Alex
Jones Sells Gold on Sirius With Bombing Conspiracies
11
June, 2013
Heda
Umarova first encountered conspiracy theorist Alex Jones while
scouring the Internet to understand how her friend Dzhokhar Tsarnaev
went from free-wheeling student to terrorism suspect.
Umarova,
a 21-year-old Chechen native from Chelsea, Massachusetts, found logic
and comfort in Jones, who uses his 17 hours of weekly radio
broadcasts and a sprawling online empire to advance the idea that the
U.S. government played a part in the April 15 explosions that killed
three and injured more than 260 at the Boston Marathon.
“A
lot of it is ‘Oh my god, he is crazy,’ but a lot of stuff he says
make sense,” said Umarova, who grew up knowing the Tsarnaev family.
“He brings up a lot of valid points.”
She
and others obsessed by the violence have coalesced around Jones, 39,
expanding the reach of a man who exemplifies the Internet conspiracy
industry. Sponsored by Midas Resources Inc., a closely held company
that sells gold, his show is broadcast by Sirius XM Radio Inc. (SIRI)
on a channel programmed by Clear Channel Communications Inc. (CCMO)
and on roughly 80 terrestrial stations.
The
ideas espoused by Jones, who says he brings in $7 million a year,
have prompted groups such as the Southern Poverty Law Center in
Montgomery, Alabama, to accuse him of fomenting hate. His guests of
note include both extremes of the political spectrum -- from U.S.
Senator Rand Paul of Kentucky on the right to former U.S.
Representative Dennis Kucinich on the left.
Boston
Windfall
“Alex
Jones is probably the most important conspiracist in terms of
influence in the U.S. now that Glenn Beck has lost his chair on
network news,” said Chip Berlet, former senior analyst at Political
Research Associates, a Somerville, Massachusetts, nonprofit that says
it advances social justice.
Views
of Jones’s website, Infowars.com, spiked about sevenfold during
mid-April as the world focused on the bombings, according to
Alexa.com, a San Francisco company that tracks Internet analytics. By
comparison, views to competing websites run by Rush Limbaugh and Beck
were flat, the data show.
Bilderberg
Spectacle
Jones
says governments have a history of staging terror attacks and cites
the 1933 Reichstag fire in Germany that preceded the Nazi rise to
power. From there he zips to present-day U.S. politics, the Boston
attacks and the arrest of Dzhokhar Tsarnaev.
“We
have a criminal government at many levels and so nothing they say can
be trusted or believed,” Jones said in a telephone interview from
Austin. “And now they supposedly have this guy saying he did it
all. I’m sure after they torture the hell out of him, he’ll say
what ever they want him to say.”
Jones
took his ideas to Britain last week to protest the annual Bilderberg
organization meeting, a group of global leaders who gather behind
closed doors that this year included U.K. Prime Minister David
Cameron and International Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine
Lagarde.
Jones
garnered attention during a BBC television interview where he yelled
“You will not stop freedom” and “Humanity is awakening” as
host Andrew Neil made hand gestures indicating Jones was crazy.
Fertile
Market
Every
weekday, Jones hosts a three-hour program from a 20,000-square-foot
studio in Austin, Texas. He does a two-hour live version Sundays,
assisted by a staff of 50. The program, or portions of it, is carried
on stations including Clear Channel’s KTCN in Minneapolis, KLBJ in
Austin and WVNJ which broadcasts into New York City.
Talkers
Magazine, a trade publication, rates Jones as the 66th most
influential radio host in the U.S. The measure understates his reach
because it doesn’t include audiences on satellite or online, said
Michael Harrison, editor and publisher. Jones’s YouTube channel,
for example, has more than 300 million views.
“Alex
Jones has one of the largest general radio listenerships in America,”
Harrison said in a telephone interview from Springfield,
Massachusetts. “There is a huge audience in the world for that type
of rebellious, anti-power, anti-establishment take.”
Wrestling
Reporter
The
Boston bombings presented a platform for Jones to spread his view
that the U.S. government benefits from terrorism -- and even
perpetrates it -- as part of a larger plot to create a police state.
“Even
if they are not staging the terror, and undoubtedly they are staging
some of it, they are using it to take my liberties,” Jones said.
“So they are part of the terrorism equation regardless.”
After
the first reports of the bombings April 15, Jones activated Boston
correspondent Dan Bidondi, a rotund wrestler with a shaved head, who
shouted the first question to Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick at
a news conference.
“Is
this another false-flag, staged attack to take our civil liberties
away?” asked Bidondi.
The
governor’s answer was “No. Next question.”
Jones
grew up in Rockwall, Texas, about 25 miles (40 kilometers) east of
Dallas before his family moved to Austin while he was in high school.
