Was there conservative outrage over the video of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez dancing?












9














There have been several stories in the media about how a video of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez dancing has caused conservatives to attack her for it.



News sources where this claim is made:



There have been several stories in the media about how a video of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez dancing has caused conservatives to attack her for it.



News sources where this claim is made:





  1. So when an old video of her as a college student emerged, some of them [conservatives] darn near lost their minds.
    MSNBC




  2. I love how Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has turned American politics into a live action Footloose. People dancing!? Oh the horror! Where will it end?
    New York Times




  3. I hear the GOP thinks women dancing are scandalous. -Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
    CNN




  4. After several conservative Twitter accounts resurfaced clips from the video this week in an attempt to mock Ocasio-Cortez, supporters rushed to her defense.
    USA Today




  5. Conservatives Try to Shame Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez for Dancing Video from College



    Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez danced around once in college — and conservatives lost it.
    Now This News




  6. Conservatives Mock Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez for College Dancing Video, Everyone Else Thinks it's Adorable
    Newsweek




However, among all these different stories, there has only been one example cited where she was attacked for the dancing video, a tweet from an anonymous twitter account.



Are there notable examples of any prominent conservatives attacking Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez for the dance? Any evidence of a public upset among common conservatives? Are all of these news stories only based on this one random tweet (in which case is it fair to say that the news stories are false when they claim that conservatives are "losing their minds" over the video)?



An article from Fox News claims the outrage is fabricated:




An old video of now-Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez playfully recreating a dance scene from "The Breakfast Club" was resurfaced anonymously on Twitter last week -- resulting in a slew of misleading stories claiming conservatives were outraged over it, despite virtually no supporting evidence.











share|improve this question









New contributor




GendoIkari is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • I'm not sure what claim you want to question here, as I don't see claims of (plural) "conservatives attacking her" being made by the sources you're linking to. Can you provide a direct quote? On an anecdotal note, I saw the @AnonymousQ1776 tweet when it first took off, and many MAGA people were making earnest replies. They were all fairly simple, just calling her stupid or hot. The account you are linking to is a knock-off with far fewer followers.
    – Avery
    2 hours ago












  • What sort of evidence are you looking for here? How could someone show there was or wasn't "outrage"? It seems rather nebulous.
    – Oddthinking
    1 hour ago










  • Quotes and another source added. Though it's not even the specific quotes that matter as much as the fact that these articles exist at all. They are all about coming to her defense, which strongly implies that there is an attack to be defended against.
    – GendoIkari
    1 hour ago






  • 5




    @Oddthinking Something along the lines of quotes or clips of conservative commentators attacking her. They are easy to find for other times that she has been mocked by conservatives for other things.
    – GendoIkari
    1 hour ago










  • Quoting a handful of tweets doesn't seem like it would be sufficient to support the claim. Proving there aren't more than a handful of tweets would be even more difficult (but not impossible).
    – Oddthinking
    1 hour ago
















9














There have been several stories in the media about how a video of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez dancing has caused conservatives to attack her for it.



News sources where this claim is made:



There have been several stories in the media about how a video of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez dancing has caused conservatives to attack her for it.



News sources where this claim is made:





  1. So when an old video of her as a college student emerged, some of them [conservatives] darn near lost their minds.
    MSNBC




  2. I love how Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has turned American politics into a live action Footloose. People dancing!? Oh the horror! Where will it end?
    New York Times




  3. I hear the GOP thinks women dancing are scandalous. -Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
    CNN




  4. After several conservative Twitter accounts resurfaced clips from the video this week in an attempt to mock Ocasio-Cortez, supporters rushed to her defense.
    USA Today




  5. Conservatives Try to Shame Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez for Dancing Video from College



    Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez danced around once in college — and conservatives lost it.
    Now This News




  6. Conservatives Mock Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez for College Dancing Video, Everyone Else Thinks it's Adorable
    Newsweek




However, among all these different stories, there has only been one example cited where she was attacked for the dancing video, a tweet from an anonymous twitter account.



Are there notable examples of any prominent conservatives attacking Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez for the dance? Any evidence of a public upset among common conservatives? Are all of these news stories only based on this one random tweet (in which case is it fair to say that the news stories are false when they claim that conservatives are "losing their minds" over the video)?



