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'All I Know Is What's On The Internet': The Donald Trump Story

After a demonstrator attempted to storm the stage at Donald Trump’s rally in Dayton, Ohio, on Saturday, Trump took to Twitter to allege that the perpetrator “has ties to ISIS(link is external).”

The evidence of the man’s purported ISIS ties? A fake video(link is external).

When asked why he would promote such an easily debunked claim, Trump said(link is external) simply: “All I know is what’s on the internet.”

Indeed, that might be a great slogan for his campaign, as he has repeatedly promoted rumors and bogus stories that were popularized by chain emails. Trump, who according to one analysis, averages “one misstatement every five minutes(link is external),” seems to be fond of pushing right-wing myths and refusing to back down after they’ve been debunked.

As Matt Taibbi put it(link is external), “there isn’t any absurd idea Donald Trump isn’t willing to entertain, so long as it fits in with his worldview.”

Trump tweeted a photoshopped image(link is external) of Megyn Kelly posing next to a Saudi prince and a woman dressed in a niqab during his feud with the Fox News host and, even more notoriously, tweeted a racist and bogus crime statistic image from a neo-Nazi(link is external). Trump nonetheless defended(link is external) the post as originating from a “very credible” source.

More recently, Trump seized on the right-wing conspiracy theory that Justice Antonin Scalia was murdered(link is external). Last year, was criticized(link is external) by medical groups when he brought his anti-vaxxer views(link is external) to the presidential debate stage.

Trump has persistently told a spurious story spread around the internet(link is external), dismissing several reports debunking(link is external) it(link is external), about an American general allegedly Ctrl+Click or tap to follow the link"> using bullets drenched in pig’s blood to execute Muslim prisoners(link is external) (Trump thought it was a good thing).

In the same way, even after reports proved(link is external) without (link is external) a(link is external) doubt(link is external) that Trump’s story about thousands and thousands of Muslim-Americans in New Jersey celebrating on 9/11 was false, he has continued(link is external) to(link is external) accuse(link is external) thousands of Muslim residents of Paterson, New Jersey, of partying in the streets as the terrorist attack happened. His campaign manager even accused the media of covering up corroborating evidence(link is external).

Of course, we can’t forget how Trump spread the ultimate political conspiracy theory made popular online: birther theories about President Obama’s birthplace and college records.

Trump, however, wants to assure you that he “never falls for scams(link is external).”