Categories
Social Media Standards

Testing Tribel, counter.social, and Mastodon

Elon Musk’s Twitter antics are getting harder to ignore, so I’ve joined with others to look at social media competitors in hopes of finding that perfect Twitter alternative.

Hint: there aren’t any.

The Trouble with Tribel

The first app I checked out is Tribel, a social media app created by Omar Rivero, also known as the founder of Occupy Democrats.

Tweet by Omar Rivero talking about founding Tribel

I verbalized Tribel as “tribble” right at the start, which made me inclined to like the service. However, friendly associations aside, Tribel is trouble.

The first red flag for the service was when it asked for age and gender when signing up. There’s absolutely no reason for this type of information unless the people behind Tribel plan on doing some data gathering. If you don’t want the kiddies, then just put a disclaimer in at signup requiring that the person be over 18.

Hmmm.

Once reluctantly passed the intrusive sign on, the next roadblock is figuring how the system works.

Tribel doesn’t seem to have the word count limitations of Twitter, and as someone pointed out, you can edit your posts. But the system also forces you into behaviors that are annoying.

For one, you can’t just do a post and publish it to the world. You have to pick your audience, and then you have to select from a gawd-awful huge list of topics and sub-topics. If you choose to submit a personal post, then you can only share it with friends. If you do pick a topic, then it asks if you want to be a Contributor, when all you really want is to publish a damn post.

You could look beyond these design fails, but how people treat you on the service is something you can’t ignore. Woe unto you who criticizes Tribel, the software.

The screenshot below is an example of an exchange I went through when I expressed my unhappiness about some of the Tribel design decisions (specifically, having to choose from a gawd-awful list of topics). I don’t think in my entire life, I’ve been accused of being a traitor to the Democratic cause solely because of tech criticism.

screen capture from Tribel where I was told to get the hell out because of being critical of Tribel's tech

This screenshot demonstrates the biggest problem with Tribel: it is an echo chamber, similar to TruthSocial but falling over on the left. That the members are Democrats, or progressive, or liberal doesn’t matter: it’s an echo chamber; an echo chamber that exhibits zero tolerance for dissent.

I’m a Democrat and a progressive and a liberal…but I’m not a clone or a cult member.

Tribel promises to be a “kinder, smarter network.” It’s anything but.

counter.social and the 90s live again!

The second social media app I tried was counter.social. Unlike Tribel, it’s fairly simple to post…once you get past all the 5xx errors from a service that’s being hit with a lot of new signups at the moment (a problem all the apps are experiencing right now with the sudden interest).

Once you can access the site, your first thoughts might be, “The 90s called, and they want their web design back.”

It actually features a scrolling banner at the bottom. Wow, when was the last time you saw a scrolling banner? The rest of site is a jumbled mess of columns, all white text on dark background and featuring a lot of ‘stuff’ including that scrolling banner.

screenshot of counter.social featuring scrolling banner on bottom, left

Thankfully, counter.social does feature an ostrich mode in preferences that turns off much of the cruft, including the banner. You can access preferences by clicking the three dots next to your profile.

screenshot of counter.social with the cruft turned off

There is no option to change the coloring to dark on light. or make it less messy. The most you can do is actually make it more messy by adding more columns of stuff to the page.

Additional functionality including creating groups and lists and modifying the appearance is behind a subscription paywall. The amount you have to pay isn’t very much ($4.99 a month), but having to pay for what should be basic functionality isn’t necessarily conducive to increased participation.

I did find the folks on counter.social to be quite friendly. The service is still small enough to have a nicely intimate feel to it. Two things, though, don’t work for me.

The first is the design and layout, which is just too busy and overwhelming. It’s hard to see what’s going on. Even in Ostrich mode, it’s too busy. I suspect even if I could switch to a dark on light background, it would still be too busy.

added more columns to counter.social, and it is really messy now

The second concern—and the primary concern—is the fact that the service is controlled by one person.

The counter.social app, itself, is a fork of Mastodon (discussed next), by The Jester, a very well known hacktavist. In real life, The Jester is a man named  Jay Bauer.

snapshot of tweet by the jester noting that counter.social is a fork of Mastodon

The counter.social site promises a hate-free environment, and I have no reason to doubt this isn’t true. Moderation takes resources, though, and we have no idea how many resources counter.social has.