An article from Fox News claims the outrage is fabricated:




An old video of now-Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez playfully recreating a dance scene from "The Breakfast Club" was resurfaced anonymously on Twitter last week -- resulting in a slew of misleading stories claiming conservatives were outraged over it, despite virtually no supporting evidence.











share|improve this question









New contributor




GendoIkari is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • I'm not sure what claim you want to question here, as I don't see claims of (plural) "conservatives attacking her" being made by the sources you're linking to. Can you provide a direct quote? On an anecdotal note, I saw the @AnonymousQ1776 tweet when it first took off, and many MAGA people were making earnest replies. They were all fairly simple, just calling her stupid or hot. The account you are linking to is a knock-off with far fewer followers.
    – Avery
    2 hours ago












  • What sort of evidence are you looking for here? How could someone show there was or wasn't "outrage"? It seems rather nebulous.
    – Oddthinking
    1 hour ago










  • Quotes and another source added. Though it's not even the specific quotes that matter as much as the fact that these articles exist at all. They are all about coming to her defense, which strongly implies that there is an attack to be defended against.
    – GendoIkari
    1 hour ago






  • 5




    @Oddthinking Something along the lines of quotes or clips of conservative commentators attacking her. They are easy to find for other times that she has been mocked by conservatives for other things.
    – GendoIkari
    1 hour ago










  • Quoting a handful of tweets doesn't seem like it would be sufficient to support the claim. Proving there aren't more than a handful of tweets would be even more difficult (but not impossible).
    – Oddthinking
    1 hour ago














9












9








9


1





There have been several stories in the media about how a video of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez dancing has caused conservatives to attack her for it.



News sources where this claim is made:



There have been several stories in the media about how a video of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez dancing has caused conservatives to attack her for it.



News sources where this claim is made:





  1. So when an old video of her as a college student emerged, some of them [conservatives] darn near lost their minds.
    MSNBC




  2. I love how Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has turned American politics into a live action Footloose. People dancing!? Oh the horror! Where will it end?
    New York Times




  3. I hear the GOP thinks women dancing are scandalous. -Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
    CNN




  4. After several conservative Twitter accounts resurfaced clips from the video this week in an attempt to mock Ocasio-Cortez, supporters rushed to her defense.
    USA Today




  5. Conservatives Try to Shame Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez for Dancing Video from College



    Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez danced around once in college — and conservatives lost it.
    Now This News




  6. Conservatives Mock Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez for College Dancing Video, Everyone Else Thinks it's Adorable
    Newsweek




However, among all these different stories, there has only been one example cited where she was attacked for the dancing video, a tweet from an anonymous twitter account.



Are there notable examples of any prominent conservatives attacking Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez for the dance? Any evidence of a public upset among common conservatives? Are all of these news stories only based on this one random tweet (in which case is it fair to say that the news stories are false when they claim that conservatives are "losing their minds" over the video)?



An article from Fox News claims the outrage is fabricated:




An old video of now-Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez playfully recreating a dance scene from "The Breakfast Club" was resurfaced anonymously on Twitter last week -- resulting in a slew of misleading stories claiming conservatives were outraged over it, despite virtually no supporting evidence.











share|improve this question









New contributor




GendoIkari is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











There have been several stories in the media about how a video of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez dancing has caused conservatives to attack her for it.



News sources where this claim is made:



There have been several stories in the media about how a video of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez dancing has caused conservatives to attack her for it.



News sources where this claim is made:





  1. So when an old video of her as a college student emerged, some of them [conservatives] darn near lost their minds.
    MSNBC




  2. I love how Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez has turned American politics into a live action Footloose. People dancing!? Oh the horror! Where will it end?
    New York Times




  3. I hear the GOP thinks women dancing are scandalous. -Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
    CNN




  4. After several conservative Twitter accounts resurfaced clips from the video this week in an attempt to mock Ocasio-Cortez, supporters rushed to her defense.
    USA Today




  5. Conservatives Try to Shame Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez for Dancing Video from College



    Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez danced around once in college — and conservatives lost it.
    Now This News




  6. Conservatives Mock Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez for College Dancing Video, Everyone Else Thinks it's Adorable
    Newsweek




However, among all these different stories, there has only been one example cited where she was attacked for the dancing video, a tweet from an anonymous twitter account.



Are there notable examples of any prominent conservatives attacking Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez for the dance? Any evidence of a public upset among common conservatives? Are all of these news stories only based on this one random tweet (in which case is it fair to say that the news stories are false when they claim that conservatives are "losing their minds" over the video)?



