The D.C. astroturf specialist Bonner & Associates has been feigning innocence that its employees were forging letters to Congress in an industry-funded attack on the Waxman-Markey climate change bill. But DeSmogBlog researcher Nathanael Baker has turned up a 12-year-old article that shows this kind of questionable public manipulation is old hat in the Bonnerย offices.
The Ken Silverstein article, from a 1997 edition of Mother Jones, shows that Bonner has been duping American politicians on behalf of everyone from stale cigarette smoke-and-mirrors gang at Philip Morris to the coal barons of the Western Fuelsย Association.
Silverstein identified two particular tactics: the โvirtual petitionโ in which people are induced to sign a statement (with a release in fine print) only to have their signature scanned and inked onto a petition; and the recruiting of โwhite hats,โ in which Bonner engages influential people lobby for their clients without ever identifying the funder – sometimes without being completely open about the nature of the issue on which they wereย lobbying.
Silversteinโs article is well-documented and shows a pattern of deception that, judging from Bonnerโs own website, seems to make the company proud. The Bonner promise is, essentially, to make politicians think that people care about anย issue.
In a way, they have a point: if people really knew what Bonner was up to – and who was paying the bill – theyโd careย deeply.
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