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Dove Kent, the senior strategy officer for Bend the Arc: Jewish Action, said OANN’s hire of Posobiec puts Jewish people at risk:
In 2020 it must be said: no news network seeking any kind of credibility should employ someone who traffics in antisemitic rhetoric and conspiracy theories, with ties to white nationalist groups, like Jack Posobiec. Posobiec has a track record of harassing Jewish journalists, on multiple occasions employing antisemitic symbols used by white nationalists and neo-Nazis to call attention to a person’s Jewish identity, resulting in online targeting, threats of death, rape, and other violence against them and their families. Posobiec's hire at One America News Network reflects their willingness to mainstream and even embrace antisemitism, and demonstrates their utter negligence for the safety of the American Jewish community.
Jack Posobiec, a correspondent for One America News Network (OANN), brought a pseudonymous disinformation poster onto the air without providing context of that person’s hateful and terroristic beliefs, Hatewatch found.
Posobiec produced a segment for OANN in September 2018 in which he interviewed “Microchip,” who was at that time a pseudonymous contributor to the white-supremacist-friendly website Gab. Microchip achieved notoriety during Trump’s 2016 run for president for his involvement in a number of high-profile disinformation campaigns. Posobiec also linked his Twitter followers to Microchip’s Gab feed at least five times after the interview was aired, archives show. Microchip posted statements to Gab prior to being interviewed on OANN that celebrated Hitler, and alluded to terrorism and murder.
“I wish [Atomwaffen Division] had survived. They did great work in scaring the living shit out of everyone,” the person behind the Microchip Gab account wrote on July 24, 2018, across two posts. “We need more hatred and fear. Everyone needs to stop being such f------ p------.”
Atomwaffen Division is a terroristic neo-Nazi group responsible for at least five murders in the U.S. since 2017. On July 14, John Cameron Denton of Atomwaffen Division, who goes by the online moniker “Rape,” pled guilty to charges related to “swatting” journalists, which means calling police on false grounds to the homes of people in an effort to provoke accidental violence against them.
Hatewatch documented Microchip’s Gab posts extensively at the time Posobiec brought him onto the air, and they are virulently hateful. In addition to writing “Hitler 2.0 is coming and it is glorious,” he called black Congresswoman Maxine Waters a “Bush n----r ,” in response to President Trump saying she had a “low IQ.” In another Gab post, Microchip expressed hatred for LGBTQ people, Jews and people of color by employing a litany of slurs. Hatewatch has chosen not to reproduce the hatred and profanity in this post, but readers can view a screenshot of the full content. He also wrote on Gab that “racism and hatred is the future.” OANN noted to Hatewatch that their segment featuring Microchip is “active.” It can be found on their YouTube page. Posobiec, however, appears to have deleted a tweet promoting it to his followers.
From white supremacist websites to Posobiec’s Twitter followers
Posobiec’s promotion of Microchip’s Gab account is one of many instances Hatewatch found of the OANN correspondent boosting content from fringe websites that are heavily frequented by white supremacists to his substantial Twitter following.
On May 9, 2017, roughly one year before he started with OANN, Posobiec directed his followers to a link on 8chan’s “pol,” a forum that was at that time dominated by antisemitic, racist and terroristic users. Two months later, on July 4, 2017, Posobiec referenced 8chan again, announcing that the forum had published the personal information of CNN reporters. Far-right terrorists posted apparent manifestos to 8chan, making the forum globally infamous. Cloudflare, a hosting service, ultimately terminated the site after the El Paso Wal-Mart terror attack, in which one of its users was suspected of killing 23 people in a shooting spree.
In the Posobiec post alerting his followers to the publication of private information about CNN reporters, a Twitter user replied with the name and address of CNN employees such as Wolf Blitzer, Don Lemon and Brian Stelter. (Hatewatch is linking to a screen shot of Posobiec’s tweet rather than the archive of it to avoid republishing that private information.) Someone with the handle @DarkTriadMan wrote, “#DoxCNN” and “#CNNKarma” underneath Posobiec’s tweet. “8chan is so ruthless Google delisted them,” a Twitter user with the handle @SonofLiberty54 wrote in the replies to Posobiec’s tweet.
As recently as May 15, Posobiec promoted to his Twitter followers an article about antifa from an obscure website operated by “Eric Striker.” Eric Striker is the pseudonym of Joseph Jordan, a neo-Nazi from Queens, New York, who attended the “Unite the Right” rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, and once wrote hundreds of posts for the neo-Nazi website The Daily Stormer. Jordan once wrote that Jews “need to be driven out of America.” Like Posobiec, Jordan promoted #Pizzagate. At the time Posobiec tweeted out the post linking to Jordan’s website, only a handful of other, much smaller Twitter accounts had done so, Hatewatch determined through a review of timestamps. Posobiec’s link to Jordan’s website was ultimately retweeted hundreds of times, causing the article to spread.
Posobiec responded to a request for comment on this series in April by claiming to have called the FBI on Hatewatch. In the first three stories in this series, Hatewatch detailed Posobiec’s connections to the white supremacist movement, his embrace of internet slang used by white supremacists to target Jews with harassment, and his connections to and promotion of Poland’s neo-fascist movement. He did not reply to a voice message Hatewatch left on July 8 offering him an additional opportunity to comment on the stories in this series.
Robert Herring, the CEO of OANN, portrayed Hatewatch’s effort to report on Posobiec’s ties to the white supremacist movement as “a guilt by association fallacy” and “a typical smear tactic” in April. Herring did not respond to a follow-up email Hatewatch sent on July 22 after the publication of the first three stories in this series.