An article from Fox News claims the outrage is fabricated:




An old video of now-Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez playfully recreating a dance scene from "The Breakfast Club" was resurfaced anonymously on Twitter last week -- resulting in a slew of misleading stories claiming conservatives were outraged over it, despite virtually no supporting evidence.








united-states politics






share|improve this question









New contributor




GendoIkari is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




GendoIkari is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 1 hour ago









fredsbend

3,89763365




3,89763365






New contributor




GendoIkari is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked 2 hours ago









GendoIkariGendoIkari

1464




1464




New contributor




GendoIkari is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





GendoIkari is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






GendoIkari is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












  • I'm not sure what claim you want to question here, as I don't see claims of (plural) "conservatives attacking her" being made by the sources you're linking to. Can you provide a direct quote? On an anecdotal note, I saw the @AnonymousQ1776 tweet when it first took off, and many MAGA people were making earnest replies. They were all fairly simple, just calling her stupid or hot. The account you are linking to is a knock-off with far fewer followers.
    – Avery
    2 hours ago












  • What sort of evidence are you looking for here? How could someone show there was or wasn't "outrage"? It seems rather nebulous.
    – Oddthinking
    1 hour ago










  • Quotes and another source added. Though it's not even the specific quotes that matter as much as the fact that these articles exist at all. They are all about coming to her defense, which strongly implies that there is an attack to be defended against.
    – GendoIkari
    1 hour ago






  • 5




    @Oddthinking Something along the lines of quotes or clips of conservative commentators attacking her. They are easy to find for other times that she has been mocked by conservatives for other things.
    – GendoIkari
    1 hour ago










  • Quoting a handful of tweets doesn't seem like it would be sufficient to support the claim. Proving there aren't more than a handful of tweets would be even more difficult (but not impossible).
    – Oddthinking
    1 hour ago


















  • I'm not sure what claim you want to question here, as I don't see claims of (plural) "conservatives attacking her" being made by the sources you're linking to. Can you provide a direct quote? On an anecdotal note, I saw the @AnonymousQ1776 tweet when it first took off, and many MAGA people were making earnest replies. They were all fairly simple, just calling her stupid or hot. The account you are linking to is a knock-off with far fewer followers.
    – Avery
    2 hours ago












  • What sort of evidence are you looking for here? How could someone show there was or wasn't "outrage"? It seems rather nebulous.
    – Oddthinking
    1 hour ago










  • Quotes and another source added. Though it's not even the specific quotes that matter as much as the fact that these articles exist at all. They are all about coming to her defense, which strongly implies that there is an attack to be defended against.
    – GendoIkari
    1 hour ago






  • 5




    @Oddthinking Something along the lines of quotes or clips of conservative commentators attacking her. They are easy to find for other times that she has been mocked by conservatives for other things.
    – GendoIkari
    1 hour ago










  • Quoting a handful of tweets doesn't seem like it would be sufficient to support the claim. Proving there aren't more than a handful of tweets would be even more difficult (but not impossible).
    – Oddthinking
    1 hour ago
















I'm not sure what claim you want to question here, as I don't see claims of (plural) "conservatives attacking her" being made by the sources you're linking to. Can you provide a direct quote? On an anecdotal note, I saw the @AnonymousQ1776 tweet when it first took off, and many MAGA people were making earnest replies. They were all fairly simple, just calling her stupid or hot. The account you are linking to is a knock-off with far fewer followers.
– Avery
2 hours ago






I'm not sure what claim you want to question here, as I don't see claims of (plural) "conservatives attacking her" being made by the sources you're linking to. Can you provide a direct quote? On an anecdotal note, I saw the @AnonymousQ1776 tweet when it first took off, and many MAGA people were making earnest replies. They were all fairly simple, just calling her stupid or hot. The account you are linking to is a knock-off with far fewer followers.
– Avery
2 hours ago














What sort of evidence are you looking for here? How could someone show there was or wasn't "outrage"? It seems rather nebulous.
– Oddthinking
1 hour ago




What sort of evidence are you looking for here? How could someone show there was or wasn't "outrage"? It seems rather nebulous.
– Oddthinking
1 hour ago












Quotes and another source added. Though it's not even the specific quotes that matter as much as the fact that these articles exist at all. They are all about coming to her defense, which strongly implies that there is an attack to be defended against.
– GendoIkari
1 hour ago




