词条 | Palmer Report |
释义 |
| logo = Palmer Report logo.png | screenshot = | collapsible = | collapsetext = | caption = | url = {{URL|http://palmerreport.com}} | slogan = | commercial = | type = Political blog | registration = | language = English | num_users = | content_license = | owner = Bill Palmer | author = | editor = | launch_date = {{Start date|2016|MM|}} | revenue = | alexa = {{DecreasePositive}} 3,154 (US December 2018) | name = Palmer Report | logocaption = The logo of Palmer Report | current_status = Online | footnotes = }}Palmer Report is a liberal American political blog.[1] It is written by Bill Palmer, who describes himself on his website as a political journalist who covered the 2016 election cycle from start to finish, along with more than fifty additional writers.[2] Palmer previously ran a site called Daily News Bin, described by Snopes.com editor Brooke Binkowski as “basically a pro-Hillary Clinton 'news site.' It was out there to counter misinformation.”[3] The site has been criticized for building a large following based on "wildly speculative theories about Donald Trump."[4] FounderPalmer is described by Business Insider{{'}}s Pamela Engel as "a mysterious figure who is behind several shuttered publications and has made enemies online as he threatens and intimidates those who question his reporting."[5] CriticismThe Atlantic's McKay Coppins called the Palmer Report "the publication of record for anti-Trump conspiracy nuts who don’t care about the credibility of the record."[6] The New Republic's Colin Dickey claims that Palmer "routinely blasts out stories that sound serious but are actually based on a single, unverified source," such as the time when he reported Supreme Court Chief Justice John Roberts had ordered Trump appointee Neil Gorsuch to recuse himself from all Trump-related Russia hearings, with his only sourcing coming from a "single tweet from an anonymous Twitter account under the name 'Puesto Loco.'"[4]References1. ^{{cite web|url=http://palmerreport.com/about/|title=About Palmer Report|date=19 November 2016|website=palmerreport.com|accessdate=11 June 2018}} 2. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.palmerreport.com/about/|title=About Palmer Report|date=19 November 2016|website=palmerreport.com|accessdate=11 June 2018}} 3. ^{{cite news |last=Meyer |first=Robinson |url=https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2017/02/viva-la-resistance-content/515532/ |title=The Rise of Progressive 'Fake News' |work=The Atlantic |date=2017-02-03 |accessdate=2017-07-03 }} 4. ^1 {{cite news |last=Dickey |first=Colin |url=https://newrepublic.com/article/142977/new-paranoia-trump-election-turns-democrats-conspiracy-theorists |title=The New Paranoia |work=New Republic |date=2016-06-08 |accessdate=2017-07-03 }} 5. ^{{cite news |last=Engel |first=Pamela |url=http://www.businessinsider.com/the-palmer-report-bill-louise-mensch-2017-5 |title='People want it to be true': Inside the growing influence of a mysterious anti-Trump website |work=Business Insider |date=2017-05-16 |accessdate=2017-07-03 }} 6. ^{{cite news |last=Coppins |first=McKay |url=https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2017/07/liberal-fever-swamps/530736/||title=How the Left Lost Its Mind |work=The Atlantic |date=2017-07-02 |accessdate=2017-07-03 }} External links
5 : American political blogs|American political websites|Internet properties established in 2016|Liberalism in the United States|Progressivism in the United States |
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