Cliff Kincaid
A no-go zone for truth
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By Cliff Kincaid
January 27, 2015

Accurately reporting on no-go zones dominated by Muslims in Europe is now a no-go zone. Our media have made a mess of the whole issue and are now afraid to dig themselves out. What a disgrace and disservice to news consumers.

Jumping on the pile, the left-wing Politico has published a story accusing Louisiana Republican Governor and possible presidential candidate Bobby Jindal of telling a "lie" about the no-go zones by saying they exist. But the story is itself based on a lie. Things are so twisted that Politico is doing the lying by denying that the no-go zones exist. How did we get in such a mess?

Let's understand that the method in this madness is to accommodate the radical Muslim lobby and demonize politicians who talk about the jihad problem.

First of all, the evidence shows that the zones or areas do exist. We cited evidence for them, and numerous other outlets have done so as well. The confusion stems from a Fox News apology over the matter that should never have been made.

Steve Emerson made a mistake on one Fox show in saying that "in Britain, it's not just no-go zones, there are actual cities like Birmingham that are totally Muslim where non-Muslims just simply don't go in."

Acknowledging his error, Emerson tells WorldNetDaily that he is nevertheless appalled that the media have now decided that any and all reporting on no-go zones is wrong. "It's outrageous for media outlets to apologize, saying 'no-go zones' don't exist in Europe, when even the New York Times for years has published articles documenting Muslim 'no-go zones' do exist in European countries like France," he tells WND reporter Jerome Corsi.

Corsi notes that "NBC News, the New York Times, the Associated Press and others were using the term 'no-go' zones for Muslim-majority neighborhoods in Paris when Muslim youth gangs were rampaging through the streets and setting cars on fire."

We made the same point in our treatment of the issue, noting that Fox News suddenly altered its reporting of the Muslim riots in France in 2005, determining them to be "civil riots" instead. We saw then the power of the Islamists to alter Fox's coverage.

Fox News media reporter Howard Kurtz had a great opportunity on his Sunday show "Media Buzz" to set the record straight. Instead of confronting his own channel over the unnecessary apology, Kurtz praised CNN's Anderson Cooper for making the same kind of apology. But then he mentioned that other outlets have been reporting on the no-go zones for years. So an apology wasn't necessary after all! "The subject is complicated," he said. No it's not. Just tell the truth.

If all of this is unnecessarily confusing, it's clearly because of the unnecessary Fox apology. It was a political apology. There is no other explanation. It is this kind of pandering that is becoming a pattern at Fox, which had earlier yanked anchor Bret Baier from a Catholic conference under pressure from the homosexual lobby.

Liberal special interest groups should not have this kind of influence on a news organization, especially one claiming "fair and balanced" coverage that is also supposed to be accurate.

Journalism 101 teaches that corrections or apologies are called for when errors are made. Since no-go areas do in fact exist, according to numerous sources, no apology was necessary. Yet, Fox News offered the view that since the no-go zones are not "specific" or "formal" entities, they really don't exist. Fox was wrong. This is complete nonsense and a gross distortion of the concept.

Robert Spencer makes the observation, "The Fox apology is all the more curious in light of the fact that others, even on the Left, have noticed the no-go zones in France before some Fox commentators began talking about them in the wake of the Charlie Hebdo attacks."

Citing just one example of many, he notes that David Ignatius had written in The New York Times back in 2002, "Yet Arab gangs regularly vandalize synagogues here, the North African suburbs have become no-go zones at night, and the French continue to shrug their shoulders."

Spencer notes that Fox's apology "only plays into the hands of leftists and Islamic supremacists who have a vested interest in rendering people ignorant and complacent about the reality of what is going on in these areas."

He suggests that Fox "apologize for its apology." That would perhaps further confuse matters, but it is the right thing to do.

Without an apology for the apology, those who apologize for the Islamization of Europe like Arif Rafiq will continue to claim, as he did in Politico, that Jindal, by even discussing the no-go zones, "has been repeating a lie that even Fox News was forced to apologize for." The Fox News correction, or apology, though unwarranted, is now being cited as the media standard.

Politico headlined the piece "Bobby Jindal's Muslim Problem," as if the governor has a bias against Muslims. So a Fox News apology has now been transformed into an indictment of a conservative political figure. Soon, Jindal will be denounced as an "Islamophobe," another smear term used by the radical Islam lobby.

The liberal media won't believe any of Fox's normal day-to-day reports. But when the channel claims to have made an error that makes the rest of the media look good by comparison, that suddenly becomes the truth and the channel has to be believed. This is how reality is turned upside down.

The real story is why Fox made this unnecessary correction. The clout of the Muslim Brotherhood's Council on American-Islamic Relations is the most likely explanation. Fox has undermined its own credibility by apologizing for something that was true. It is bizarre and was absolutely unnecessary.

Pamela Geller is correct that the major media are "failing us." It's terribly tragic that at a time when we were depending on one channel, Fox, to tell the truth, it has failed us, too.

© Cliff Kincaid

 

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