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Sharyl Attkisson

Untouchable Subjects. Fearless, Nonpartisan Reporting.

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Wikipedia Weaponization: A dissection of bias

(Language warning)

The controversy over Wikipedia agenda editing and bias is longstanding, as I have reported for several years.

Well-meaning Wikipedia editors are often outmatched and outgunned by more powerful editors who control pages and topics on behalf of vested special interests, or who are deeply, ideologically entrenched.

My own Wikipedia biography is unimportant-- except to the extent to which it makes the point about what's happening across the platform.

Read about the Wikipedia Correction Project

Those interested can read the commentary Wikipedia editors are engaging in about my Wikipedia biography. The discussion on this "talk" page ranges from the obviously biased to the unhinged. Honest Wikipedia editors attempt to weigh in and point out violations of Wikipedia's own policies made by some editors but they are often drowned out by the nonsense that has become routine.

Check out the Wikipedia alternative "Everipedia," a new, more accurate and fair (so far) project of Wikipedia co-founder Larry Sanger.

One of the most disturbing aspects of Wikipedia's weaponization is the evidence of agenda editors seeking out the subjects they are editing --to harass and attack them.

As I have sought to point out Wikipedia's bias and mistakes, several Wikipedia editors have threatened to stop me, have found me on Twitter to attack me and my followers, and have taken other steps to otherwise attempt to harass me outside of the Wikipedia platform.

Who would have dreamed that "volunteer editors" for an online encyclopedia would stalk subjects and harass them under a cloak or anonymity?

Watch: "The Dark Side of Wikipedia"

One such Wikipedia editor who attacked me and my followers on Twitter, "Gamaliel," was discovered to have posted a great deal of profanity and hate on his Twitter feed about a variety of other subjects. (Language warning)

When these hateful tweets were exposed, "Gamaliel" deleted the tweets, blocked those who'd found them, and returned to editing my biography on Wikipedia where he complained on the "talk" page that my followers had attacked him. (Mind you, nobody knew who he was until he sought me out on Twitter to attack me.)

"Gamaliel" then retreated to Wikipedia where other agenda editors such as the conflicted Toa Nidhiki05 sought to soothe his feelings with what amounts to a commendation in the strange underworld of Wikipedia:

Another well known pharmaceutical interest Wikipedia agenda editor, "SkepticalRaptor," edits my page even though he is also clearly biased. On the "talk" page associated with my Wikipedia biography, for example, he referred to Emmy Awards as "pathetic" and does not recognize that I am, as a matter of indisputable fact, employed as a journalist, as I have been for the past 35 years. "SkepticalRaptor" wrote: "We only provide information that can be sourced and presents a neutral article regarding an anti-science, pseudoscience-pushing right-wing 'journalist.' If we're going to do some fanboi crap here by listing her pathetic list of awards, then that should include adding all of her false anti-vaccine claims over the past few years. That will be fun. SkepticalRaptor (talk) 18:24, 7 June 2019 (UTC)

(Note: I have never expressed anti-vaccine views or reported any false material.)

After simply defending myself in the face of being unable to correct errors and bias on the widely-viewed Wikipedia biography in my name, another editor reacted as though I was the one who started the attacks. He wrote: "On the bright side, knowing from our first hand experience that Attkisson is the sort of person who makes public accusations without evidence does much to help us better understand what our reliable sources are trying to communicate about her. Silver lining and all that. Rklawton (talk) 00:06, 19 June 2019 (UTC)"

Wikipedia co-founder Larry Sanger has separated from Wikipedia due to his objection to the direction it has taken. Read about his Declaration of Digital Independence here.

Once I point out the Wikipedia mistakes, bias and errors; or use Twitter to counter the attacks made by Wikipedia editors; the editors retreat to the "talk" pages of Wikipedia where they complain, oblivious to the notion that they are the ones who prompted the conflict by promulgating false and biased material).

In other words, the Wikipedia editors believe they are free to publish all manners of libel, bias and false information on a subject, but the subject is considered to be out of line if she corrects the record.

Some Wikipedia editors do know better but intentionally resort to attacks and obfuscation as part of a tactic to prevent honest edits from being made to a Wikipedia page. When there is no so-called "consensus" among Wikipedia editors in a dispute, then the status quo-- the false and biased information in the case of my biography page-- stays put. So an agenda editor need only chew on a dispute over and over, throwing up red herrings and asking for third opinions, until the group declares no consensus can be reached.

Here are a few more of the discussions among some of the Wikipedia editors editing my biographical page, which is supposed to be "neutral" according to Wikipedia policy. You can decide for yourself if these Wikipedia editors sound capable of being neutral.

Fair point, far-right hyper-partisan would be a better description of Sinclair. It's way to the right of Fox.

Wikipedia editor Guy (Help!) 18:39, 15 February 2019 (UTC)

Sinclair's political agenda is very noteworthy to an article about Attkisson. She chose to align herself with an aggressively ideological organization.

Wikipedia editor R2 (bleep) 20:04, 28 May 2019 (UTC)

Regarding CNN, NYT, PBS, Washington Post:

None of those organizations are liberal in my view. More importantly, none of them are consistently described as liberal by reliable sources (unlike for example the Huffington Post).

Wikipedia editor Snooganssnoogans (talk) 15:11, 3 June 2019 (UTC)

Attkisson provides no justification for her claims of bias. I can't help but wonder if her reporting is equally as sloppy.

Wikipedia editor Rklawton (talk) 15:47, 27 May 2019 (UTC)

When another editor noted WIkipedia’s well known problems of bias and inaccuracies:

Please stop using this page as a discussion forum about the failings of Wikipedia. If you continue to do so, I will request that administrators block your IP address.

Wikipedia editor R2 (bleep) 20:31, 8 June 2019 (UTC)

This Wikipedia editor is suspicious after I told them that my birth place on Wikipedia is incorrect:

There's something odd going on here. In this C-SPAN interview, Brian Lamb said to Attkisson that she was born in Sarasota and she didn't correct him. There may be more to this than meets the eye. I'm going to keep digging.

Wikipedia editor R2 (bleep) 22:25, 28 May 2019 (UTC)

Sarasota was also listed on old versions of her CBS bio while she worked there. I'm mystified as to why she would now insist she wasn't born there. And I haven't managed to find any evidence she or anyone else ever contested these details here.

Wikipedia editor: R2 (bleep) 22:47, 28 May 2019 (UTC)

When a well meaning Wikipedia editor asked for my list of awards after I noted some had been deleted from my biographical page, it elicited this reply:

I've removed this entire section as it is completely unsourced, links to unreliable or partisan awards, includes book sales lists, and incorporates non-individual awards. The Emmys might be salvageable but everything here needs sources and including unsourced content at the request of a BLP subject seems incredibly unwise. There is no reason to mention them again in some “awards” section, especially when half of it is just outright bad, other than to provide puffery.

Wikipedia editor ToaNidhiki05 15:24, 9 June 2019 (UTC)

When other well meaning Wikipedia editors balked at "ToaNidhiki05's" assessment, he retorted:

Also, I don't appreciate you accusing me of disruptive editing. All I did was remove an unsourced, uanessacry, and puffery-ridden section proposed by the BLP subject. You are accusing me of vandalism, essentially, and that's unacceptable. I suggest you ether remove/strike your comment or report me to the appropriate noticeboard if you actually think I'm disrupting anything...I have requested a third opinion be offered for this dispute.

Wikipedia editor ToaNidhiki05 20:38, 9 June 2019 (UTC)

And, though I never suggested controlling my Wikipedia biographical article, simply correcting inaccuracies and bias, the pharmaceutical interest agenda editor "SkepticalRaptor" writes:

Subjects of BLPs don't have a right to edit or control the edits of their article. We only provide information that can be sourced and presents a neutral article regarding an anti-science, pseudoscience-pushing right-wing "journalist." If we're going to do some fanboi crap here by listing her pathetic list of awards, then that should include adding all of her false anti-vaccine claims over the past few years. That will be fun.

