Shellenberger: Pelosi & Kavanaugh Murder-Plots Expose Media Double-Standard Authored by Michael Shellenberger via substack, The same news media that mischaracterized psychosis as fanaticism in the alleged plot to kill Pelosi also downplayed the assassination plot against Kavanaugh by an abortion rights fanatic… Journalists have described the alleged assassination attempt against House Speaker Nancy Pelosi by a delusional psychotic man in explicitly political terms, but largely dismissed the overtly political motivations of the suspect in the murder plot against Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh. David DePape, the suspect in an alleged assassination attempt against House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, wrote a series of right-wing blog posts in recent weeks. βMany of the posts were filled with screeds against Jews, Black people, Democrats, the media and transgender people,βΒ notesΒ The Washington Post. βIn one post, written on Oct. 19, the author urged former President Donald J. Trump to choose Tulsi Gabbard, the former Democratic congresswoman from Hawaii, as his vice-presidential candidate in 2024,βΒ reportsΒ The New York Times. βIn another,βΒ wroteΒ The Los Angeles Times, βhe called βequityβ a leftist dog whistle βfor the systematic oppression of white peopleβ and βdiversityβ a βdog whistle for the genocide of the white race.ββ But the blog posts confirmΒ my original reporting yesterdayΒ that DePape has been, for at least a decade, in the grip of a psychosis caused by mental illness and/or drug use.Β The Washington Post, to its credit, reports in the first paragraph that DePapeβs blog was filled with βdelusional thoughts, including that an invisible fairy attacked an acquaintance and sometimes appeared to him in the form of a birdβ and that, as each post loaded, βa reader briefly glimpses an image of a person wearing a giant inflatable unicorn costume.βΒ The New York TimesΒ acknowledgedΒ that, βmixed in with those posts were others about religion, the occult and images of fairies that the user said he had produced using an artificial intelligence imaging system,β albeit not until the 22nd paragraph. And now the mother of DePapeβs two children, Gypsy Taub, has publicly confirmed that DePape has experienced psychotic episodes. “He is mentally ill,β sheΒ toldΒ ABC7, βHe has been mentally ill for a long time.” Taub said DePape disappeared for almost a year and βcame back in very bad shape. He thought he was Jesus. He was constantly paranoid, thinking people were after him. And it took a good year or two to get back to, you know, being halfway normal.β However, it is not clear whether DePapeβs psychosis is a result of an underlying mental illness, like schizophrenia or bipolar disorder, or from the long-term use of drugs, particularly meth, which can result in psychosis and permanent changes to brain functioning. Taubβs neighbors, as IΒ reported yesterday, said Taub herself suffered frequent bouts of paranoid psychosis and had repeatedly lied about them to the police. Many people responded to my reporting yesterday by noting that DePape may have been psychotic but that the real problem lay with right-wing conspiracy theories. βBut even if you believe he’s psychotic (which seems plausible),βΒ wroteΒ formerΒ New YorkerΒ reporter James Surowiecki in response to my article, βwhy did his paranoid psychosis take as its object Nancy Pelosi? Because of the ubiquity of right-wing conspiracy theories and the demonization of Pelosi by right-wing mediaβ¦ We can certainly get rid of conspiracy theories being mainstreamed on cable TV and social media by high-profile pundits.β But we canβt get rid of discussions of conspiracy theories because doing so would violate the First Amendment and, as I noted yesterday, psychotic people construct their delusions from whatever is in popular culture at the time to invent justifications for their actions. In 1981, a psychotic man named John Hinkley, Jr. shot President Ronald Reagan because, Hinkley said, he wanted to impress the actress Jodie Foster. Earlier this month, a man in Washington stateΒ shotΒ two 40-something innkeepers because, he said, he heard the voice of Pope Gregory and John Paul say to him, βAre you going to let Bonny and Clyde do that to our family?β Law enforcement officers stand guard as protesters march past Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh’s home on June 8, 2022 in Chevy Chase, Maryland. An armed man was arrested near Kavanaugh’s home that morning. [Photo by Nathan Howard/Getty Images] And if mainstream news journalists are so concerned that political extremism is resulting in more violence against public officials, why did they,Β en masse, downplay the assassination attempt against Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh in June? WhereΒ The New York TimesΒ has put the alleged Pelosi assassination attempt on its front page for two days in a row, it buried the story of the Kavanaugh murder plot on page A20. Three days later, none of the Sunday morning political shows, such as NBCβs βMeet the Press,β even mentioned the assassination attempt. Today, βMeet the Press,βΒ focusedΒ on the Pelosi plot and framed it as overly political, making no mention whatsoever of DePapeβs psychotic delusions. βThe chilling and violent attack on Paul Pelosi β House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s 82-year-old husband β is raising fears of more political violence,βΒ saidΒ its host, Chuck Todd. The double standard in news media coverage is brought into sharper relief when one considers that the suspect in the murder plot against Kavanaugh, Nicholas John Roske, 26, has, unlike DePape, shown no sign of psychosis. Rather, he appears to be motivated by theΒ same kind of political fanaticismΒ that has gripped climate activists around the world. Subscribers to Michael Shellenberger can read more here… Tyler Durden Sun, 10/30/2022 – 17:00
Shellenberger: Pelosi & Kavanaugh Murder-Plots Expose Media Double-Standard
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