


By Harlow Giles Unger
โAmerican Nation Debauched by WASHINGTON!โ screamed a newspaper headline before charging the Father of Our Country with โthe foulest designs against the liberties of a people.โ
President Donald Trump would call it โfake Newsโ and George Washington most certainly would agree.
After he read Philadelphiaโs Aurora in December 1796, President Washington blasted the story as โindecent โฆdevoid of truth and fairness.โโand most of Americaโs Founding Founders concurred. Indeed, when South Carolinaโs Charles Pinckney and Elbridge Gerry, of Massachusetts, proposed to the 1787 Constitutional Convention โthat the liberty of the press should be inviolably observed,โ Connecticutโs Roger Sherman responded angrily, โIt is unnecessary!โ Most delegates agreed, rejecting the proposal seven to four against.
Four years later, however, the First Congress included free-press guarantees in the first of ten constitutional amendments, collectively called the Bill of Rights. Freed from government constraints, many newspapers used First Amendment rights to uproot government corruption, but others used them as licenses for libel, giving birth to โfake newsโ in America.
After Washington left office, the press assailed his successor, President John Adams, with fake news that he was โa warmonger,โ โinsane,โ and possibly โa hermaphrodite.โ Adamsโs successor Thomas Jefferson fared no better, as opposition newspapers tarred him as โan atheist, radical, and libertineโ and โson of a half-breed Indian squaw sired by a Virginia mulatto.โ
Jefferson had championed press freedom until fake news changed his thinking: โNothing can now be believed which is seen in a newspaper,โ he charged. โTruth itself becomes suspicious in that polluted vehicle.โ The press had the last word, however, publishing the not-so-fake news of Jeffersonโs sexual relationship with Sally Hemings, a slave girl Jefferson inherited.
Fake news did not diminish as the nation matured. Indeed, it became entwined in the nationโs literary fabric. In the run-up to the 1828 presidential election, the Cincinnati Gazette โexposedโ candidate Andrew Jackson, the hero of the Battle of New Orleans in the War of 1812, as a โmurderer, swindler, adulterer, and traitorโฆ.
General Jacksonโs mother was a COMMON PROSTITUTE, brought to this country by the British Soldiers! She afterwards married a MULATTO MAN, with whom she had several children, of which number General JACKSON IS ONE!!!
Americans ignored the fake news and elected Jackson President, but Rachel Jackson, the new Presidentโs wife, suffered a heart attack and died before his inauguration.
Twenty years later in 1848, fake news that โCanadaโs woods are full of Chineseโฆready to make a break for the United States,โ provoked American โ49ers to run thousands of Chinese โ49ers off the Sierra Nevada gold-laden mountains at gun point and steal their claims. As fake news of a โyellow menaceโ intensified, Congress passed the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act barring Chinese entry into the United States for the next 60 years.
Fake news about Asians grew more virulent after Japanโs December 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor. Newspapers across America clamored for expulsion of everyone of Japanese ancestry. โThey are not to be trusted.โ AndThe Argus in Seattle predicted: โIf any Japs are allowed to remain in this country, it might spell the greatest disaster in history.” The Bakersfield Californian concurred, claiming, โWe have had enough experiences with Japs.โ
President Franklin D. Rooseveltโs responded with an executive order that sent anyone with at least 1/16th Japanese ancestry into concentration camps without trial or due process–120,000 in all, including 17,000 American children.
Since its first appearance during the early days of the republic, the wide variety of fake news has often made it difficult to identify. Some is born of innocent misreporting or failure to uncover all facets of a story, but as much or more results from bias in the form of misstatement, misreporting, or misinterpretation. Deliberate placement of a story on the front or inside pageโor omission of a story–can also reflect bias by lessening the storyโs impact on readers.
Aside from its ill effects on American politics, fake news can have dangerous consequences, as in 2011, when newspapers published a rogue scientistโs contention that vaccinations caused diseases they were meant to prevent. Enough parents responded by refusing to allow their children to be vaccinated. A nation-wide epidemic of measles followed–years after compulsory universal vaccinations had eradicated the disease.
When President Washington ended his second term in 1797, he had so tired of fake news by โinfamous scribblers,โ he rejected pleas to remain in office. โI am become a private citizen,โ he wrote with joy, โunder my own vine and fig tree, free from the intrigues of courtโ — and, he might have added, โfake news.โ
Originally published by History News Network, 11.24.2019, reprinted with permission for educational, non-commercial purposes.


