Fox News has inspired at least one person to attempt mass murder — a new report removes any doubt.[1]
Three months ago, a heavily armed man named Byron Williams was on his way to kill people at two non-profit organizations in San Francisco, when he got into a gun battle with police before they eventually arrested him. Now, in an interview from jail, he's said that Fox News' Glenn Beck was a major inspiration:
"Beck will deny everything about violent approach, deny everything about conspiracies, but he'll give you every reason to believe it ... I understand what he's doing."[2]If you needed any more evidence that Fox News is dangerous, this is it. It's time to do everything we can reduce Fox News' influence and stop them from spreading divisive propaganda and inciting violence. I've joined the Turn Off Fox campaign and I'm asking businesses and public places in my community to stop playing Fox News. Will you join me? It just takes a minute:
http://www.turnofffox.org/580/?id=1767-1085447&pr=crByron Williams came frighteningly close to killing people at offices of the ACLU and the Tides Foundation in San Francisco. He was stopped by police on the highway in Oakland just a few miles from his targets, and shot at them for about 12 minutes (injuring two of them but thankfully killing no one) before they finally could arrest him.[3]
While many Americans are aware of the ACLU, the Tides Foundation is an organization that most people had never heard of — until Glenn Beck started demonizing and spreading false information about them. Since Beck’s show premiered, he has pushed conspiracy theories involving Tides on nearly 30 episodes. During the same time period, Tides was never mentioned on other news channels.[4,5]
Williams survived the gunshots police used to bring him down — and now, he’s told us about his motives. According to an interview with Williams recently released by Media Matters, he was driven by a bizarre and false conspiracy theory involving Tides Foundation that Glenn Beck pushed multiple times on his TV show.[6]
Click here to watch a video about Williams' attempted killing spree (and its connection to Glenn Beck's conspiracy theories) — and to sign the petition calling on businesses and public places to stop playing Fox News:
http://wwww.turnofffox.org/580/?id=1767-1085447&pr=crHere are some more quotes from Byron Williams that show what he thought about Glenn Beck:
"I would have never started watching Fox News if it wasn’t for the fact that Beck was on there ... It was the things that he did, it was the things he exposed, that blew my mind." "Anything that you do is going to be considered promoting terror attacks or promoting violence. So now they’ve got Beck labeled as a guy that is trying to incite violence. And what I say is that if the truth incites violence, it means that we’ve been living too long in the lies."[7] Williams is the clearest example we have of someone who was motivated by Fox News to engage in political violence — but he's part of a consistent pattern of violence from far-right extremists that was likely motivated at least in part by the hateful rhetoric and misinformation that's commonplace on Fox News and in other far-right media. Many of those who have planned or carried out violence (including Byron Williams) held racist and anti-Semitic views and were angry at the fact that our country has a Black president.
In April 2009, a white supremacist named Richard Poplawski shot and killed three police officers that were called to his house. Poplawski hated Jews and Black people, and believed in right-wing conspiracy theories that say the Obama administration is gearing up to take away peoples' guns and institute a police state. Glenn Beck has consistently implied that the Obama administration is taking away our rights and moving us towards a fascist dictatorship or police state. Poplawski once posted a Youtube clip of Glenn Beck — in which he discussed a conspiracy theory about FEMA concentration camps — to the white supremacist website Stormfront.[8] In May 2009, abortion doctor George Tiller was gunned down in his church by an anti-abortion terrorist after being demonized for years by Fox's Bill O'Reilly as "Tiller the Baby Killer." O'Reilly had compared Tiller to the Nazis and to Al-Qaeda. He said that Tiller had "blood on his hands" and that he wouldn't want to be Tiller "if there is a Judgement Day."[9] There's a very real danger of political violence from the far-right — and Fox News fans the flames every day. It's no longer a hypothetical question whether the conspiracy theories, bigotry, violent rhetoric on Fox can lead to real-world violence. It's already happened. Thankfully, police were able to stop Byron Williams before he committed a massacre. But we might not be so lucky with the next killer inspired by Glenn Beck and Fox News.
We can't allow Fox News to stoke the kind of fear, division and hatred that leads to violence. It's time to ask our friends, our neighbors, and our communities to turn off Fox. Please join me:
http://www.turnofffox.org/580/?id=1767-1085447&pr=crThanks.
References
1. http://act.colorofchange.org/go/464?akid=1621.189178.5kaLiI&t=7
2. http://act.colorofchange.org/go/464?akid=1621.189178.5kaLiI&t=9
3. http://act.colorofchange.org/go/465?akid=1621.189178.5kaLiI&t=11
4. http://act.colorofchange.org/go/466?akid=1621.189178.5kaLiI&t=13
5. http://act.colorofchange.org/go/467?akid=1621.189178.5kaLiI&t=15
6. See reference 1.
7. See reference 1.
8. http://act.colorofchange.org/go/468?akid=1621.189178.5kaLiI&t=17
9. http://act.colorofchange.org/go/395?akid=1621.189178.5kaLiI&t=19
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