Louise Mensch is experienced in three areas: Writing chick lit, marrying famous music managers, and quitting a political career. Notice that Russian politics is not one of these areas. She has no degree in any subject that would grant her anything close to expertise on Russian politics. And she tweets things like this:
I absolutely believe that Andrew Breitbart was murdered by Putin, just as the founder of RT was murdered by Putin.
— Louise Mensch (@LouiseMensch) February 24, 2017
Might get pregnant again just to have another kid and name them "Jim Comey" (either sex)#Hero@FBI
— Louise Mensch (@LouiseMensch) May 10, 2017
Re all the nice pictures of Rudy Giuliani and the Russians yesterday.
— Louise Mensch (@LouiseMensch) May 10, 2017
Last I heard, he was singing like a bird to @FBI and @AGSchneiderman
Louise Mensch doesn’t know anything about the Russia investigation. No one sane would leak any valuable information to a person who isn’t a journalist and whose only moment of public self-awareness occurred in 2012, when she appeared on the BBC’s Question Time and announced: “I did serious drugs and it messed with my head.”
Nevertheless, an aide for Democratic Senator Ed Markey reportedly cited Mensch as a source for the senator’s claim that a grand jury has been empaneled in New York to investigate the Trump campaign’s ties to Russia. The problem? Grand jury subpoenas were issued in Virginia. There’s no evidence of a second grand jury in New York. He got the claim from Mensch:
A Markey aide says that the Senator was referring to reports on Louise Mensch's blog and Palmer Report (seriously) https://t.co/4U8EEg3yKn
— Jon Swaine (@jonswaine) May 10, 2017
And she’s already got an excuse (also unverified, as is her wont):
What if I told you........
— Louise Mensch (@LouiseMensch) May 10, 2017
that the #GrandJuryNY and the #FederalGrandJury were actually the SAME case?#Lisov#AI#Microchip@hardhouz13 pic.twitter.com/xJtAl0Ccfq
Markey’s other source, The Palmer Report, also has a checkered reputation. As Dana Milbank previously reported for The Washington Post, the website started the conspiracy theory that Vladimir Putin ordered Bashar al-Assad to launch a chemical weapons attack against his own people to boost Donald Trump’s standing in America. Markey has since retracted his claim.
But Mensch and The Palmer Report are part of a disturbing emerging trend. Liberals desperate to believe that the right conspiracy will take down Donald Trump promote their own purveyors of fake news. Here’s Andrea Chalupa, another Twitter favorite:
Whatever Tillerson has been busy doing, it worked. Haven't seen the Russian government this happy since election day https://t.co/4xmWTTyv2P
— Andrea Chalupa (@AndreaChalupa) May 10, 2017
There’s no evidence that Secretary of State Rex Tillerson has anything to do with the current scandal. It’s a completely unsourced, unverified theory. So is this:
Source: Comey at the "rocket docket" yesterday in Virginia that expedites cases, submitting intel. Trump panicked. #FBIDirector #Comey fired
— Andrea Chalupa (@AndreaChalupa) May 9, 2017
And Shareblue’s Leah McElrath:
Golden showers and woman-on-woman sex play are fairly mainstream given today's porn access.
— leah mcelrath 🗽 (@leahmcelrath) May 7, 2017
Raping 11 year olds would be kompromat. https://t.co/qbXo93xtu9
My tweet from November calling this a coup.
— leah mcelrath 🗽 (@leahmcelrath) May 9, 2017
I stand by this thread.https://t.co/F7CY8guafZ
Things are very bad, yes, but a “coup” is something specific, and calling the Comey firing a coup erases the meaning of an important term. Words mean things. Similarly not everything is “kompromat.”
Finally, it’s no help when individuals who regularly appear on TV as experts promote the sources of these conspiracy theories:
I'm about to leave the US to speak at an international conference. Rec follows: @leahmcelrath @AndreaChalupa @MalcolmNance @JasminMuj
— Sarah Kendzior (@sarahkendzior) May 10, 2017
This is bullshit, and it deserves to be treated as such. So before you retweet, ask yourself a few questions:
1. Is that person a reporter for a legitimate news outlet?
2. If this person tweets a claim attributed to an anonymous source, do they follow that claim up with any reporting?
3. Does this person have credentials relevant to the subject matter they’re discussing?
4. Are this person’s claims drastically out of step with what’s currently being reported?
5. Why would a high-level official leak to this specific person?
6. Am I only tweeting this because it makes me feel good?
Finally, remember that sometimes conspiracy theorists will get things right. This is not actually evidence that they are real experts who merit your attention. It’s a matter of odds. A person who produces a large volume of content will naturally get a couple things right. And Trump offers plenty of fodder for amateur investigators: He really is corrupt, and we really do inhabit an unstable political moment.
We have always told ourselves stories about what waits in the dark. It’s how we cope with uncertainty. But campfire tales are usually just that: tales. To find your way in the dark, you need something real.