Fake news is everywhere. The power of the press is said to be waning. And because the nation's most famous populist—the man with his sights on the presidency—can't trust the lying media, he says, he has no option but to be a publisher himself.
Oh yeah, and the year is 1896.
The would-be president in question is William Jennings Bryan. In an era before the internet, television, or radio, the best way to reach the masses is with newsprint. So, without the option of tweeting his grievances after losing the election to William McKinley, what does Bryan do? He starts his own newspaper. And he uses it to rail against "fake news."
I don't need to tell you a lot of this sounds weirdly familiar.
https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2017/01/the-fake-news-crisis-120-years-ago/513710/
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday January 29 2017, @09:34PM
This is America! We don't have "Leaders" (Original German: "Der Furher"), we have a President. His is supposed to serve, not lead. (Original Italian: "il Duce") Take you authoritarian Nazi Fascist butt back to where you were first hurt, try to live through the experience as an adult in control of your own destiny, and perhaps you will finally see you have been mislead.