In no particular order, here are the biggest hoaxes and misinformation campaigns run by corporate media hacktivists this year.
thefederalist.com
1. Bloodbath
Taking Trump’s remarks out of context is one of legacy media’s favorite pastimes — and March’s “bloodbath” nontroversy was no exception.
2. War on SCOTUS
While Democrat mouthpiece
ProPublica kickstarted a media
war on the Supreme Court last year with
smear attacks on Justices Clarence Thomas and Samuel Alito, The New York Times took its hysteria to a whole new level.
3. Hiding Biden’s Cognitive Decline
If you’re looking for an example of how the media
interfere in our elections, look no further than their concentrated effort to hide Joe Biden’s cognitive decline.
4. Project 2025
It didn’t take long for the media to make The Heritage Foundation’s “Project 2025” their go-to bogeyman during the 2024 campaign.
5. What’s a Border Czar?
After Democrat oligarchs orchestrated a silent coup to replace Biden with Kamala Harris on the 2024 ticket, the media jumped into action to cover up the vice president’s myriad failures — including her role as “border czar.”
6. Trump’s Arlington Cemetery Visit
Obviously seeking to tarnish Trump ahead of the November election, anti-truth NPR ran an anonymously sourced hit piece
attacking the former president for — wait for it — visiting Arlington National Cemetery at the
request of
Gold Star families.
7. Show Me the Garbage!
Legacy media propagandists had their hands full in the closing days of the 2024 election after Biden
referred to the tens of millions of Americans who support Trump as “garbage.”
8. Trump’s Liz Cheney Comments
One of the biggest media-driven hoaxes concocted this year was the manipulation of Trump’s remarks about Liz Cheney.
9. What Assassination Attempts?
If you watched and read nothing but legacy media, there’s a good chance you’d know little to nothing about the two assassination attempts against Trump this year.
10. The Atlantic’s Hitler Hysteria
In a last-ditch attempt to salvage Kamala Harris’ flailing presidential bid, The Atlantic’s
Jeffrey Goldberg — who
ran the
debunked 2020 “suckers” and losers” smear — published an anonymously sourced October hit piece with
claims that Trump said he wanted “the kind of generals that Hitler had.” It also contained accusations that Trump expressed anger about paying for the funeral services of a murdered Army soldier.
Media: " Nobody trusts us. We can't figure out why."