The funding for the site is a month-to-month operation. That’s one of the actual design elements: a progress bar tracking whether the month’s funding goal has been met. The site does tend to make its funding fairly quickly during the month, but the nature of the funding and  ownership make the service very precarious.

Frankly, I don’t want to trade one service that was purchased by a billionaire with another that could easily disappear or be sold.

I quit counter.social after my first impressions, but then decided to continue giving it a try (I’m @bbird). I might be able to learn to live with the 1990s design, but that single owner is likely to be a no-go for me. This leads me to the next social media app, which goes from one owner to no owner.

I’m on Mastodon. Somewhere.

Mastodon is a fascinating social media application, because unlike Twitter, or Facebook or counter.social, no one owns it. Or, I should say, everyone owns it.

My mastodon.social main feed page, using a dark text on light background

Mastodon is a federation of individual servers based on open source software and protocols managed by different groups or people located all over the world. When you sign up for Mastodon, you don’t sign up at a single entry point: you locate and find a server you’re interested in, and then sign up at it.

Once signed up, though, people can follow you regardless of what server they’re on and you can follow them back. So, I’m signed up at mastodon.social as @burningbird, but I can follow @someuser at phpc.social, and my posts show up for them, and their posts show up on my home page.

Each server may or may not have a waiting list, and each server sets its own moderation rules. In addition, each server may monitor or block other servers that they deem to be the source of spamming, hate, pornography, or misinformation. As an example, you can see a list of filtered, limited, and suspended servers for the Fosstodon Mastodon, to get an idea what type of servers do get moderated and blocked.

In addition, you can sign up at multiple servers if you wish. I’m @burningbird at mastodon.social, but I’m also @burningbird at phpc.social, and @burningbird at fosstodon.org. I can keep the separate accounts, or if I decide to stay with just one, I can migrate all my follows/followers to the Mastodon server of my choice. If I do migrate my account from one server to another, we’ll still be connected, and you won’t even know I’ve moved.

Best of all, I can install and setup my own Mastodon server at burningbird.net, and join into the federation—something I am seriously considering. The only downside to this approach is that I won’t have access to folks on a local server when I run my own. Which is why I may stay with an existing server, and why it’s important to sign on to a server that best matches your interest.

(If I do install Mastodon, it would be for personal use. I’ve done the running a server for multiple people in the past, and it was exhausting and very stressful.)

Of course, the freedom to sign up at multiple servers is also one of the problems with Mastodon: there’s no way to know who is authentic and who isn’t. I’ve signed up as @burningbird at three different servers. Someone else can sign up as @burningbird at other servers, and you won’t know who is who without some other way of authenticating the individual. In most cases, you’ll have to find the correct Mastodon user by following a link they’ll provide either at a web site, or other social media app.

(Note that Musk doesn’t consider authentication to be a big thing, since he’s turned the famous Twitter blue authentication checkmark into a marketing brand anyone can buy. I like what one person wrote on Twitter: the blue checkmark will become the equivalent of posting an Amazon Prime subscriber badge.)

From a usability perspective, Mastodon is about the closest experience I’ve found to Twitter, notwithstanding the expected growth issues related to a sudden surge of new users. You start out with light text on dark background, but you can change to the dark text on light background in Preferences. In addition, you can change to slow mode for your feed (new posts require a click rather than automatically scrolling), set image size, determine what happens when an image is hidden and so on.

mastodon preferences page

Unlike counter.social which tends to get into your face about contributing funds, the Mastodon servers typically include a request for donations in their About pages, and they’re not pushy about it. Having said this, if you do like Mastodon and you like your server and don’t want it to go away, consider contributing.

Mastodon isn’t owned by corporations, the Saudi government, or some rich guy. Because of the open source nature of the software, and the standardized open protocol of the federated access, trying to buy out Mastodon would be like trying to buy out the web or the entire internet. Not even a big bucks guy like Musk could do it.

What about Bluesky?

In the midst of all of this, Twitter’s original founder Jack Dorsey has popped up with Bluesky—seemingly his version of a federated social media app.

When I first heard about it, I signed up for the beta. If I get invited, I’ll probably check it out for grins and giggles. But will I stay with it? Unlikely.

To me, the biggest strike against Bluesky is the fact that Dorsey chose to go his own way on designing the federated protocol for Bluesky—the AT protocol—rather than work with the open source and open standards community. This type of arrogant indifference to open standards and its “I know what’s right, and I’m doing it my own way” attitude just stinks. I’ve seen it too much and have fought against it for years. I certainly don’t need to buy into it because one technocrat thinks he know better than anyone else.