Wikipedia editor SkepticalRaptor (talk) 18:24, 7 June 2019 (UTC)

There are other sources, so we should be able to document that she's an antivaxxer. She pretty much follows the Fox News/Trump party line on many of their anti-science issues. --

Wikipedia editor BullRangifer (talk) 15:44, 10 June 2019 (UTC)

A well meaning Wikipedia editor attempted to ask why agenda editor Toa_Nidhiki05 removed the following context from my Wikipedia biography:

“ 'The fact is, the government has acknowledged there’s a link [between vaccines and autism],' Attkisson says, citing the recent admission by a senior Central for Disease Control epidemiologist that he and his colleagues improperly omitted from a 2004 study the data that tended to support such a link. 'They simply say it’s not a causal link'.”

Toa_Nidhiki05 said he removed the quote simply because "it isn't true." He went on to falsely state:

Attkisson "falsely makes a contrast between the facts and what she believes, like she has some sort of secret evidence. Her stance on vaccines is already apparent, as is her belief in government conspiracies (mentioned in the January 2019 TV shows). The exact nature of her belief that vaccines cause autism is irrelevant, because it’s flatly false. She believes a casual link exists, and that’s what we note - her misattribution/conspiracy theory about the government isn’t needed. The fact that this has been removed twice now by different editors should give you pause in re-adding it again without consensus. 23:02, 12 June 2019 (UTC)

Wikipedia editor Toa Nidhiki05 23:02, 12 June 2019 (UTC)

Note: I have never expressed any "anti-vaccine" opinions; I have quoted evidence and scientific studies on various sides of vaccine safety issues. Further, I have never reported on any false conspiracies.

The historic use of the phrase "conspiracy theory" as propaganda tool, as used by "Toa_Nidhiki05" in an attempt to controversialize, is well described in my book "The Smear." Obviously, a rational person knows that many events factually fall under the definition of "conspiracy," which simply means a plot by more than one person to commit a crime or wrongdoing. There's nothing controversial about the notion of a "conspiracy" when it is factually true. The mafia is a conspiracy, as were Bonnie and Clyde's crimes, the 9/11 terrorist attacks, as is most any crime involving more than one criminal. It is not controversial to acknowledge that conspiracies are, in fact, conspiracies. Having said this, my reporting does not involve me alleging "conspiracies," real or imagined.

Meanwhile, another Wikipedia editor agrees that the government's acknowledgment of a link between vaccines and autism should not be included, as the Wikipedia editors use my biography to try to (incorrectly) portray the issue as settled science:

"I support exclusion as well. It's confusing, not obviously relevant, and arguably misleads readers into thinking that fringe views are accurate.

Wikipedia editor R2 (bleep) 23:28, 12 June 2019 (UTC)

So who are these people who make their biased opinions and incorrect conclusions count above all else on Wikipedia?

It's hard to know, since they edit under a veil of anonymity on Wikipedia. "Toa Nidhiki 05" describes himself as a 24-year old kid from North Carolina; a guy who says he has an alter ego and is really, really into comic books.

If all of that is true, I've been investigating vaccine controversies since he was about seven years old. But he appoints himself as Wikipedia's arbiter of facts and truth on the topic.

This is how Wikipedia works.

Correcting the record

For the few who might be interested, and for the record, the following is a summary of some of the problems that remained on my Wikipedia biography page the last time I checked.

Wikipedia begins by describing me as a "writer." It is true that I write as part of my job; but I have never described my profession as that of "a writer." None of my professional contracts describe me as a "writer." I am an investigative journalist. I have been a journalist for approximately 39 years.

Calling me a "writer" is bit like describing a judge as "a lawyer," calling a police officer a "a professional driver," or saying a professor is "a researcher." These descriptions are all subsets of their occupation, not their occupation itself.

1. Issue: Vaccine issue misrepresentation

A Wikipedia agenda editor recently added this non-cited, unbalanced comment to the top of my biographical page. 

Wikipedia quote:

Attkisson has published stories suggesting a possible link between vaccines and autism, a theory rejected by the scientific community.

First, among my 30+ years of reporting, the vaccine-autism topic is not, likely, even the top 10 topics I reported on most heavily or received the most recognition for. Thus, it is an inappropriate inclusion at the top of the biography. It is only included because certain Wikipedia agenda editors wish to improperly use my biographical page to shape opinion on the vaccine-autism issue, libel me, and falsely portray me as “anti-vaccine.”

Second, the comment is not neutral, is out of context, and is unbalanced since many in the scientific community have not rejected a link between vaccines and autism; and some scientists support the concept of a link. For example, the head of CDC immunization safety has acknowledged that it appears vaccines triggered autism in a child with mitochondrial disorder, as determined in a landmark federal lawsuit that the government sealed so that nobody would know about it. Further, it is libelous and misleading for Wikipedia to imply my reporting has somehow been discredited; though an organized effort has been made by conflicted sources and vested interests to make that appear to be the case.

Third, to the extent Wikipedia editors allow my biographical page to be used to spin on the issue of vaccine safety, it should be balanced with facts such as: 

Many studies and pro-vaccine scientists support the idea of a link between vaccines and autism, including (among many others) former Director of the National Institutes of Health Dr. Bernadine Healy; the former government medical expert witness in vaccine injury cases, pediatric neurologist Dr. Andrew Zimmerman of Johns Hopkins; Dr. Jon Poling— also a Johns Hopkins trained neurologist; and the current head of immunization safety at CDC Dr. Frank DeStefano. None of these experts was called controversial until they publicly stated that vaccines may-- or do-- trigger autism in a certain subset of vulnerable children. Only then did they face organized attacks falsely labeling them as “anti-vaccine,” “tin-foil hat” or “discredited.” In fact, by any neutral assessment, they are none of those things.

My reporting on vaccines and autism has been recognized with independent reporting awards and has been cited positively in the peer-reviewed New England Journal of Medicine.

Watch Sharyl Attkisson's TedX Talk: "Is Fake News Real?"

2. Issue: Non-sequitur quote from conflicted source/blogger

A Wikipedia agenda editor added this strange non-sequitur to my biography (below) as if to imply that the accuracy of my reporting was challenged or at issue, when it never was.

Wikipedia quote:

Erik Wemple, in his Washington Post blog, said CBS News had greater resources to deal with potential litigation than Attkisson as an individual and commented "if her nearly aired stories are as bulletproof as she suggests, where’s the risk?"[31] He quoted Sonya McNair, a spokesman for CBS News, who had told him the operation "maintains the highest journalistic standards in what it chooses to put on the air. Those standards are applied without fear or favor.”[31]

First, the cited quote is from a blogger, Erik Wemple, who is a well-known supporter of the longstanding propaganda effort by Media Matters and some linked to the Obama administration to attempt to contoversialize my reporting on topics contrary to their interests. Such sources should be considered invalid or, at least, should include the proper context as to their lack of impartiality.

Second, the CBS/Sonya McNair quote is completely out of context and so is presented in a misleading way. The wording included in Wikipedia seems to imply that CBS questioned my reporting. In fact, that was never the case. In fact, all of my investigative reports were approved not only by a series of producers, but I also chose to have them approved by the CBS team of lawyers. I initiated my departure from CBS ahead of my contract expiration because so many of my investigative reports were being spiked for reasons having to do with corporate and political conflicts of interest. The CBS/McNair quote was a defensive response to public reporting about certain CBS personnel inappropriately spiking stories, not because my reporting was questioned. CBS executives worked hard to convince me to remain at CBS, which I agreed to do for a time, and our parting was ultimately amicable.

