A Republican lawmaker wasnât happy when he was exposed for using a fake photo to spread propaganda.
On Monday, Representative Paul Gosar tweeted a doctored pic that showed former President Barack Obama meeting with Iranian President Hassan Rouhani â an encounter that never happened. The photo was captioned: âThe world is a better place without these guys in power.â
CNN journalist Andrew Kaczynski noted that Gosar was sharing a misleadingly edited version of a photo that was taken in 2011 â when Obama met not with Rouhani, but with former Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.
Journalist Daniel Medina also pointed out that Rouhani was still in power and condemned Gosarâs attempt to spread disinformation.
Despite the criticism, Gosar defended his use of the doctored image in a follow-up tweet: âTo the dim witted reporters like @dmedin11: No one said this wasnât photoshopped. No one said the president of Iran was dead. No one said Obama met with Rouhani in person. The tweet says: âthe world is a better place without either of them in power.ââ
Gosar continued to argue that the tweet was truthful, avoiding the fact that the photo wasnât.
But people on Twitter werenât moved by Gosarâs logic. Rep. Sean Casten (D-Ill.) tweeted: âThe world would be a better place if elected officials didnât share photoshopped images and take pride in being ignorant.â
One Twitter user suggested that Gosar had invented a new catchphrase:
Some people responded to Gosarâs photoshopped pic with photos of President Donald Trump and North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un, who actually met.
Another user observed that Gosarâs tweet was âonly intended to incite fear and hate at a Black Christian man and a Brown Muslim man.â
Of course, tweeting bizarre and inappropriate things is nothing new for Gosar, who made news when six of his siblings did campaign ads for his opponent in 2018.
On Christmas, he tweeted out a strange Christmas message with a video of former President Bill Clinton and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton nearly getting hit by a falling studio light during an interview.