Dave Troy touched on much of this in an in-depth piece that discusses Dorsey, his relationships with Musk, and their world views. What he wrote made me wary even before discovering the AT protocol. Read it, and form your own judgement.

Ultimately, it’s not the application or the technology: it’s the people

After testing the three tools, I’ve decided to stay with Mastodon. I’m still exploring the network, still considering what server I want to live on, but what I’ve seen pleases the open source “can’t be owned by rich assholes” part of me.

However, I’m not quite ready to give up Twitter, and it’s not because I’m enamored of the app. I actually find Mastodon to be better tech fit for me. No, leaving Twitter means leaving the best part of Twitter, the part that Elon Musk can’t and will never understand:

The people.

I have built relationships with folks out on Twitter. I have a good group of very smart people I follow and interact with. They’re in technology, Constitutional law, food safety, the environment, politics, news, and life. They can write amazing things in a very small space. They can convince, inform, instill wonder, spark outrage, inspire thoughtfulness, and make me laugh.

A platform’s technology is such an unimportant component of social media. Yes, you want to prevent security hacks, and you need to scale your app to fit the demand. Social media applications are complex and take real skill to manage. I’m not disparaging the abilities of the people who maintain a social media app.

But it’s the people that make the social media app, not the other way around.

Elon Musk doesn’t understand this. He never will. And it’s why I’m investing time in other platforms and encouraging others to do the same. Because someday I hope all the wonderful people I connect with on Twitter will be somewhere else, and I can kiss Twitter good-bye.

And in case you decide to pursue a Mastodon account, find me at @burningbird@mastodon.social. Or you can always find me here, at Burningbird.

Categories
Media Political Whatever

Republicans are crazy and the media loves it

Today, more than a dozen publications were featuring a Herschel Walker event in Richmond Hill. He didn’t take his shoes off and start sucking his toes, so, for the most part, the media coverage is positive.

In the meantime, you can’t find one single story on Senator Warnock. Not on him, specifically. You can find several about him and Walker, both. But not about him. I had to go to his campaign web site to find out he’s currently in Atlanta.

That the media can impact the election with this grossly uneven coverage doesn’t matter, because to them, it’s all about eyeballs and clicks. Attention. It’s all about attention. And what generates attention?

Republicans and their never-ending show of crazies: the crazier, the better.

All Walker has to do is show up and he gets attention. Why? Because of the idiotic things he’s said in the past. My particular favorite was the one about bad air from China coming over here, and our good air going over there. I’m less fond of his demand that women obey him when it comes to our healthcare choices—particularly since his philosophy seems to be do what I say, not what I do.

Sure, you say. It’s good to expose idiocy in a Senatorial candidate. Except now, Walker’s minders have him sticking to the script and following the party line. So when he gets media attention now, the news folks can’t help but comment on the fact that Walker showed up, and he acted normal.

The same applies to JD Vance. To Mehmet Oz. To Boebert. To…well, you get the point.

And when the Republican candidates do the crazy, well, that’s OK, too. The media’s right there, except they aren’t. The Republicans do the crazy at audience-friendly pep rallies. And they do the crazy on friendly media shows, like Tucker Carlson’s, where there’s no real questions; never any pushback. In environments where the rest of the media might say, “Well, hold on now…,” the crazy gets put away.

So in rallies, Walker is against any form of abortion, no matter what. But in the studio or the debate, well, he’s no such thing. Whatever the GOP decides here is OK by him. And too many (not all, but too many) in the media just let it all slide…because after all, they’re fair and balanced. Right?

When the media chooses to go along with the Republican ploy—giving attention to the crazies and then normalizing their behavior when they behave—we all lose. We lose fairness in media coverage. We lose fairness in truth in reporting. And with so many Republicans being election deniers, we risk losing our democracy.

But hey, look what I did. I only talked about Walker. My bad. But since we’re talking about Walker and giving Walker attention, I think I’ll let Pastor Jamal Bryant have the last word on Herschel Walker.

Categories
Social Media

Evil twin Twitter and the media

Musk took over Twitter, immediately fired most of the executive staff, and has seemingly lowered the restrictions on some of the more notorious Twitter offenders (of which sadly pathetic but proud killer Kyle Rittenhouse is one).