3. Issue: Media Bias Chart section

Wikipedia agenda editors have improperly slanted my Wikipedia biography by omitting relatively important work, but highlighting relatively unimportant work that they hope can be used to discredit or controversialize me. 

The first inappropriate example they’ve chosen to single out is a “media bias chart” I created. The goal is apparently to falsely portray me as conservative or politically conflicted— a constant theme on my Wikipedia biography.

Wikipedia quote:

In 2017, Attkisson created a media bias chart. According to PolitiFact, this chart "labels anything not overtly conservative as 'left'". 

First: A fact error. I did not create the chart in 2017. Wikipedia is apparently relying on false information from a BuzzFeed article.

Second: The media bias chart is hardly one of my more significant projects or writings, so it is strange that it is highlighted among all else in my Wikipedia biography when much more significant work is omitted.

Third: Wikipedia disingenuously fails to note that both PolitiFact and its parent, Poynter, are on the aforementioned media bias chart and therefore should not be cited as if neutral sources. 

Fourth: If Wikipedia wishes to include BuzzFeed's negative assessment of the “chart” as part of my biography—which seems out-of-place—then it should also include some of the extensive, positive feedback the chart received for its perceived accuracy. As it stands, the section on Wikipedia is one-sided, out of context, and violates Wikipedia policies on neutrality.

Wikipedia quote: 

BuzzFeed News reported in August 2018 that Attkisson indicated on her website that she compiled the "subjective" chart "from various sources and your feedback”.[37]

Again, Wikipedia editors disingenuously fail to note that BuzzFeed also appears on the chart and, so, is not a neutral source on this topic. Further, the BuzzFeed article about the media bias chart contained false and misleading information, which I addressed in this article. (You can read a reprint in full at the end of this post.*) 

Wikipedia quote:

She linked "various sources" to a study from the Pew Research Center, a Washington think tank that BuzzFeed said "measures audience bias, not the alleged bias of an outlet and a college library's website that cites another college library's project describing media outlets." 

Again, Wikipedia quotes BuzzFeed, which is a conflicted source because it is on the chart, and which published false information about it (as detailed in my article). Additionally, the BuzzFeed quote appears to only be included in my Wikipedia biography to falsely imply that my work is misleading or unfair. 

Further, Wikipedia fails to note that I made no grand representations about the media bias chart; quite the contrary. I called my chart “subjective… based on information compiled from various sources and your feedback.” I also noted “…outlets on left and right sometimes publish material that's on the opposite side of the political spectrum, or that has no political leaning at all. The placement [of a media outlet on the media bias chart] is based on perceived overall tone and audience. Position on the chart doesn't necessarily imply credibility or lack thereof. Sources on far right and far left have, in many instances, produced excellent, factually correct information at times…Compiling such a chart is obviously difficult for many reasons, some of them having to do with space. The spacing should be considered relative and not an indicator of absolute position.” I also included links to alternate charts, left and right. 

None of this context is included on Wikipedia.

Wikipedia quote:

Attkisson’s chart includes such websites as InfoWars (to which Attkisson is said to link from her own site).[37]

I’m not even sure what the above parenthetical section means, but it appears to be another attempt by a Wikipedia agenda editor to follow BuzzFeed’s lead and controversialize me by trying to associate me with InfoWars. In fact, this Wikipedia passage again lacks context and balance. My blog on the media bias chart included links to several other popular media bias charts so that people can compare and make up their own minds on this subjective issue. The links I used included a widely circulated chart produced by InfoWars; but also charts produced by Pew research center and Media Bias/Fact Check. By Wikipedia cherry picking the mention of one controversial site (InfoWars) and omitting mention of the others I linked to, it shows bias and demonstrates lack of neutrality.

Watch Sharyl Attkisson's TedX Talk on Astroturf and Media Manipulation

4. Issue: False info in Vaccine Reporting section

The talk page attached to my biography provides the clearest picture of conflicted Wikipedia editors fighting to the mat to include biased, false and libelous information. It makes a prima facie case for why these very editors should be barred from not only editing my page, but also from editing on the issue of vaccine safety. Additionally, it demonstrates their inability to make neutral or fair assessments and decisions. Further, it emphasizes the point that a biographical page is no place to promulgate a one-sided discussion on a contentious issue.

Wikipedia quote: 

Anti-vaccine reporting[edit]

This misleading title, "Anti-vaccine reporting," forms a false conclusion about my reporting on this topic. There is no fair way that my reporting can be construed as “anti-vaccine.” I have never done a story on anti-vaccine efforts (not that there would be anything wrong with doing a story on the efforts of anti-vaxxers, but it has not been a focus of mine). My reporting on vaccine safety issues is no more “anti-vaccine” than my reporting on Firestone tire safety issues was “anti-tire” or my reporting on Red Cross fraud makes me “anti-charity.” Any implication otherwise is false and libelous.

Wikipedia quote;

Attkisson has published stories linking vaccines with autism; this contradicts the scientific community who reject such a link.[38][39][40] 

It’s irresponsible for Wikipedia agenda editors to attempt to litigate the vaccine-autism issue on my biographical page, and to further do it in such a one-sided fashion. Also, the above passage lacks the context mentioned earlier, that many studies and pro-vaccine scientists have stated there is or might be a link between vaccines and autism. This includes some scientists at the Centers for Disease Control (CDC). 

Wikipedia passage:

Seth Mnookin, Professor of Science Writing at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, described Attkisson as "one of the least responsible mainstream journalists covering vaccines and autism. Again and again, she’s parroted anti-vaccine rhetoric long past the point that it’s been decisively disproved."[41]

The above statement is false and libelous. First, my reporting has not parroted anything. Second, my stories have not been "anti-vaccine" in any sense. Third, since many scientists, court cases and published studies have found links between vaccines and autism, it is patently false to call such links "decisively disproved."

Wikipedia irresponsibly and presents Mnookin as if he is a neutral analyst. However, he is a well known vaccine industry advocate and fanatic who has made numerous false and libelous allegations about me. Additionally, if Wikipedia decides that my biographical page is, indeed, the place to litigate the vaccine-autism issue, then in the interest of neutrality, it should include the fact that Mnookin is himself a controversial and conflicted figure (as demonstrated in many published works); and that many others have recognized my reporting as accurate and fair.

Wikipedia passage:

Anna Kata, an analyst at McMaster University, has accused Attkisson of using problematic rhetorical tactics to "imply that because there is no conclusive answer to certain problems, vaccines remain a plausible culprit."[42][verification needed] 

Again, Wikipedia cherry picks a vaccine advocate (not a neutral party) and then uses a quote that is unsupported by the footnote referenced: there is nothing at the actual citation that criticizes or even mentions me. Obviously it is a violation of Wikipedia policy to include this passage and quote with an invalid citation... but it's yet another transparent attempt by an agenda editor to controversialize my reporting.

Wikipedia passage:

In a January 2019 episode of her television show Full Measure, Attkisson mischaracterized statements made in 2007 by a medical expert, Andrew Zimmerman, regarding a hypothetical relationship between vaccines and autism.

This allegation that I mischaracterizaed anything is libelous and false on its face. It is not a matter of opinion, it is provable by examining Dr. Zimmerman's affidavit (which I posted on my website) and the actual story. It is shocking that Wikipedia would allow this statement to exist on my biography for even a minute.

Further, the article refers to a "hypothetical" relationship between vaccines and autism. This is a mischaracterization since Dr. Zimmerman, the government's medical expert at the time, concluded there is a relationship between vaccines and autism; nothing hypothetical about it (in his opinion).

