NYT: To live and seethe in that world of conspiracy theories means rejecting any form of objective [View all]
reality. When unemployment numbers make the administration look good, they are obviously cooked. When poll numbers put Mr. Obama ahead, they are skewed. Birth certificates are forgeries. Safety-net programs are giveaways to supporters. Health insurance reform is socialism. And campaign donation disclosure is antibusiness.
Its an upside-down version of life, and it is not innocuous. When desperation leads political critics of the president to discredit important nonpolitical institutions including the Census Bureau, the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the Federal Reserve and the Congressional Budget Office the damage can be long-lasting.
If voters come to mistrust the most basic functions of government, the resulting cynicism can destroy the basic compact of citizenship.
When Republicans began questioning President Obamas birth certificate four years ago, it seemed at first like a petulant reaction to a lost election, a flush of nativist and racist anger that would diminish over time. But the preposterous charges never went away. As this election cycle shows, many in the Republican Party continue to see the president as the center of a broad and malevolent liberal conspiracy to upend the truth.
Democrats arent happy about the latest polls, but they arent suggesting Mr. Romney is manipulating them, just as they didnt undermine the Bureau of Labor Statistics when the jobless numbers were high.
Many are far more worried about a conspiracy that is verifiable and serious: the concerted effort by Republicans over the last four years to deprive minorities, poor people and other likely Democratic supporters of their voting rights.
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/10/opinion/conspiracy-world.html?hp
To summarize: Facts have a liberal bias. And republicans don't need no stinking fact-checkers running their campaigns.
In their world, conspiracy theories based on suspicions alone are all they need.