Musk’s own tweets would seem to support our worst fears of his impact on the site. This screenshot of a Hillary Clinton tweet and a Musk reply is a good example. Instead of joining with Clinton to condemn what was a heinous attack on Paul Pelosi, Nancy Pelosi’s husband, Musk decided to jump onto the most-cringeworthy, fringeworthy conspiracies.

Musk implies there's 'more to story' on the Pelosi attack

What’s worse is the despicable and disgusting lie about Paul Pelosi is being allowed to flourish on Twitter. So much so that I’m wondering if Musk has told the people that handle moderation to cease their activities.

Good-bye Good Twitter

To celebrate Musk’s take over, the right burst forth in hate speech, including an astounding 500% increase in the use of the N word.

tweet about increase

Tom Fitton, that miserable excuse for a human being who wants to destroy the quality of life we still have, is claiming that Twitter is censoring a report on illegal ballot harvesting in Florida. The above-mentioned Rittenhouse is looking into it.

The reality is: there is no illegal ballot harvesting in Florida. The claims are a lie. A fact-checked lie. So Twitter is preventing an election lie, and that has the right so very unhappy. Which says a lot about the right.

But how long will the lies be caught and tossed? Already, the appalling and ugly-as-hell rightwing-generated myth surrounding the Paul Pelosi attack that Musk tweeted is dominating the service.

Meet Evil Twin Twitter

All the ugly activity—the Pelosi attack myth, the racism and bigotry—will end up driving sane people off the site. Many folks have quit already; moving on to singular writing or other social media sites. This leaves the toxic and the even more toxic to control what happens at the site.

Normally, folks who want to stay with Twitter would have a solution: just block everyone who is toxic. And in a way this would work. We could resurrect Good Twitter, and float it above its evil twin.

The problem, though, is the media. The media is used to examining Twitter trends to figure out what stories to cover, and for how long. If extremists on the right have excessive influence on these trends, and the media continues it’s lazy, click-bait behavior, Musk and Evil Twin Twitter could have a profound impact on what news is published.

Twitter and other social media sites have already had a wrongful impact on how news is covered—with major news organizations determined to normalize extremist rightwing activity in order to appear to be ‘balanced’ in its coverage based on loud howls of protest on social media.

I shudder to think how much worse this will all get with Musk in control.

Categories
Social Media

Twitter is about to be Musked

The Musk buyout of Twitter is all but done, and even before the blo…ink dried on the contracts, the scent of Musk permeates the social service.

According to the Verge:

Musk has a deadline to close the purchase of Twitter by October 28th. In a sign the deal is proceeding, Twitter froze its employees’ equity awards, Bloomberg reported. Anonymous sources tell The Post that the deal is moving forward in good faith.

Among bright boy’s planned changes? Mass layoffs of over 7500 of what he considers ‘low performing’ employees. This means we can kiss content moderation good-bye. Which means we’ll be inundated with spam, scams, misinformation, and most likely, Trump.

Twitter has always been my favorite social media site. It’s the best source not only for breaking news, but also the more obscure but in-depth news pieces that don’t always float to the top in our attention-grabbing spaces.

I’ve also enjoyed the brilliance of the writing. Anyone can write 10,000 words and eventually make a point—lord knows, I’ve tried—but it takes mad skills to do so in 140280 characters.

Then there’s the people. There are folks with a few followers, folks with millions, but regardless, they have something to say and we want to hear it. Twitter is good at this.

The old Twitter. Not the newly Musked Twitter.

No, the Musked Twitter will be monetized to a degree that will take our breath away (or smother us, whichever comes first). Every bad actor kicked off of the site will be welcomed back, starting with the worst of the worst, Trump. Forget trying to stop the spread of misinformation—if the lies mean profit, the more lies the merrier.

What’s scarier is the fact that the news media trolls Twitter looking for the stories it should cover. Twitter has already had a bad impact on news coverage—I hate to think how much worse it can get with Musk and his ego in charge. Probably All Trump, All the Time. Excuse me, make that All Musk, Trump part of the Time.

My days as one of the birds of Twitter are numbered.

 

 

 

Categories
Media Political

Raffensperger conspires with Walker’s campaign and rightwing orgs to smear Senator Warnock and MLK’s Church

On October 11, a story appeared in the Washington Free Beacon that claimed “Warnock’s Ebenezer Baptist Church” moved to evict disadvantaged residents of an apartment building it owns.

As evidence, the publication provides copies of two eviction notices for the same person. One dated September of 2021, and one dated September of 2022.