Wikipedia passage:

Attkisson falsely said that the Omnibus Autism Proceeding (OAP), which refuted claims of a causal link between vaccines and autism, was based primarily on Zimmerman's testimony, and that Zimmerman's nuanced views on the subject were kept hidden from the public by the federal government until 2018; 

This claim is false and libelous on its face. This is a misguided Wikipedia editors attempt to twist my reporting into something it never said. Further, this passage fails to note that the referenced vaccine court agreed that a child’s autism had been cause by her vaccinations. (The case was secretly pulled from the Omnibus proceedings, settled confidentially and sealed so that other parents would not know; but word eventually leaked out). Wikipedia also fails to note that the government has paid many other vaccine brain injury cases that resulted in autism. This context is important or the passage leaves the misimpression that the issue was laid to rest in the negative sense. It was not.

Wikipedia passage:

…the program called [the government's alleged coverup of the vaccine-autism link, as described by its own medical expert] "one of the most consequential frauds, arguably in human history."[disputed – discuss] 

The above passage is the focus of what may be one of the most ridiculous Wikipedia "talk" page discussions among ridiculous discussions. Originally, Wikipedia editors falsely attributed the above quote directly made to me when I never said any such thing.

When I pointed out that I never said the quote, as demonstrated by simply watching the news story referenced, Wikipedia agenda editors then reasoned that it was fair and all-the-same to pretend it was my own quote, anyway, because I “obviously” feel that way.

When some well-meaning Wikipedia editors suggested the quote should actually be attribute to its source (imagine that!), Robert F. Kennedy, Junior, the Wikipedia agenda editors balked and wanted to attribute it to my “program” instead.

I only speculate here, but I assume the agenda editors do not want the quote accurately sourced to Kennedy because the idea that I used him-- a far left liberal-- in a story, runs counters to Wikipedia's other major false narrative that I am “conservative.”

Further, the Wikipedia editors falsely claim my vaccine reporting provides no counterpoints and is one-sided. In fact, for every vaccine story I have done, I have sought and represented comments from both sides. Many of my stories, including the one Wikipedia attempts to criticize, begin with me stating that vaccines have saved many lives.

The fact that all of this context is omitted further demonstrates that my Wikipedia biography is not neutral and some of the editors are conflicted.

Wikipedia passage:

…the views that Attkisson said were kept secret had already been made public in 2006 and were noted in the OAP.[44]

The above statement if provably false on its face. The views of the government’s pro-vaccine expert, Dr. Andrew Zimmerman— that the government had covered up and misrepresented his scientific opinion that vaccines cause autism in “exceptional” cases of vulnerable children after all— were not made public in 2006. They were not widely reported until January of 2019 after Dr. Zimmerman signed a sworn affidavit saying so.

Wikipedia passage:

David Gorski was sharply critical of the segment, calling it a "propaganda piece" and a "conspiracy theory".

Again, Wikipedia cherry picks opinion-- this time from Gorski, a well known, conflicted vaccine industry propagandist. Wikipedia omits the many sources who complimented the segment, showing lack of neutrality.

5. Issue: Computer hacking claims section

Once again, Wikipedia editors omit more important and relevant work, but highlight a "computer hacking claims" in a way intended to controversialize me.

Wikipedia passage: 

Computer hacking claims[edit]

The section title is misleading and attempts to controversialize me at the outset. The "computer hacking" is not a “claim,” it is a fact proven though multiple forensics reports and stated publicly by CBS News in a press release.

Wikipedia passage:

…a report by the Office of Inspector General (OIG) was released[50] stating that "their investigation was not able to substantiate... allegations that Attkisson's computers were subject to remote intrusions by the FBI, other government personnel, or otherwise"

This passage is libelous in its implications and apparently based on a propaganda campaign that resulted in widespread misreporting on the topic. The OIG did not examine the primary computer at issue, therefore could not and did not rule out remote intrusions, which have been substantiated by multiple independent examinations. More details regarding the false reporting on this topic are published here.

Wikipedia passage:

…and the deletion seen in Attkisson's video "appeared to be caused by the backspace key being stuck, rather than a remote intrusion”.

Same issue as above: The implications of the above passage are false and libelous. The OIG did not examine the primary computer at issue, therefore could not and did not rule out remote intrusions, which have been substantiated by multiple independent examinations. More details regarding the false reporting on this topic are published here. Further, the OIG did not examine the separate computer that it claimed had a “stuck backspace key.” (There is no backspace key on that computer, and no key was “stuck.”) More details can be found here.

In conclusion...

Some Wikipedia editors devote a great deal of time on the forum complaining that I am not "going through the proper Wikipedia processes" by publicly discussing their mistakes and bias.

They are apparently unaware of the months of intense efforts I expended years ago "going through the Wikipedia process" with Wikipedia editors, trying to understand the broken system and working within it, only to have well-meaning editors admit to me they were outmatched by agenda editors who are trolling and controlling my page.

Only in the weird world of Wikipedia does this torturous, ineffective system make sense. Only on Wikipedia is it deemed acceptable for libelous and false information to reside on a Wikipedia biography because we are to rest assured -- it will eventually be sorted out.


Below is a reprint of my article after BuzzFeed wrote biased and false information in an article about my "Media Bias" chart. That bad information is now quoted on my Wikipedia biography.


*The following is a news analysis

Today I received an inquiry from BuzzFeed reporter Tasneem Nashrulla that appeared so sloppy— even for a writer at a quasi-news site– that it was particularly remarkable.

First, the reporter contacted me only after the article that mentioned me was published. (That’s sort of frowned on in journalism circles.)

Then, when I pointed out the reporter’s errors and misimpressions, and asked for a correction, the reporter and his or her editor declined.

The subject matter was a Media Bias chart I constructed some time ago. (See here.)

See what you think of the BuzzFeed position.

Original email from reporter:

Hello Sharyl,

This is Tasneem Nashrulla, a reporter with BuzzFeed News. I’m writing about President Trump’s claims this morning about Google search results being “rigged” against him to shut out conservative media outlets.

He appears to have seen this on last night’s episode of Lou Dobbs Tonight which cited a PJ Media study that used your Media Bias Chart from 2017 to analyze Google search results on two different computers to test the premise that Google search results had an anti-conservative bias.

I saw that you updated your chart today. Could you tell me what prompted you to update the chart today and what changes did you make to the original chart?

You had earlier included a link to this Lorain County Community College site which contained a list of the political leanings of magazines and newspapers. The link no longer appears in your article. Did you delete the link today and if so, why?

You included a link to a Pew Research Center chart as a source for your media bias chart. The Pew chart says it measures audience bias, not media bias. Can you explain how this study factored into your chart?

Do you believe that your chart is an accurate representation of media bias and if it can be effectively used to analyze Google search results to show that Google has an anti-conservative bias?

We’ve published our story on the study, and will update it with your responses.

Thank you.

Tasneem

My response:

Hi Tanseem!

I did not update chart today. Can you tell me what prompted you to make that allegation?

I did not change the original chart today. Again, please let me know what makes you make that allegation?

If I do update the chart in the future it will be to add new items or change items based on feedback.

I didn’t delete any links or make changes to the article.

Yes I think it’s a pretty accurate representation obviously because I wouldn’t aim to create a chart with an inaccurate representation, but since much rests on matters of opinion, that’s up to the beholder.

Please read the article for caveats and notes such as: Compiling such a chart is obviously difficult for many reasons, some of them having to do with space. The spacing should be considered relative and not an indicator of absolute position. A number of the information sources technically belong on top of one another.

As I stated in my article, there are many views and alternates such as the ones I linked to in the article:

Ideological Placement of Each Source’s Audience

https://www.infowars.com/alternate-reality-viral-propaganda-chart-demonizes-independent-media/

https://mediabiasfactcheck.com

My chart adds to the charts that are out there and can be considered alongside them or as people choose.

