Voice of Europe is a far right website that publishes sensational stories. Although the website doesn’t list who runs the site, according to Whois the site’s registrant name is Annemiek Ploumen. According to Dutch magazine De Groene Amsterdammer (independent Dutch weekly news magazine published in Amsterdam), Erik De Vlieger is the financier and founder of the site, while Daan van Seventer is the technical person. Voice of Europe doesn’t have an about page, however according to their twitter profile information they describe their content as “Conservative news network delivering you breaking news, uncensored articles and must-see videos.” Voice of Europe reports stories from European media and frames and spins them in a misleading way that always turns out negative for immigrants and the European Union: “Almost 98% of gang rapists in Sweden have a migrant background”, “Sweden reports highest number of murders in fifteen years” Voice of Europe also has a poor track record with fact checkers.
Voice of Europe’s stories consist of sensational click bait headlines and focus on a variety of topics that are mostly anti-immigrant with emotionally loaded headlines and content such as “Swedish student suspended for telling the truth about migrant sex crimes.“ Voice of Europe frequently uses factually mixed sources such as Breitbart, Daily Mail, Gatestone Institute, and Sputnik News.
Overall, this site is Questionable due to extreme right wing bias, promotion of propaganda, conspiracy theories and poor sourcing. (M Huitsing 4/8/2018)
Sceptr blijkt niet het product van een groepje journalisten die zich samen hebben gezet met de bedoeling een nieuwe biotoop te creëren waar journalistiek goed kan gedijen. Het initiatief komt van financiers uit de entourage van 't Pallieterke. Mensen met een uitgesproken (extreem)rechtse conservatief katholieke ideologie. Zij willen een kanaal creëren om hun mening te ventileren. Dat lijkt op propaganda, verkocht als journalistiek.
The Gatestone Institute has been described as "anti-Muslim", regularly publishes articles to stoke anti-Muslim fears, and has published false stories to that end. Gatestone frequently warns of a looming “jihadist takeover” and "Islamization" of Europe leading to a “Great White Death.” Gatestone authors have a particular interest in Germany and Sweden, and frequently criticize leaders such as Macron and Merkel.
In 2012, the Gatestone Institute hosted a talk by Geert Wilders. Gatestone has been criticized for affiliating itself with Geert Wilders, who says that he "hates Islam."In 2016, Gatestone paid for Wilders’s flights and hotels on trips to the United States, and has published his writings.
Alina Polyakova, a Brookings Institution fellow and expert on far-right populism, said that Gatetone's content "was clearly anti-immigrant" and "anti-Muslim".
Gatestone authors frequently appear on Russian government-controlled media such as Sputnik News and RT. Several Gatestone articles were promoted by Russian trolls working for the Kremlin-linked Internet Research Agency, as the articles often have a common purpose with a Russian disinformation campaign which seeks to portray Western society as in crisis due to immigration of Muslims.
Tja, daar kunnen Harvard en The Atlantic niet tegen op.
(Good L-rd, en ik denk dat hij het nog serieus meent ook :-) )