He took courses at Austin Community College and then hosted a live a
call-in show on a local cable-access station.
Conspiracy
Celebrity
He
earned his first measure of celebrity after the 51-day federal siege
near Waco, Texas, in 1993 that resulted in the deaths of 75 members
of the Branch Davidian cult. Jones made documentaries about it.
“Austin
at that time became a hotbed of conspiracy theorists and Alex became
like the star quarterback,” said Kevin Booth, 51, who helped him
and was the best man in his wedding.
“Before
that, really the biggest conspiracy anybody really had was the
Kennedy assassination,” Booth said. “All these conspiracy
theorists saw this Waco thing happen and it was kind of game on.”
Jones
said he got hired on a now-defunct station in Austin, before being
fired for tirades in 1999.
He
turned to Ted Anderson, who had just started Genesis Communications
Network, a radio syndication company in Burnsville, Minnesota,
founded to “promote the importance of investing in precious
metals,” according to its website.
Anderson
uses Genesis to bolster sales for parent company Midas Resources. He
is president of both.
Avid
Seeker
Jones
frequently rails against the Federal Reserve and has espoused a
return the gold standard to control spending and take monetary policy
out of the hands of the government.
When
Jones pitches gold “people will respond,” said Anderson. “We do
a lot of business with Alex Jones’s listeners.”
He
said he is at peace with the content of the program.
“The
man just wants to uncover the truth and he is willing to look a
little further for it,” Anderson said.
Sirius
XM, which has more than 24 million listeners, broadcasts the Alex
Jones Show daily from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. In an e-mail, Patrick Reilly,
a senior vice president for communications, said “his show is not
programmed by us nor is the host, show or channel under our control.”
Reilly,
whose company is the product of a 2008 merger, said the show is
broadcast due to a “pre-existing agreement” between XM and Clear
Channel. New York-based Sirius reported $3.4 billion in revenue last
year.
Tiffany
Johnson, a spokeswoman for Clear Channel, which is the biggest U.S.
radio station owner, declined to comment on Jones’s program.
Lonely
Millenarian
Jones
said additional revenue comes from books and films with titles such
as “Police State 4: The Rise of FEMA” and “ENDGAME: Blueprint
for Global Enslavement” that he sells on his website.
Fans
can also purchase radiation sensors, water purifiers and seed vaults.
There’s even a dating service. In one posting, a 48-year-old
divorcee named Chris says she’s looking for a man who believes that
the end of civilization is nigh.
“It’d
be nice to find someone to snuggle in a bunker with,” she wrote.
Other
fans are less harmless. One was Tamerlan Tsarnaev, according to an
Associated Press story. Jared L. Loughner, who killed six people and
wounded 13, including U.S. Representative Gabrielle Giffords in 2011,
saw a 9/11 conspiracy film Jones made, according to the Los Angeles
Times.
Human
Bombs
“He
does not build bombs, he builds bombers,” said Mark Potok, a senior
fellow at the Southern Poverty Law Center. “He feeds sick minds all
over this country, and some of those people engage in real-life
terrorism.”
Jones
dismissed the notion that he bears any responsibility.
“It
is an outrageous, fascist demonization to connect free speech to
terrorism,” he said.
Jones’s
ideas have surfaced in more formal venues. New Hampshire lawmaker
Stella Tremblay, a Republican, said Jones’s website helped convince
her that official accounts of the terrorist attacks are not reliable.
She suggested that Boston bombing victim Jeff Bauman, photographed in
a wheelchair with mangled legs, wasn’t really hurt.
“He
was not in shock. He was not in pain,” Tremblay said during a radio
interview. “If I had had those types of injuries, I’d be
screaming in agony.”
Spreading
Lies
After
the Dec. 14 Sandy Hook Elementary School shootings in Newtown,
Connecticut, an article on Infowars.com argued that Adam Lanza didn’t
use an AR-15 Bushmaster to kill 20 children. Instead, the piece said,
authorities lied to create a pretext for an assault-weapons ban.
State
police put out a news release to quash that idea.
“What
they are spreading, simply stated, is lies,” Lieutenant J. Paul
Vance, a spokesman, said in an interview.
Confusion
over basic facts makes informed public debate impossible, said
Jonathan Kay of Toronto, who interviewed Jones for his 2011 book
“Among the Truthers.”
“You
can’t debate national security with somebody who thinks 9/11 was an
inside job,” he said. “He’s a showman.”
And
his show provides validation and inspiration for Heda Umarova and her
followers. Their #freejahar network is raising money for the Tsarnaev
family.
“When
I first started I thought nobody would support this,” Umarova said.
“I thought I would take all the heat. I expected nobody to support
what I was doing.”
Instead,
her social media following increased 16-fold.
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