In rapid succession, the following events then occurred:

  • A scant three hours after the Washington Free Beacon broke the story of the evictions, Herschel Walker claimed he would pay all of the back rent for the people supposedly being threatened with eviction. The Free Beacon published a story on the Walker offer, four hours later.
  • Fox picked up and published the same story that afternoon.
  • October 12: A conservative ‘watch dog’ group, National Legal and Policy Center, filed a complaint with the IRS about the Ebenezer Building Foundation.
  • October 12: Georgia’s Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger’s office sends a letter to the Ebenezer Building Foundation, noting that nonprofits that solicit contributions in Georgia have to register with the state. He demands that the nonprofit proves it’s exempt from filing.
  • October 13: The Atlanta Journal-Constitution’s reporter assigned to cover Herschel Walker picks up the story and the complaint.
  • October 14: The Free Beacon writes about the ‘Georgia investigation’ into the Ebenezer Building Foundation, Inc.
  • October 14: The Fox debate moderator at the Warnock/Walker debate asks Warnock about the Washington Free Beacon story and the evictions. (As noted prior to the event by the ever-helpful AJC.)
  • October 14: Walker also hits Warnock about the evictions.

Whew! Busy week! And I haven’t seen such exquisite coordination between seemingly independent entities since the last Cirque du Soleil show I attended.

Normally, I wouldn’t pay any attention to a story in the Washington Free Beacon, a publication on par with other luminaries such as Brietbart and Newsmax. What made this different, though, was the painfully obvious orchestration of the events between the Washington Free Beacon, the National Legal and Policy Center, Herschel Walker’s campaign, Secretary Raffensperger, and even the Nexstar debate team. Orchestration that casts doubt on the true legitimacy of the Walker/Warnock debate, and the media coverage related to it; Orchestration that includes an Georgia elected official, Raffensperger, using his office for political gain.

Would this sequence of closely timed events happened if Senator Warnock was not running for Senate? Would the stories had been published? Would the IRS complaint had been filed? Would Raffensperger had sent the letter?

I can say with complete surety: No.

Now, let’s look at the facts.

Just the Facts

Columbia Tower at MLK Village is a 96 unit apartment building, and all units are designated as low-income housing. I can’t find exact figures for rents, but I’ve found indications online that they can range from $100 a month up to $700 a month, depending on the renter’s income.

Columbia Residential provides the day-to-day management of the property, which is owned by MLK  Village Tower LP—a limited partnership between MLK Village Corporation, Inc, and Columbia at MLK Village Tower Partners, LLC, with the sole member, Columbia Residential.

Ebenezer Baptist Church established the MLK Village Corporation in 2003 to handle the business end of its effort to provide homes for the disadvantaged, including support for the Columbia Tower at MLK Village. The church owns 99% of the property, Columbia Residential owns 1% via the limited partnership.

As for Ebenezer Building Foundation, the nonprofit at the center of all the recent fooflah, I’ll let it speak for itself in what the Free Beacon termed an audited financial statement, but in actuality, is nothing more than a simple grant request for money to renovate the Columbia Tower.

Ebenezer Building Foundation was established in 1996 to raise funds for the construction and maintenance of facilities of the Ebenezer Baptist Church of Atlanta and to support the various programs of Ebenezer Baptist Church including ownership in Columbia Tower at MLK Village a permanent supportive housing development of 96 units serving the homeless, mentally ill population in Atlanta, Ga. The Ebenezer Building Foundation has supported the construction of the Horizon Sanctuary and the Martin Luther King, Sr. Community Resources Center, and maintenance of the small low-income rental properties owned by Ebenezer Baptist Church. Its officers are members and leaders of Ebenezer.

OK, now you know the players. Let’s move on to the accusations.

Evictions

The Washington Free Beacon started all of this with its stories on the Columbia Tower evictions. It’s important, then, to establish who has control over evictions at Columbia Tower.

As the AJC article notes, Columbia Residential, the organization that manages the Columbia Tower, issued a statement:

As the building’s sole management agent, Columbia Residential handles all aspects of property management at MLK Village; the building’s owners bear no responsibility for the day-to-day operations of the property, nor do they exercise any oversight of the building tenants’ rental transactions.

Neither Senator Warnock, nor Ebenezer Baptist Church/Ebenezer Building Foundation have any control over how evictions are managed at the property.