Quotes and another source added. Though it's not even the specific quotes that matter as much as the fact that these articles exist at all. They are all about coming to her defense, which strongly implies that there is an attack to be defended against.
– GendoIkari
1 hour ago




5




5




@Oddthinking Something along the lines of quotes or clips of conservative commentators attacking her. They are easy to find for other times that she has been mocked by conservatives for other things.
– GendoIkari
1 hour ago




@Oddthinking Something along the lines of quotes or clips of conservative commentators attacking her. They are easy to find for other times that she has been mocked by conservatives for other things.
– GendoIkari
1 hour ago












Quoting a handful of tweets doesn't seem like it would be sufficient to support the claim. Proving there aren't more than a handful of tweets would be even more difficult (but not impossible).
– Oddthinking
1 hour ago




Quoting a handful of tweets doesn't seem like it would be sufficient to support the claim. Proving there aren't more than a handful of tweets would be even more difficult (but not impossible).
– Oddthinking
1 hour ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















5














In light of there being virtually no prominent conservative cited by any of the media outlets making the claim, and further in light of Fox News' through article (which you already cite), the burden of proof that a conservative outrage actually exists or existed is firmly in the claimants' hands. As that Fox article notes multiple times, not a single bit of evidence aside from an anonymous tweet can be found as the reason for this claim. Without an exhaustive search of all media, I'm not sure what else could be provided to disprove the claim. Without the claimants coming forward with real evidence, a skeptical position seems the most reasonable.



What I believe we are witness to here is an instance of a recent phenomenon. So called "Fake news" is perhaps the most comprehensive term, but in this instance, the drumming up of controversy from a small collection of tweets from common people with no audience is specifically what has happened. It's been determined that Twitter specifically is prone to spreading falsehoods (secondary source), but more and more people are depending on Twitter as a news source. Science News blames this on cleverly designed Twitter bots. The Guardian scathingly blames fellow journalists as self-referential and detached from the rest of the world outside their "twitter bubble". Ken Kam of Forbes, in an article on the rapidly changing landscape of news media, calls Twitter a direct line to newsworthy persons. Specifically, he means to point to President Trump, with with 50 million Twitter followers, whose Twitter use is only exacerbated by his belief that the news media will not report on him fairly.



With all this in mind, your inner skeptic should be screaming his head off the moment you see any news that has anything to do with the activities happening on Twitter. This Ocasio-Cortez dancing thing is only a recent example, egregious as it is.






share|improve this answer





























    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes








    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    5














    In light of there being virtually no prominent conservative cited by any of the media outlets making the claim, and further in light of Fox News' through article (which you already cite), the burden of proof that a conservative outrage actually exists or existed is firmly in the claimants' hands. As that Fox article notes multiple times, not a single bit of evidence aside from an anonymous tweet can be found as the reason for this claim. Without an exhaustive search of all media, I'm not sure what else could be provided to disprove the claim. Without the claimants coming forward with real evidence, a skeptical position seems the most reasonable.



    What I believe we are witness to here is an instance of a recent phenomenon. So called "Fake news" is perhaps the most comprehensive term, but in this instance, the drumming up of controversy from a small collection of tweets from common people with no audience is specifically what has happened. It's been determined that Twitter specifically is prone to spreading falsehoods (secondary source), but more and more people are depending on Twitter as a news source. Science News blames this on cleverly designed Twitter bots. The Guardian scathingly blames fellow journalists as self-referential and detached from the rest of the world outside their "twitter bubble". Ken Kam of Forbes, in an article on the rapidly changing landscape of news media, calls Twitter a direct line to newsworthy persons. Specifically, he means to point to President Trump, with with 50 million Twitter followers, whose Twitter use is only exacerbated by his belief that the news media will not report on him fairly.



    With all this in mind, your inner skeptic should be screaming his head off the moment you see any news that has anything to do with the activities happening on Twitter. This Ocasio-Cortez dancing thing is only a recent example, egregious as it is.






    share|improve this answer


























      5














      In light of there being virtually no prominent conservative cited by any of the media outlets making the claim, and further in light of Fox News' through article (which you already cite), the burden of proof that a conservative outrage actually exists or existed is firmly in the claimants' hands. As that Fox article notes multiple times, not a single bit of evidence aside from an anonymous tweet can be found as the reason for this claim. Without an exhaustive search of all media, I'm not sure what else could be provided to disprove the claim. Without the claimants coming forward with real evidence, a skeptical position seems the most reasonable.



