A Community-Based Reality
Aug 1st, 2007 by Bob Owens
Cross-posted at Confederate Yankee:
I think that the phrase borrowed from commenter at Riehl Word View quite accurately reflects a growing “conventional wisdom” among a peculiar group of bloggers that military and conservative bloggers attempted to claim that “Scott Thomas” didn’t actually exist.
“Scott Thomas,” of course, was the pseudonym chosen by U.S. Army PV-2 Scott Thomas Beauchamp when he posted a series of three dispatches in the magazine The New Republic.
The most recent post, “Shock Troops,” (subscription required) became the focus of Michael Goldfarb on July 18 because of some very strong claims of various kinds of abuse alleged by “Scott Thomas” of himself and other soldiers. These claims are now the subject of investigations by the U.S. Army (real) and the magazine that carried the claims, The New Republic (which critics have dismissed as an attempt at face-saving and job-keeping by the editors, and little more).
Soon afterward, Beauchamp’s previous post, “Dead of Night” came under scrutiny, and two claims he made there were conclusively debunked.
Military bloggers began zeroing in on the identity of “Scott Thomas” within days— Marine turned documentary filmmaker JD Johannes had his unit narrowed to the 1-18 Infantry by the following Saturday—forcing Thomas into a position where he felt the need to reveal himself days later.
On the afternoon Beauchamp came forward on July 26, severel prominent bloggers began to compose a narrative every bit as fictional as that of Beauchamp himself, and apparently, for equally dishonorable reasons.
On that afternoon in The Washington Monthly, Kevin Drum seems to have manufactured the controversy:
Conservative sites went crazy. Thomas didn’t really exist. His stories were made up. The left hates the troops. Etc. etc.
At Sadly No!, Gavin M. claimed:
1) WingNet accuses soldier/journalist of being an impostor.
2) WingNet proven wrong.
At alicubog:
ATTENTION COMRADES! Previous meme “Scott Thomas does not exist” is no longer operative. Please to substitute “Scott Thomas Beauchamp is a bad man” or “Scott Thomas Beauchamp is Oliver Stone” or “Scott Thomas Beauchamp is a semiotic construct” or “We’ll get Scott Thomas Beauchamp fired” or whatever damn thing you can think of.
By the next day, Americablog had latched onto this creative fiction as well:
Of course, the right wing blogosphere went nuts, accusing TNR of fabricating a soldier and lying about his experiences. There were repeated attempts to prove that Scott Thomas was a fake.
Even yesterday, at Mercury Rising yesterday, a blogger wrote:
Of course, once they found out about it, all of the Usual Suspects in the conservative’s mighty Wurlitzer - Malkin, Powerline, the whole schmear - set out to prove that “Scott Thomas” didn’t exist and that this was all just liberal lies to smear the armed forces and turn the country against the war. They went berzerk proving to themselves through “semiotic analysis” and other such crapola that this whole thing was just made-up liberal media lies.
And so it is that “this whole thing”—the claim that conservative bloggers said Thomas didn’t exist or wasn’t a soldier—comes squarely back onto the shoulders of liberal bloggers who created the meme themselves.
When pressed to provide a specific quote from any conservative blog stating that Scott Thomas didn’t really exist, was fabricated, or was an imposter, these and other liberal bloggers have utterly failed to do so.
Why they failed should now be obvious: they made up these claims themselves.













[…] morphed, in some cases (it is alleged; I have yet to see an actual link), into the speculation that Beauchamp can’t possibly be a […]
[…] a tendency to create things that fit one’s world view. Bob Owens notes one case in his post A Community-Based Reality: And so it is that “this whole thing”—the claim that conservative bloggers said Thomas […]
[…] Cole is himself a milblogger — and that his idea of a “smear” seems to extend to questioning the specifics of what Beauchamp […]