In addition, though low-income housing offers substantially reduced rents, tenants do have to follow tenant agreements, and these include paying rent. If a tenant doesn’t pay rent, doesn’t work with the management to pay rent, they face eviction.

However, as Columbia Residential noted in the statement to AJC, there have been no evictions at Columbia Tower since 2020. And, from my own examination of eviction cases in the Fulton County Magistrate’s court database, contrary to what’s implied in the Washington Free Beacon, no eviction action was filed during the various COVID eviction moratoriums.

The residents of Columbia Tower also have help to ensure such evictions occur rarely, if at all. Hope Atlanta has two permanent caseworkers at Columbia Tower to assist the residents. The focus of this organization at the apartments is also included in the grant request:

HOPE Atlanta provides supportive services for the residents at Columbia Tower by offering an array of programs and services that refer to treatment, train, strengthen, and support persons with mental illness, substance abuse disorders, physical disabilities, abused persons, persons living with HIV/AIDS, homeless, and persons coming out of transitional housing to live a more self-sufficient and satisfying life in the community. HOPE Atlanta serves as a vehicle to assist these participants in accessing programs and services offered by HOPE Atlanta and its community partners.

The IRS Complaint

The National Legal and Policy Center terms itself a watch dog, but SourceWatch considers it a “front group and industry funded right-wing political and policy lobbying organization.”

The IRS complaint is almost a total word-for-word rehash of the original Washington Free Beacon story. However, at the end we find the actual reason for the filing: The Ebenezer Building Foundation did not list the MLK Village Corporation as a related entity.

(There was also a claim of financial irregularities in the form, but I’ll get to them later.)

First of all, the Ebenezer Building Foundation, Inc. is related to an entity, as noted in the Form 990 Schedule R the foundation filed. The entity is the Ebenezer Baptist Church. That entity, being a religious organization isn’t required to file a 990. If it did, though, chances are good that it would list its relationship with the MLK Village Corporation.

What the Washington Free Beacon and the National Legal and Policy Center don’t mention in any of their various accusations is that it isn’t unusual for nonprofits to spin certain functionality off to other entities for activity that it, itself, doesn’t consider a primary component of its existence. So, a church could create a nonprofit to handle efforts such as providing low-income housing in a city that desperately needs it (Ebenezer Building Foundation), and then create another, separate C corporation (MLK Village Corporation), to handle the business aspects of some or all of of its efforts. How the relationships exist between all the entities can be complicated, and may be identified in IRS paperwork not as accessible as the form 990 filing is for Ebenezer Building Foundation.

Nonprofit form 990s are publicly accessible but most other IRS filings, are not. Both the Washington Free Beacon and the National Legal and Policy Center know this.

The real problem is the IRS does not penalize people or organizations for making false complaints, like the police would if you make a false claim of a crime. So people can make a bogus IRS complaint a few weeks before a critical election and know that they will suffer no penalty for doing so, and the IRS is still so badly understaffed it can’t respond before the election.

In addition, the Center’s IRS complaint also hastens to point out what it terms discrepancies in income on the form 990 the organization filed in 2020, and the amounts provided in the grant request specifically for Columbia Tower submitted in 2022 listing the 2020 rents.

The two documents are not for the same entity or same purpose. What amounts are recorded in each have specific requirements. The IRS form requires an accounting of income before expenses, the statement in the grant request likely requires an accounting of income sans expenses. In particular, as the Washington Free Beacon so helpfully pointed out, the figures in the grant request had been fully audited.

At a minimum, commonsense should have demonstrated the absurdity of all of this. Look at the dates when each of these organizations were founded: The Ebenezer Building Foundation was established in 2006; MLK Village Corporation was established in March of 2003; the partnership with Columbia Residential began in 2005, when they bought the Columbia Tower and renovated it for habitation. They’ve been dealing with both state and federal agencies, since.

In the complaint, the Center stated, “It is abundantly clear that Ebenezer Building Foundation, Inc. has violated one or more IRS laws and regulations regarding the operations of a nonprofit charity.”

No, what is abundantly clear is that the Center is making an accusation of guilt based on no evidence, and is demanding that the Ebenezer Business Foundation prove its innocence.

And speaking of being forced to prove innocence…

The Disingenuous Mr. Raffensperger

Both the Washington Free Beacon and the National Policy and Legal Center care more about messaging than fact, which is something that shouldn’t surprise any of us.

