Best of: Author Elizabeth Mitchell on Civil War-era “fake news”
In 1864, as the Civil War was raging on and in the throes of some of it’s bloodiest battles, a couple of widely circulated New York-based newspapers published what would today be known as “fake news.” It sent the Union and President Lincoln into a frenzy, and arguably, it almost took both of them down. In response, Lincoln sent troops to arrest the editors.
A 2020 Gallup poll shows that more than 4 out 5 Americans say that news organizations advocate political viewpoints rather than report the news free of bias. More than 8 of 10 Americans say the media bears at least “a moderate amount” of blame for the political division in the country, but based on this Lincoln-era anecdote, the era of so-called “fake news” is nothing new.
The 21st was joined by a former executive editor of George magazine to to bring us this story from American history.
This conversation originally aired Oct. 8, 2020.
GUEST:
Elizabeth Mitchell
Author of Lincoln's Lie: A True Civil War Caper Through Fake News, Wall Street and the White House
Prepared for web by Zainab Qureshi and Owen Henderson
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