I then read the BuzzFeed article that had already been published and followed up with this:

Tasneem, I just looked at your article. I understand what you are aiming to do. Nonetheless, please correct the following misrepresentations:

“Attkisson said she compiled the chart ‘from various sources and your feedback.’ The link on ‘various sources’ is to a Pew Research Center study that measures audience bias, not the alleged bias of an outlet.”

The above sentence implies that I have misrepresented something. I have not. 

“The ‘media bias chart’ includes sites that are not news outlets but peddlers of outright unproven conspiracy theories — such as Infowars.”

The above sentence also seems to imply something improper. I didn’t title it a “news” chart, it’s appropriately titled a “media” chart and Infowars is a media organization. 

“Attkisson also links to more Infowars content on her website explaining the chart.”

The above statement falsely implies that I used “infowars content” to “explain” my chart (as if for sourcing). That’s untrue. As explained in the article, I included links to alternate/opposing charts and one of them is infowars. The infowars chart is not a source for my information but a competing chart, if you will, with different results. Please make this clear in your correction and let me know when it posts. Thanks.

After checking another of the reporter’s allegations, I followed up with this:

[Tasneem]

Lastly, I checked and the missing Lorain link you asked about isn’t missing, it’s still there where it alway was on the word “sources” at the beginning of the article.

Check your work.

Here’s the BuzzFeed response:

Sharyl, thanks for getting back. We believe we have represented everything appropriately. I’m happy to add a description of the Lorain link to our story.

I was asking about the date because the dateline on your post that contains the chart shows today’s date.

Best,

Tasneem

Attkisson Note: On WordPress, to put an old article on the front page requires putting the current date on the article. This apparently led the BuzzFeed writer to falsely conclude — before asking — that I had mysteriously changed or altered the content of my Media Bias chart. I don’t blame the reporter for not understanding the technology, I’m technically challenged myself, but that’s why it is irresponsible to make assumptions and conclusions before you have full information. We should be wise enough to know when there are things we might not know.

I asked to appeal to a supervisor the BuzzFeed decision not to correct the misimpressions in the article. Tasneem connected me to editor, Tom Namako, who almost immediately stated they weren’t going to change the article and stand by it as written.

I asked Tom Namako about Tasneem’s mistakes. He said it didn’t bother him because they were made in an email to me, not in the story. I suggested this reflected something about the quality of the reporter. He said he has confidence in and stands by his reporter.

I asked that Tom correct the misimpressions given in BuzzFeed article, particularly the false implication that I somehow used InfoWars to explain or develop my chart. I pointed out that the InfoWars link I included was among a selection of links at the bottom of my article pointing to alternate media bias charts that are different than mine– so people can consult different views than mine.

Nonetheless, Tom said he said he wasn’t going to change anything in the article because, “The fact is you linked to a conspiracy theory website.”

And that was that.

(Here’s the uncorrected BuzzFeed article followed by a link to the InfoWars chart and the MediaBias Fact Check chart)

https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/tasneemnashrulla/trump-google-lou-dobbs

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The Weaponization of Wikipedia

The egregious vandalism and misuse of my biography page by Wikipedia agenda editors continues.

I understand that cases like this matter little except to those who are libeled. However, I would argue that they are important to the extent they represent what's going on across the increasingly-troubled Wikipedia platform.

Wikipedia has been "weaponized."

Anonymous political and special interests control pages on behalf of paid clients. Devoted ideologues use their authority on Wikipedia to censor and controversialize ideas with which they disagree. There are attacks, libel, biases, false information and censorship.

In my instance, the Wikipedia editors have violated multiple Wikipedia policies over the years governing matters such as neutrality, libel and attribution.

And there's nothing anybody can do about it.

The well-meaning Wikipedia editors-- and there are many-- are simply outwitted and overpowered by the bad guys.

As I have reported and discussed these matters publicly, anonymous Wikipedia agenda editors controlling my biographical page have mounted a campaign to attack me beyond my Wikipedia page.

"To put it bluntly, this is unacceptable behavior," wrote a Wikipedia agenda editor in discussing my public objections to the false information and slander on my Wikipedia biographical page. "...some action needs to be taken."  (Toa Nidhiki05 01:52, 9 June 2019 (UTC))

Wikipedia editors have long been known to track down, troll and attack those who criticize them.

As I reported in my Full Measure investigation, some Wikipedia editors have even gotten together and tracked down personal details about someone they don't like, figuring out where they travel, what they do in their spare time, and where they work-- even calling their boss on the phone to try to get them in trouble. No kidding.

Not long after the "something must be done" threat against me by the Wikipedia editor, additional false and biased information was edited onto my Wikipedia biographical page, an attack blog was published against me, and Wikipedia interests came after me on Twitter.

The Twitter attackers included a Wikipedia editor @wikigamaliel who calls himself "Gamaliel@ALA" on Twitter.

@Wikigamaliel proceeded to state that he knows "how I feel" and "what I think" about certain topics based on my Twitter followers, whom he called "nutty." (He received a "like" from @Wikimedia UK regarding his "nutty" comment about my followers. These are Wikipedia's supposedly neutral arbiters of information.)

When some Twitter users then flagged extensive hate, profanity and bias in @Wikigamaliel's recent Tweets on many subjects, he deleted some of the Tweets and blocked the users.

But he's still editing away on my Wikipedia biographical page and, presumably, many others.

The Talk Pages

Wikipedia's "talk" pages are arcane, to be sure, but they can provide a window into the bias, twisted justifications, and mangled logic used by Wikipedia agenda editors to make sure false and biased information stays on a page... and fair, truthful information is censored.

This is where matters of controversy are supposedly arbitrated and settled. Instead, it's the place where the agenda editors band together and play games to beat back attempts to change their will.

Read Wikipedia's Sharyl Attkisson "Talk" page

For example, when I politely inquired on the "talk" page as to why someone had deleted my most recent Emmy nominations and awards, it launched a tortuous month long debate among the Wikipedia agenda editors and some well-meaning editors.

In the end, the discussion ended with: paralysis. The Wikipedia editors decided there was so much disagreement over this simple, easily-resolved point, that nothing should be changed. Of course, that was the goal all along of the agenda editors. They made sure there was a protracted discussion and no "consensus." Without "consensus," the edit will not be permitted.

(As an aside, the reason the awards I asked about were deleted is because they fight the Wikipedia agenda editors' attempts to falsely portray me and my reporting as "conservative"; the awards included a daytime Emmy award and a news Emmy award for my undercover investigation into Republican fundraising.)

There are other awards and citations the Wikipedia agenda editors will not allow because the awards and citations disprove the false narrative that I am "anti-vaccine" or unscientific in my reporting.

The Absurd

And then there's simply the absurd.

One lengthy discussion about me on Wikipedia's talk page (attached to my biography) actually involved why it was supposedly okay to attribute a direct quote to me, though I had never said it.

After all, said the Wikipedia agenda editors, Snopes reported I said it, so even though I didn't say it, it is okay to claim that I said it.

"It's all the same," claimed Wikipedia's agenda editors.

Another absurd discussion among the Wikipedia editors controlling my biographical page talked about how they could tell how "I feel" based on items I retweet.

Yet I'm pretty sure the Wikipedia agenda editors realize that people often retweet items with which they disagree or on which they have formed no particular opinion. In fact, I often retweet items that are contrary to one another, so it's difficult to understand how a sincere Wikipedia editor could claim to glean my "feelings" because of them. My twitter profile even explicitly states that retweets do not imply agreement.

Watch "The Dark Side of Wikipedia," a Full Measure investigation

And when I politely pointed out to Wikipedia editors an item of low hanging fruit that needed correcting-- the false birth place they had listed for me-- it unleashed a torrent of attacks and speculation by the uniformed Wikipedia editors such as "Why would she deny where she was born?"

