Marci McDonald and The Armageddon Factor
Thursday, 10 June 2010

It has been several weeks since the book The Armageddon Factor was released, igniting a storm of controversy that author Marci McDonald says she neither intended, nor anticipated. Perhaps so, but one gets the feeling that she’s not entirely unhappy with the attention. What really bothers her, she says, is the invective that has been directed her way since the book’s publication. Now she’s fighting back…and she’s using me to do so.

In a column published by the Ottawa Citizen June 9, McDonald tells how I greeted her with a “massive bear hug” prior to appearing on a CTV panel together. The implication is clear: Marci McDonald remains a good friend of one of the two (according to the Toronto Star) official “spinmeisters” of Canada’s conservative movement, and a Jew at that – Joseph Ben-Ami.

Except - the above episode never happened. When McDonald and I greeted one another before our joint appearance on CTV’s Power Play, all we did was touch cheeks gently, as standard a greeting between a man and a woman as shaking hands is between two men. That she would portray such a common and innocuous gesture as a “massive bear hug” illustrates a disturbing willingness to adjust facts to fit her personal narrative. This would be fine if she were Dan Brown (author of The Da Vinci Code) but she's not. She's supposed to be a serious journalist and her book, a serious work of journalism.

It's not the first time McDonald has misrepresented our relationship when promoting her book. In an interview with Harris MaCleod of The Hill Times she stated that she and I “talked endlessly” until a couple of weeks before her book’s publication, when I suddenly cut off communication. In fact - other than exchanging pleasantries when running into one another at various events - I probably spoke with McDonald four or five times in the six years that I've known her. What's more, all but one of these conversations were interviews that she requested, and the one that wasn't took place sometime last winter when she called to say her book would soon be published, and that I could expect a call from her publisher to verify facts.

I never heard from her or her publisher again.

There's more. In the course of our debate on CTV, McDonald accused the government of Stephen Harper of eliminating taxpayer funding of left-wing advocacy groups while giving money to conservative groups.

Now, as it happens, this is something that I and my colleagues at the Canadian Centre for Policy Studies monitor pretty closely, so I know who is getting money and who isn't, and no conservative advocacy group is. When I challenged her to name one that was, McDonald dodged the question by changing the subject. And when I refused to let her of the hook, our moderator ended the debate, saying that we were "out of time".

And then there was a recent column by Daphne Bramham of the Vancouver Sun that claims that I converted to Orthodox Judaism (whatever that means) and changed my name after divorcing my first wife. It’s beyond me why anyone would think that reporting details of my private life would be in the public interest, but to the degree that it is, the “facts” reported by Bramham are wrong from start to finish.

Bramham's source? Marci McDonald.

In her Ottawa Citizen column, McDonald reminds us - with unbecoming triumph - that her critics were "only" able to find four factual errors in her entire book. Moreover, according to her, some of those critics didn't even read the book.

Her first observation misses the point completely. The critics she identifies only chose to highlight the four errors in question because each were so egregious – and the truth so easily verifiable – that they fatally undermine the credibility of her whole work, which is intended to be interpretive (meaning she explains the implication of the “facts” she reports), rather than just documentary.

As for reading the book, I have to confess that I haven't read it either, but even if I had, how could I possibly trust that the thousands of small "facts" she reports, most of which I could never hope to verify myself, are indeed true? Given the bizarre nature of her behaviour and statements afterthe book was published as they relate to me, I have to say that I can't.

Besides, I'm still waiting to receive the copy she promised she would send me. No surprise there…but I digress.

The bottom line is this: Just because I prefer to be polite in my discourse, and civilized in my behaviour with Marci McDonald doesn't mean that we're good buddies. When it comes down to it, I'm squarely on the side of the critics.

Comments (11)add comment
SteveR: ...
It's about time you responded. We were all starting to think that maybe you were on her side.
1

June 10, 2010
Karen Selick: ...
I wonder whether she is counting the errors she made about the Canadian Constitution Foundation among the four she says critics have found. I haven't bothered to read the book either, but I have been compelled to correct online excerpts in two different places.
2

June 10, 2010
Joseph replies: ...
Karen:

It might interest you to know that before our panel discussion on CTV and after our alleged bear hug, Marci shared with me that the mistake regarding the Canadian Constitution Foundation was made by the Toronto Star. She claimed that they inserted the "fact" that had to be retracted.
3

