NEO: Nathan Phillips, character assassin: what even his critics seem to be ignoring about him.

However, what’s being almost completely ignored even on the right (the NY Post is just about alone in mentioning it, and they don’t emphasize it much at all) are Phillips’ most vicious lies, told quite early in the game (I’ll get to what they were in a minute). These particular lies probably had a big role in shaping people’s perceptions of the boys and helped to spur their widespread demonization.

It was Phillips himself who quite early on, during his Saturday interview with CNN that set the original tone and was widely disseminated, gave the following description of the Covington boys:

It looked like these young men were going to attack [the Black Israelites]. They were going to hurt them. They were going to hurt them because they didn’t like the color of their skin. They didn’t like their religious views. They were just here in front of the Lincoln — Lincoln is not my hero, but at the same time, there was this understanding that he brought the (Emancipation Proclamation) or freed the slaves, and here are American youth who are ready to, look like, lynch these guys. To be honest, they looked like they were going to lynch them. They were in this mob mentality.

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If not for that long video that finally emerged (ironically, as a result of the Black Israelites taking it and posting it), Phillips’ pernicious and poisonous narrative would have carried the day. As it is, his narrative continues to override reality for many many people. And that is also with the assistance of the MSM, including Savannah Guthrie’s gentle, respectful later interview of him (a contrast to her challenging one of Sandmann) that failed to question Phillips on a single one of his lies. Rather, she let him continue to spread his narrative as he wished.

On Wednesday, William Jacobson wrote, “The lesson anybody on the right needs to learn, is you need to have your own video cameras running.”

During the Tea Party days, before he turned away from blogging about politics, I remember blogger Moe Lane frequently stressed the importance of having at least two people shooting video at a Tea Party pro-small government protest. For example, it’s one thing to have video of having someone having his camera knocked away; it’s another to have simultaneous video of the assailant in the act.

Conversely, multiple cameras rolling at an event works against someone creating a false narrative — as Phillips discovered this week the hard way.