Clearly I'm up to something nefarious.

In other words, Wikipedia editors will unskeptically rely on false, published information from strangers for no other reason than-- well, it's published-- but then express unabashed suspicion of the source herself providing facts and offering documentary proof.

As Wikipedia co-founder Larry Sanger noted after separating himself from his original creation: Wikipedia is "broken beyond repair."

Today's status quo is a system whereby Wikipedia editors can make every kind of false claim and libelous accusation about someone they've never met, but go on the attack when the false information and bias are exposed.

What do you think? Leave your comments on this page.

Read the "Sharyl Attkisson Talk page" on Wikipedia by clicking the link below. Warning: you're entering a world where reason and logic are turned on its head.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Sharyl_Attkisson

Fight government overreach and double-standard justice by supporting the Attkisson Fourth Amendment Litigation Fund for Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI for the government computer intrusions. Click here.

The Nuclear Option: It's complicated.

Nuclear power provides clean energy at a reasonable cost-- in theory. The problem seems to come in the construction of the plants. We recently set out to investigate the state of nuclear power in America. We were surprised to learn how many projects have been halted midstream, rife with mismanagement, cost overruns or waste: almost all of them. Watch our Full Measure video investigation at the link below. A transcript follows.

Watch the Full Measure investigation: The Nuclear Option

Today, a hard look at the double edged sword of the nuclear industry. Right now in the U.S. there are 60 commercially operating nuclear power plants in 30 states. But there’s a problem. This clean source of energy comes with a staggering price tag. One after another planned project has run behind schedule and wildly over budget. Today, there’s only one nuclear reactor project under construction in the US right now kept alive by *billions* in taxpayer dollars. Joce Sterman takes us there to investigate the Nuclear Option.

Every time Steve Prenovitz looks at his monthly power bill—he gets angry.

Steve Prenovitz: Pretty much everything has been passed on to the ratepayer.It's a high stakes game really is. And it's, you know, people getting screwed.

This is the source of his anger: The Vogtle Nuclear Plant in Waynesboro, Georgia - operated by Georgia Power. Crews nearby are working on Vogtle’s two new reactors that have become the face of the industry’s problems in this country. Reactors 3 and 4 are years behind schedule and more than a jaw dropping 10 billion dollars over budget so far. A seemingly bottomless pit supported by federal taxpayers and residents like Prenovitz.

Prenovitz: Right here, you've got the nuclear construction cost recovery.

His bill includes an extra monthly charge for nuclear construction. For an average family it adds up to 100 dollars each year.

Joce: What's the danger of passing on the responsibility and the cost to the rate payer?

Steve Prenovitz: Well the danger for who? For the company? No danger. You know, hey, the more they screw up, the more money they make.

The 14-billion dollar budget has swelled to more than 27 billion as problems have stacked up -- including inexperienced contractors, construction flaws and the bankruptcy of its original contractor: Westinghouse.

But the troubled Vogtle project has a key source of support.

Tim Echols: Why do I believe that this is the best way forward? Because Units 1 and Units 2 were built in 1987 and 1989 on that very same plant site, they went over budget as well, but now what is that? It is the cheapest energy in our state, and I believe Vogtle 3 and 4 will be that one day as well.

Tim Echols is Vice Chairman of the Georgia Public Service Commission, which regulates utilities. Even though its own analysts concluded the project was “no longer economic” and suggested it be shut down in 2017, the commission ultimately greenlighted customer fees to keep the project moving.

Tim Echols: It would be irresponsible for me to take all of the billions of dollars that have been spent and just, and just throw in the towel because we happen to be running late. No, we're going to push through.

Joce: Do you have to keep spending and just continue writing checks just to get this thing done and is that a wise way to go about it?

Tim Echols: No, i'll remind them that this elected public service commission will have the final say on what is prudent and it was not prudent. Plant Vogtle's very important because if we fail, if we throw in the towel on this, we essentially cede this technology authority to Russia, to China and to India, which is where the nuclear renaissance is happening right now in the world.

France derives 75% of its energy from nuclear making it a key component of their power grid. China has 13 new reactors in progress. Russia has more than 20.

Katie Tubb says the return on america’s nuclear investments will be worth it.

Katie Tubb: The case for nuclear energy is so compelling that I think at some point, we'll figure out how to do this right.

Tubb is a policy analyst at the conservative Heritage Foundation. She blames over-regulation for the nuclear failures. One analysis says the average nuclear plant must pay nearly $9 million in regulatory costs and $22 million in fees to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

Katie Tubb: I think we have essentially regulated ourselves out of the business of nuclear energy. We’ve made it very expensive and difficult to run power plants to innovate.

Meantime, the Vogtle project has now attracted support in the highest of places.

Rick Perry: We’re going to make nuclear cool again!

Federal Department of Energy Secretary Rick Perry recently offered $4 billion in new loan guarantees to see the Vogtle project through.

Rick Perry: The message that gets sent on this plant, America is back in the nuclear energy industry folks! We are back, We’re gonna be leading the world!

With all the enthusiasm, Greg Jackzo insists that continuing to fund the Vogtle Project is throwing good money after bad.

Gregory Jaczko: I was assured repeatedly that these plants would be built on time and on budget.

He once headed the Nuclear Regulatory Commission -- the powerful federal agency that oversees all nuclear activity in the US. He opposed construction of Vogtle 3 and four.

Gregory Jaczko: I mean, imagine giving somebody $15 billion what they could do with that. Tesla started a car company that is revolutionizing the transportation sector with less money than that. And so you, when you put it in that perspective, it really is a huge amount of money that's just really being wasted on, on these projects.

One notorious nuclear failure - is north of Waynesboro at the VC Summer Nuclear Plant in South Carolina, which also ran over budget and behind schedule. The plant, owned largely by a corporation called SCANA, was supposed to have 2 new reactors online by last year, also paid for by taxpayers and local electric cusomters.

Ad: Progress has been made on the VC Summer plant. Indeed, nuclear matters!

In 2017, after four years of work - the project was shut down -- after eating up $9 billion a quarter of that from electric customers. Customers sued, and late last year, SCANA agreed to pay them back $2 billion they had been forced to invest into the failed project. From 2007 to 2010, 30 nuclear projects were in design or construction. Every one of them was halted before completion- except Plant Vogtle reactors 3 and 4.

Jaczko - the former nuclear regulator - now says it’s time for America to face a harsh reality check.

Joce: Do you view nuclear power as essential to our power grid at this point given all the alternatives?

Gregory Jaczko: Not at all. I think we have many, many alternatives.

Joce: Should we pull the plug on it as a whole?

Gregory Jaczko: I think that's a very difficult question to answer. I think the answer is yes; I think the answer is we should have pulled the plug 5 years ago when it was clear this project wasn't going to succeed or 3 years ago when far less money was spent.

For now, the future of nuclear power in the us hangs on Waynesboro Georgia and the fees paid by people like Prenovitz keeping Vogtle’s new reactors on life support. They are now slated to go online in 2021 and 2022 4 years late.

Steve Prenovitz: You spent 10 years, which is true, it started in 2009 - we spent over 10 billion for the whole project- even more - 12 billion. I don’t know. How Much energy was produced? Not one kilowatt hour! As one cynic put it, they promised us power without cost. They gave us cost without power.

Georgia Power did not agree to an interview with us, but in an email, told us it's focused on completing the reactors - and once it's done, the Vogtle Plant will produce enough power for 1 million homes in Georgia. h

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The Foreign Connection

Below is my investigation into foreign money influence into the U.S. political system as it aired on Full Measure on April 8, 2018.

Watch the video of the Full Measure investigation here.