      What I believe we are witness to here is an instance of a recent phenomenon. So called "Fake news" is perhaps the most comprehensive term, but in this instance, the drumming up of controversy from a small collection of tweets from common people with no audience is specifically what has happened. It's been determined that Twitter specifically is prone to spreading falsehoods (secondary source), but more and more people are depending on Twitter as a news source. Science News blames this on cleverly designed Twitter bots. The Guardian scathingly blames fellow journalists as self-referential and detached from the rest of the world outside their "twitter bubble". Ken Kam of Forbes, in an article on the rapidly changing landscape of news media, calls Twitter a direct line to newsworthy persons. Specifically, he means to point to President Trump, with with 50 million Twitter followers, whose Twitter use is only exacerbated by his belief that the news media will not report on him fairly.



      With all this in mind, your inner skeptic should be screaming his head off the moment you see any news that has anything to do with the activities happening on Twitter. This Ocasio-Cortez dancing thing is only a recent example, egregious as it is.






      share|improve this answer
























        5












        5








        5






        In light of there being virtually no prominent conservative cited by any of the media outlets making the claim, and further in light of Fox News' through article (which you already cite), the burden of proof that a conservative outrage actually exists or existed is firmly in the claimants' hands. As that Fox article notes multiple times, not a single bit of evidence aside from an anonymous tweet can be found as the reason for this claim. Without an exhaustive search of all media, I'm not sure what else could be provided to disprove the claim. Without the claimants coming forward with real evidence, a skeptical position seems the most reasonable.



        What I believe we are witness to here is an instance of a recent phenomenon. So called "Fake news" is perhaps the most comprehensive term, but in this instance, the drumming up of controversy from a small collection of tweets from common people with no audience is specifically what has happened. It's been determined that Twitter specifically is prone to spreading falsehoods (secondary source), but more and more people are depending on Twitter as a news source. Science News blames this on cleverly designed Twitter bots. The Guardian scathingly blames fellow journalists as self-referential and detached from the rest of the world outside their "twitter bubble". Ken Kam of Forbes, in an article on the rapidly changing landscape of news media, calls Twitter a direct line to newsworthy persons. Specifically, he means to point to President Trump, with with 50 million Twitter followers, whose Twitter use is only exacerbated by his belief that the news media will not report on him fairly.



        With all this in mind, your inner skeptic should be screaming his head off the moment you see any news that has anything to do with the activities happening on Twitter. This Ocasio-Cortez dancing thing is only a recent example, egregious as it is.






        share|improve this answer












        In light of there being virtually no prominent conservative cited by any of the media outlets making the claim, and further in light of Fox News' through article (which you already cite), the burden of proof that a conservative outrage actually exists or existed is firmly in the claimants' hands. As that Fox article notes multiple times, not a single bit of evidence aside from an anonymous tweet can be found as the reason for this claim. Without an exhaustive search of all media, I'm not sure what else could be provided to disprove the claim. Without the claimants coming forward with real evidence, a skeptical position seems the most reasonable.



        What I believe we are witness to here is an instance of a recent phenomenon. So called "Fake news" is perhaps the most comprehensive term, but in this instance, the drumming up of controversy from a small collection of tweets from common people with no audience is specifically what has happened. It's been determined that Twitter specifically is prone to spreading falsehoods (secondary source), but more and more people are depending on Twitter as a news source. Science News blames this on cleverly designed Twitter bots. The Guardian scathingly blames fellow journalists as self-referential and detached from the rest of the world outside their "twitter bubble". Ken Kam of Forbes, in an article on the rapidly changing landscape of news media, calls Twitter a direct line to newsworthy persons. Specifically, he means to point to President Trump, with with 50 million Twitter followers, whose Twitter use is only exacerbated by his belief that the news media will not report on him fairly.



        With all this in mind, your inner skeptic should be screaming his head off the moment you see any news that has anything to do with the activities happening on Twitter. This Ocasio-Cortez dancing thing is only a recent example, egregious as it is.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered 49 mins ago









        fredsbendfredsbend

        3,89763365




        3,89763365















            Popular posts from this blog

            濃尾地震

            How to rewrite equation of hyperbola in standard form

            No ethernet ip address in my vocore2