What should surprise us, though—or, at a minimum, be cause for concern—is when an elected state government official uses his office solely to help a candidate running for office.

The ink for the original Washington Free Beacon story had barely a chance to dry before Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger jumped onto the Ebenezer Building Foundation pile-on.

In a letter dated October 12, his office wrote:

The Division’s records indicate that Ebenezer Building Foundation, Inc. (“Ebenezer Building Foundation”) is not registered as a charitable organization with the state of Georgia. Accordingly, if Ebenezer Building Foundation is soliciting charitable contributions and operating as a charitable organization in the State of Georgia without an active registration or applicable exemption, it is in violation…

If the Washington Free Beacon and the National Legal and Policy Center can claim not to have access to all the documentation when making their claims, the same cannot be said for Raffensperger. He knows full well that the demand for Ebenezer to prove its innocence is disingenuous because, as Secretary of State, he has access to all the information he needs to answer the question in the letter, himself.

What was worse is there’s nothing in Raffensperger’s department letter actually accusing Ebenezer Building Foundation of wrong doing. No mentions of any irregularities in any form, or any documentation that would lead to a letter of this kind. No, the letter only outlines the law, and then tells the organization it must prove it is innocent of breaking this law.

Can we then assume every other nonprofit in the state is getting this same letter? Or only nonprofits that are related to a candidate running for the Senate?

The Debate

The media, for the most part, has ignored the Washington Free Beacon stories. The only repetition they’ve received is from other conservative publications…and Fox. And AJC.

The Atlanta Journal Constitution will have to look to its own in why it would allow itself to be used so poorly. At a minimum, it did, at least, ask for a comment from the Columbia Tower management.

Fox, on the other hand, is being Fox. And interestingly enough, it was Fox being Fox that got carried into that sham of a Walker/Warnock debate on Friday evening. Of all the questions the Fox moderator Buck Lanford could ask, he asked Warnock specifically about the fresh, unvetted, and relatively obscure accusations published by the Washington Free Beacon.

Not about climate change, which would have so much impact on coastal community like Savannah. Not about the Ahmaud Arbery murder and trial that has so dominated the news in this state and the country. Not even about whether the candidates support COVID vaccinations and the various lock-downs. Or the book banning happening in schools. Or the attempts to suppress speech about the LGBTQ+ community in the state.

No, Lanford asked about the dubious allegations just published by a relatively unknown, ultra-conservative publication.

The Media Fails

The media has, for the most part, played it smart with the accusations about the Ebenezer Building Foundation and Senator Warnock’s connection. It knows that there’s little truth to the allegations, and that this all was a contrived ploy to find something, anything, to accuse Warnock of and take the heat off of Walker during the week of their only highly publicized debate.

Still, the media failed. It should be covering this story—not because the allegations have any factual basis, but because they don’t.

The people who contrived this mess attacked an organization whose purpose is to provide low-cost housing for the disadvantaged in a city that desperately needs it. They attacked the nonprofit’s founder, Ebenezer Baptist Church—Martin Luther King Jr’s church—one of the most respected churches in America. And they did so solely to provide something, anything, to taint Senator Warnock in the news leading up to, and during, the debate.

However, the worst player in all of this wasn’t the Washington Free Beacon or the National Legal and Policy Center. Or even Fox. No, the worst player was Secretary of State Raffensperger, who used his elected office to send a duplicitous letter implying much while delivering nothing—all to aid the Republican candidate for Senate.

There is no worse action an elected official can commit than putting party over people. No greater betrayal of the public trust…and the media just treats it as business as usual. Worse, Raffensperger is still portrayed as the saint who did his job when Trump came calling, and therefore can do no wrong.

Who would have known that a Republican just doing their job is enough to get a free pass from the media forever?

The media in this state, and this country, have failed in their job.

A conspiracy of innocence

In the title to this piece I accused Raffensperger, Washington Free Beacon, Fox, and the others of conspiring together in this attack on the the Ebenezer Building Foundation and, indirectly, Senator Warnock and the Ebenezer Baptist Church.

Conspiring together…that’s a pretty serious accusation. And though it is true that the timeline at the beginning of this writing gives weight to my accusation—not to mention three different types of attacks all on the same institution, even though that institution has been doing the same thing for decades—I have no smoking gun. No text messages between the players. No whistleblower claiming ‘they seen it all.’

So, I grant all of them the same courtesy they granted the Ebenezer Building Foundation:

They can prove their innocence.

We’ll wait.