Foreigners are barred from directly giving money to American politicians and political parties. But it turns out, there’s a legal way around that. It involves well-connected middlemen in the U.S., PR firms, and lobbyists, acting as foreign agents. They’re paid huge sums to get foreigners access to U.S. government officials that most Americans will never have. They may even help write our laws and direct your tax dollars to foreign interests. And when so many are talking about a foreign issue, for example, Russia, you can bet foreign agents are in the background pulling strings. For the past eight months, we’ve been examining The Foreign Connection to Russia and Ukraine.

The Foreign Agents Registration Act was passed in 1938 after an American got caught doing PR in the United States for the German Nazis.

Today, Americans who act as so-called “foreign agents” must file papers disclosing their work to the Justice Department. Lydia Dennett is an investigator with the watchdog Project on Government Oversight.

Sharyl Attkisson: So it's perfectly legal for foreign interests and foreign countries like Russia and Iran to pay some interest here in the United States to lobby for them?

Lydia Dennett: Yeah, absolutely perfectly legal for these foreign governments, individuals, political parties to hire often former members of Congress or former staff members to go and lobby on everything from arms deals to aid to trade and sort of everything in between.

And lobby they do. More than 15,000 foreign entities from Afghanistan to Zimbabwe have hired high-priced U.S. lobbyists and consultants.

The plain truth is foreign strife— like the conflict between Russia and Ukraine—provides business and fundraising opportunities in Washington D.C.

Sharyl Attkisson: It's illegal for foreign countries and interest to contribute directly to Congress. Are you suggesting it looks like they kind of funnel their money through a lobbyist and do the same thing?

Lydia Dennett: Yeah, absolutely. Sort of illuminated the fact that this looks like a quid pro quo relationship.

Sharyl Attkisson: US lobbyists use a wide variety of tactics to gain influence for their foreign clients

We analyzed Foreign Agents Registration Act records going back to 2012. Russia’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, and energy mogul Oleg Deripaska, all hired the U.S. based Endeavour Law Firm for business and policy advice. Deripaska paid Endeavour $3.5 million dollars. He’d been banned from the U.S. for alleged criminal ties, which he denies.

This is an ad for Russia’s nationalist political party Rodina, which hired Global Strategic Communications Group, which boasts of arranging news stories and op-eds in national newspapers.

After Russia invaded Ukraine in 2014, Russian banks sought to fend off US sanctions. One paid a total of $45,000 dollars a month, split between a U.S. lobbyist and a reputation management firm.

Another spent a total of more than $760,000 dollars between U.S. corporate law giant Sidley Austin, and Clinton-connected lobbyists Andy and Mike Manatos.

We asked Dennett what, exactly, do foreign interests get for their money?

Lydia Dennett: You will have the examples of foreign lobbyists writing legislation, writing statements, directly contacting members or their staff on issues. But you’ll also have large-scale public relations, placing of op-eds and sort of trying to very strategically influence U.S. public opinion on a particular issue or country.

Sharyl Attkisson:They arrange interviews with news reporters. They meet with news outlets?

Lydia Dennett: Yeah exactly. They'll meet with professors, think tanks.

In 2016, after a doping scandal, Russia was allowed to participate in the Rio de Janeiro Olympics anyway after the Russian group Top Sport shelled out $7, 000 dollars for positive PR from the U.S. firm Burson-Marsteller.

One of the biggest recipients of Russian cash is Ketchum Communications which got $17.2 million dollars over less than three years to arrange good press for Russian oil and gas company Gazprom. And $7.1 million dollars to publicize President Putin’s speeches, arrange helpful media interviews and operate social media accounts and the website ThinkRussia.com.

Ketchum even got the New York Times to publish an editorial signed by President Putin himself.

But as much as the Russians have spent pulling strings in the U.S., its adversary Ukraine has been equally if not more aggressive —especially after Russia’s invasion.

And who did we find from Ukraine hiring high-powered U.S. lobbyists and consultants? Ukraine’s national gas company, two investment firms and cryptocurrency firm Globee.

The government of Ukraine, its ministry of finance, a political leader and its National Reforms Council each paid up to $50-thousand dollars a month to U.S. PR firms and lobbyists.

Billionaire Volodymyr Lytvyn, then-Chairman of Ukraine’s parliament, paid an astounding $90-thousand dollars a month to arrange meetings with members of Congress and news reporters. And gas and steel mogul Victor Pinchuk, who, donated a fortune to the Clinton Foundation, has paid Democratic campaign consultant Doug Schoen $40-to-$64-thousand dollars a month to try to connect to the right people including Republican Senator John McCain, Obama and Trump officials and reporters at Fox, the New York Times, and the Washington Post.

While a lot of lobbyists are shy about discussing their foreign work, former Clinton counsel Lanny Davis did agree to talk about his client, another Ukrainian billionaire Dmitry Firtash.

Lanny Davis: I would never take on a government that was hurting my own country.

Davis told us he’s defending Firtash against prosecutorial abuse by the Justice Department, which indicted Firtash in 2014 for alleged bribery. Firtash has paid Davis $735,000 dollars over three years. Davis says he follows the Foreign Agents Registration Act to the letter.

Lanny Davis: I have to disclose when I call a reporter. When I send a press release out, I have to disclose that and file it with the Justice Department so when daylight is on, the American people have a chance to judge what the lobbyist, whether it's me or anyone else is doing and whether it's contrary to our national interest.

Numerous Ukrainian politicians have also hired American talent. Among them: Dmitry Shpenov, who paid Arnall Golden Gregory and the firm of ex-Congressman Billy Tauzin to lobby members of Congress and Obama officials.

Ukraine’s former Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko sought U.S. help to get released from prison after her corruption conviction.

Sharyl Attkisson: Tymoshenko’s family paid nearly a million dollars to Democrat ex-Congressman Jim Slattery and his law firm who lobbied then-Secretary of State Clinton and President Obama, and got support from Senator McCain and Democrat Dick Durbin, who sponsored a Senate resolution pressing for Tymoshenko’s release.

But it’s lobbyists Paul Manafort and Rick Gates—former Trump campaign officials— who have grabbed the biggest headlines for alleged violations of the Foreign Agents Registration Act.

The controversy dates back to 2012 and their clients: Ukraine’s pro-Russia President at the time, Viktor Yanukovich and his political group. Manafort connected them to lobbyists Tony Podesta, a Democrat heavy-hitter and Republican ex-member of Congress Vin Weber.

After special counsel Robert Mueller began investigating last year, the four lobbyists all denied wrongdoing but disclosed their work under the Foreign Agents Registration Act for the year’s old work.

Manafort reported collecting more than $17 million dollars in 2012 and 2013.

Lydia Dennett: The Department of Justice generally relies on voluntary compliance for these firms. And that when people do fail to register, fail to disclose as they should, they don't even really get a slap on the wrist. They're just sort of encouraged to retroactively follow the law.

Sharyl Attkisson: How many times has the Department of Justice, rather than the slap on the wrist or even less, how many times have they actually taken some serious action?

Lydia Dennett: They can file a civil injunction and they haven't used that since 1991. Or they can pursue criminal charges which they've only done eight times in the last 50 years, most recently with President Trump's former campaign manager Paul Manafort.

Manafort has pleaded not guilty to tax evasion and money laundering. Gates pleaded guilty to conspiracy and making false statements. Podesta hasn’t been charged but stepped down from his lobby firm.

In all, we found at least a half dozen interests from Russia and 19 from Ukraine turning to high-priced U.S. PR consultants and lobbyists.

Sharyl Attkisson: Why should it be legal for someone outside the U.S. system, who hasn't paid any taxes, to come in and influence how our tax money is spent and how our officials make decisions?

