed to Jay Leno, thus giving it credibility it would have otherwise lacked. In the process of its being forwarded, the email morphed into something more virulent, probably by accident, but stupid people are very good at mucking things up. Ironically, it’s an evolutionary process that favors “information” that’s preferred by morons who hate evolution.

    Someone should do a study to see how effectively quasi-anonymous information like this can influence people. I’d say that would be a scary study, like the one where most people would torture others if an “authority” told them to do it.

    Biggerbox touches a good point when he points out that “the fact that it was forwarded from someone they know actually INCREASES its credibility”.

    Maybe there should be a website where you could post these bogus emails along with the name of the idiot who passed it along. Maybe we could embarrass them into actually checking something out before clicking Forward.

    Short of that, I doubt if there will ever be a cure for it, because the people who lap that shit up are too stupid to even check snopes to see if what they’re helping disseminate is even true. I would also say that many of these people do not care if the stories are true, because they think the liberals are lying all the time about conservatives. They think it’s OK to engage in “defensive lying”. They’re too stupid to tell whether the left is actually telling the truth or not, and they have Rush Limbaugh and the RWNM screaming about how diabolical the left is, so they feel like it’s justified if the right lies about stuff (if they are ever confronted with proof of the lies).

    As Tom Paine said, Arguing with people who have given up their reason is like medicating the dead. Unfortunately these dead-brained people keep voting and forwarding, like peterado says, free koolaid.

  • Hey catherine, go to meetup.com and search for progressive parents / moms. You’ll find people like you!

  • I stopped getting these things from my sister-in-law and co-workers (I’m one of two liberals in a department of 15) once I copied the link from Snopes and hit “Reply to All.” Naturally, I usually added a few thoughts of my own (i.e. “Why are facts for the right so much like DDT to mosquitoes? After all, once you unleash either one, the nuisance seems to go away.”).

    One thing from the post caught my eye:

    Once [the charges] are out in the ether, they are very hard to combat.

    The left has NEVER seemed to grasp this. While I have no desire for them to lie like so many (though not all) on the right, the left’s inability to lead on an issue’s narrative, rather than being reactionary, has always pissed me off.

    Granted, part of that is the media’s willingness to soak up whatever the right throws out there (please, JRS, spare me the “liberal media!” crap) and the left’s inability to make inroads on the talk show circuit. But it’d be nice if, at least every once in a while, some liberal somewhere could be ahead on an issue before the right cranked up the ol’ smear machine. They have enough media consultants — are they all just clueless, or do they just not care?

    **sigh**

  • As the Borg were fond of saying, “Resistance is futile.” I get this crap email sent to me from right leaning relatives. In the past, I have occasionally responded to the sender to point out why it’s garbage, but it still comes on occasion. My normal response now is a just a quick move to the the very handy “Delete” button. Life’s too short to worry about it. I figure that those that are taken in by it are beyond salvaging anyway with any counter arguments.

  • Pingback: Balloon Juice
  • What you see in the spread of this forewarded koolaid is the nexus of the odious lead in to a question “Some people say……”

    Let’s face it the right’s ability to gin up outrage is only bettered by it’s ability to control the narrative from every angle. Mostly we see a top down strategy, but in emails it’s peer-to-peer.

  • Actually, Hayes’ own numbers prove that email gossip is bipartisan. He says he found 50 Bush emails, split between positive and negative, and 22 Kerry emails. Half of 50 is 25. Which means that Bush and Kerry had roughly equivalent numbers of bad gossip.

    The real difference is that, where Bush had 25 GOOD gossip emails, Kerry had NONE.

    Could it be that the Democrats biggest problem is not an inability to propagate negative information but instead an inability to propagate POSITIVE information.

    Maybe Democrats are just not that good when it comes to believing good things about themselves.

  • I used to get a lot of those from the husband of one of my hobby e-list’s “acquaintances”, with no comment at all. And I used to send him serious rebuttals every time, to which he never responded. But, the last couple of forwards came with a Snopes link *preceding and debunking* the forwarded message and a single sentence from him: “like talking to you”. Go figure…

  • I get these all the time from “church” friends. Most of them lately are about illegal aliens, of course. Once I hit reply to all with a rebuttal and picked up a stalker – some poor young woman with low self-esteem who took my reply as a personal insult to her beliefs. It was forever before I got rid of her and her whiny emails about all the trials and tribulation that made her a “good” person and thus persecuted by my reply. Now I just delete them. I figure that if I don’t pass them on, that’s about a million less people they reach.

    Most of the people who know me well know that I don’t like them. THey don’t understand why I am so deluded, but after I told them (sometimes more than once) that I don’t like them, they usually abide by my wishes.

    I did notice that there are no “lefty” emails like them. I brought up the shadow echo chamber on other blogs, but it seemed I was the only one who noticed.

    By the way, there was a clever ploy out called the “Presidential Prayer Team” too that shared daily items that were weighing down on the President’s prayer life and roped people into Bush worship by writing about his “compasion” and asking people to pray for him. I noticed that the site said it wasn’t affiliated with the President or any of his campaigns. It made me wonder how exactly they could channel him then…Great propaganda!

  • This post is funny cause it’s true. I have an aunt who sends me winger dribble all the time. Some are phony patriot blather. Some are racist diatribes disguised as immigration ‘reform’. It’s really is bizarre to how their thought process works. It’s almost like a mental illness. Derangement.

  • Comments are closed.