June 10, 2010
Karen Selick: ...
Ah, but there she has been caught in a fib, Joseph. While the Star did indeed change her words, they were really just condensing some of the erroneous stuff about the CCF that is in her book. Check it out here: http://www.xtra.ca/public/Nati...-8716.aspx
She mentions the CCF in the last 3 paragraphs of this excerpt and basically calls us "part of the Christian right" and "an evangelical group". She just tried to blame the Star in the hope that it would drop there, but the errors are right in her book. I've checked.
4

June 10, 2010
Thank you Joseph. I knew that was probably the truth already, but I am glad you have confirmed it.
5

June 10, 2010
Hayward: ...
smilies/smiley.gif about time you did something interesting like the model
6

June 10, 2010
Prime Mover: ...
Thank you for your thoughtful post, Joseph. Have you heard the Chris Selley interview on the National Post website? On the topic of religious conservatives involving themselves in Canadian politics, she says, "I'm not saying it is a bad thing." Selley stumbles through and really treats her with kid gloves.
7

June 10, 2010
Kevin McDonald : ... http://nationalreview.com
Would that she would give a bear a massive hug.
8

June 10, 2010
Karol Karolak: ...
Marci McDonald and the demonization of Christianity.

Over the years, when they were in power, Liberals run all kinds of conspiracies, on many different issues, even now their "Prince of Darkness" Warren Catsmeat Kinsella swears all kinds of affidavits alleging all kinds of conspiracies involving the usual Liberal suspects with hopes that some of his wild allegations will somehow stick and drive Michael Ignatieff over the edge of the cliff.

Innuendos, half truths and outright lies were always the staple of propaganda machines of Nazis, Commies, and Liberal regimes so there is nothing really surprising in the fact that

Marci McDonald mixed fact and fiction in her propaganda book. What is really interesting is where her imagination took her. Alleging that group of Christian fundamentalists preparing for the Armageddon and the second coming of Jesus Christ are somehow secretly controlling Canadian government is about as far as anybody's imagination can take them before six Toronto cops burst through their front door with Form 2, of Section 16, of the Ontario Mental Health Act, filled out by a local shrink and signed by the nearest Justice of the Peace in hand. In fact, I know people who have been scooped by Toronto cops for telling much less imaginative plots.

Marci's only saving grace so far is the fact that Toronto Liberals who still run that town desperately want to believe in what Marci is telling them. Judging by the looks of things, it seems that Marci's paranoia keeps on spreading especially in the gaybourhood where the prospect of the judgement day sends the chill down the spines of habitual sinners living in that part of city of Sodom. Outrage and fear, like any other strong emotions, tend to cloud people's judgements, so it seems to me, that Marci McDonald, while catering to needs to Liberals and LGBT community, is actually helping Conservative cause. Any professional liar knows that in order to effectively spread lies the liar has to contort his mind into believing in what he or she wants to sell to the gullible public. From there thinking goes, if what Marci McDonald says in her book is true and Conservatives are getting away with it, than any other offensive front that Conservatives might open up during the "culture war" with Liberals is not only explainable, justifiable but also inevitable and pretty much irresistible. Since Toronto homosexual activists are already paranoid about certain passages contained in the Bible and they are already at war with Christian fundamentalists prospect of these fundamentalists having secret access to corridors of power in Ottawa must be quite paralyzing for quite many of them. With their willingness to fight for their cause compromised Marci McDonald's new book it seems that Conservative victory in the current culture war is already assured.
9

June 10, 2010
Perhaps that's the closest any man has ever got to her. She was delirious.
10

June 11, 2010
Loni Eliot: ...
I'm just beginning to read the book 'The Armageddon Factor' and I do find it frightening if even a bit of it is true. This is because over the years,having been raised in the Christian faith, I have become very jaded with the strident 'my way or no way' attitude of most christian conservatives and their tactics. To the point where I now would count myself more of a secular humanist than anything, assuming of course that I need a label. Seeing what is taking place in the US with the religious right wing and seeing the influence and ties here in Canada, I remain dubious of and leery of any extreme and literal groups. This includes most evangelical christians and extreme muslims and also secular groups. There doesn't seem to be any real discourse going on. Everyone is firmly in one group or another and will or can not even consider the others points of view. Very scary stuff. Even a whiff of extreme evangalism having close ties to the decision makers in Ottawa causes most secular or nominally religious members of the general public to become alarmed. As to Marci MacDonald, I will finish reading the book (unlike others who comment before reading), do some research of my own and then make a decision as to whether she is off the mark or not.
11

June 30, 2010

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