Lydia Dennett: We here at the Project on Government Oversight certainly think it’s fair and reasonable for foreign governments to want to put their issues before members of Congress as well as the American public. We just feel like that should be disclosed and the Department of Justice should be enforcing this law so that the American people and members of Congress know who is influencing them and where that money's going.

On Friday, President Trump sanctioned energy mogul Oleg Deripaska and top executives of both VTB Group and Gazprom, all mentioned in our piece, as part of the administration’s response to ongoing Russian actions in the West.

Wikipedia's Pharma Industry Agenda Editors--at it again.

Though it's a moving target that changes day-by-day, Wikpedia's vaccine industry agenda editors are at it again.

Besides the other longstanding false and defamatory information edited onto my Wikipedia bio page, new false information has appeared.

The good news is that for those who care, the source information is available for you to review so that you can make up your own mind.

Watch "The Dark Side of Wikipedia," a Full Measure investigation.

Among the new false information is a paragraph that follows (with the corrected information inserted):

False Wikipedia Claim: "In a January 2019 episode of her television show Full Measure, Attkisson mischaracterized statements made in 2007 by a medical expert, Dr. Andrew Zimmerman, regarding a hypothetical relationship between vaccines and autism."

Correction: No statements were mischaracterized by Attkisson. The affidavit of Dr. Zimmerman, a pro-vaccine medical expert who served as a government expert witness, can be read in full here. 

False Wikipedia Claim: "Attkisson falsely said that the Omnibus Autism Proceeding (OAP), which refuted claims of a causal link between vaccines and autism, was based primarily on Dr. Zimmerman's testimony, and that Zimmerman's nuanced views on the subject were kept hidden from the public by the federal government until 2018 in what Attkisson called 'one of the most consequential frauds, arguably in human history'."

Correction: Attkisson did not call anything "one of the most consequential frauds arguably in human history." The quote that Wikipedia misattributed to Attkisson was actually uttered by Robert F. Kennedy, Junior, as can be clearly seen in the story. Attkisson took no position on the consequentiality of the alleged fraud.

False Wikipedia Claim: "In fact, the OAP's verdict that there is no causal link between vaccines and autism was based on testimony by nine expert witnesses, and the views that Attkisson said were kept secret had already been made public in 2006 and were noted in the OAP."

Correction: According to Dr. Zimmerman, it is false that his views had "already been made public." His affidavit can be read here so that people can make up their own mind. Additionally, at the government's request, the court sealed a landmark case where the government secretly agreed vaccines caused a child's autism.

Through my reporting, I've learned that my experience with Wikipedia is not uncommon. That's why I'm launching the Wikipedia Correction Project (WCP): to allow those slandered or censored by Wikipedia to submit information that will allow consumers of information to compare and make up their own mind.

Click here to find out how to take part in the Wikipedia Correction Project.

Who would be against efforts to allow the public to access to corrected information and different views so they can make up their own minds? Among others, perhaps those working on behalf of the Wikipedia agenda editors who have long-controlled topics and pages with impunity.

This "new blues" blog attempts to smear the Wikipedia Correction Project (WCP) using the typical tactics described in "The Smear," including invocation of the phrase "conspiracy theory." Judging by the response, the blog actually serves the opposite of its intended purpose and has sparked a great deal of positive interest.

Read the "news blues" blog that attempts to discourage corrections of Wikipedia's false and slanted information.

For the few who might be interested, here is an unbiased, factually correct Wikipedia-style biography page for me: Sharyl Attkisson.

Do your own research. Make up your own mind. Think for yourself.

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Fast Food Favorite: It's Still Burgers

The All American hamburger is apparently still king.

Just for fun, our latest unscientific poll at SharylAttkisson.com asked: What is your favorite fast food meal?

Burgers beat out the other food choices combined. Nearly 44% of respondents chose burgers over tacos, fish and chicken.

A significant number of you prefer something else or don't like fast food at all.

Here's how the results break down:

  • 44% Burgers
  • 13% Tacos
  • 24% Chicken
  • 17% None/Other

Vote in our our newest poll posted in the black box on the sidebar or scroll down on your mobile phone.

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FDA study: “Forever chemicals” linked to cancer persist in U.S. food but aren’t dangerous

Mixed fruit and vegetables, photo by Farzana Ahmad Awan

A leaked Food and Drug Administration (FDA) report has confirmed the presence of dangerous "forever chemicals" in meat, milk, and produce sold in the U.S.

That's according to a report in The Hill, which says the FDA information was leaked to it and other news outlets.

The Hill says the report is based on an FDA study not yet made public.

Aspects of the study were said to have been presented recently at a scientific conference in Helsinki, Finland. It reportedly found the class of chemicals, abbreviated as "PFAS" -- short for per polyfluoroalkyl substances -- were detected in a number of other food products. PFAS chemicals are often referred to as “forever chemicals” because of the time it takes them to break down. They have been linked to cancer.

The FDA said it plans to publicly release the findings after details of the study were leaked.

According to environmental experts, these chemicals originate in food packaging and have made their way into water supplies. From there, they can end up in food supplies, as well.

An article in The Hill goes into further detail about how the contamination spreads, and how long it would take for the chemical to be removed from a cow that has been exposed:

Produce for sale at a farmer's market 10 miles from a PFAS production plant was found to have the chemical, and testing from a dairy farm near an Air Force base in New Mexico found that water contamination from the base had reached the cows and the milk they produced.
“It would take approximately 1.5 years to eliminate PFOS from the cow after a 30-day exposure period,” the study noted, using an abbreviation for another form of PFAS.

Leaked FDA study finds milk, meat, produce contaminated with 'forever chemicals' - Rebecca Beitch for The Hill

However, the FDA study reportedly found that even when food sources tested positive for these chemicals, they were “not likely to be a safety concern.”

The FDA is said to be planning on launching a website about its research into PFAS.

Read more in The Hill.

Fight improper government surveillance. Support Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI over the government computer intrusions of Attkisson's work while she was a CBS News investigative correspondent. Visit the Attkisson Fourth Amendment Litigation Fund. Click here.

Our favorite stories of the season on Full Measure

This week, we'll be reflecting on some of our favorite interviews, trips and stories from Season 4 of Full Measure!

Sunday, you'll hear from some of our correspondents on their behind the scenes reflections. We call it our Roundtable Edition -- and it's turned into one of our most popular programs each year.

From left: Joce Sterman, Scott Thuman, Sharyl Attkisson, Lisa Fletcher

What makes a great Full Measure story? We think it's that original touch: bringing information and angles that are not widely covered, or that powerful interests are trying to suppress.

Joce Sterman and Scott Thuman

My Carter Page interview was a high point in terms of original information that's off the narrative. We learned that the man the FBI wiretapped over and over, accusing him of being the nexus between Donald Trump and Russia President Putin-- has never met Donald Trump.

Former Trump adviser Carter Page

We also uncovered dangers with MRI dye that virtually nobody else in the U.S. has reported.

And we showed how a fiesta senior citizen in Montana succeeded in turning around the state's dying health care system. To do it, she had to accomplish the unthinkable: take on hospitals, insurance companies and bureaucrats. Now they're in the black. The feds could learn a lot from Montana's experience but-- so far-- they aren't even talking about such solutions.

I think of it as just good old fashioned reporting that a lot of us used to do but had grown rarer in today's managed media environment.

Thanks for your support. We head out this weekend to begin shooting more original stories for Full Measure Season 5 this fall.

Behind the scenes Full Measure crew making it happen

Meantime, all summer, you can see our best programs in our regular time slot. And feel free to binge watch our original reporting at our website or right here at this link.

Fight improper government surveillance. Support Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI over the government computer intrusions of Attkisson's work while she was a CBS News investigative correspondent. Visit the Attkisson Fourth Amendment Litigation Fund. Click here.

All the ways you can watch Full Measure on TV, on demand or online are at the link below.

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