The Account Posting Anti-Muslim Remarks May Belong To This Professor

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
The account was registered to Viola's official university email address, the Temple Press reported.
A journalism professor at a university in Philadelphia has admitted to making some
of the posts attributed to an anonymous commenter who posted on far-right sites, spread baseless conspiracy theories and maligned Muslims,
according to the school.Francesca Viola, who teaches journalism at Temple University, which is public, was identified on Twitter by Joshua
Benton, the director of Harvard's Nieman Journalism Lab, as the user behind the commenter account name "truthseeker," after it had posted a
comment disparaging the media-centric site.After identifying Viola, Benton pulled up comments the user had made on other sites and began to
tweet them.Truthseeker had parroted evidence-less conspiracy theories about the unsolved murder of a former Democratic National Committee
staffer, that President Donald Trump would have won the popular vote during the 2016 election had it not been for illegal votes, and also
posted sharply disparaging remarks about Muslims."Scum," the user wrote in response to an article about Muslims praying in front of Trump
Tower on the conservative conspiracy theory site the Gateway Pundit, according to screenshots posted by Benton
"Deport them
They hate us
Get rid of them."David Boardman, the dean of Temple's Klein College of Media and Communication said in a statement that the university was
looking into the allegations."Professor Viola has admitted to writing some but not all of these posts and specifically denies writing the
post that is derogatory of Muslim protesters, a comment we find particularly abhorrent," he said
"We are troubled by the content of some of the other cited posts but acknowledge that those in the Temple community are entitled to exercise
free speech within constitutional parameters."It was not immediately clear for which or how many of the posts the professor had taken
responsibility.The incident comes less than a month after a professor at California State University at Fresno attacked the recently
deceased former first lady Barbara Bush on Twitter, sparking a debate over free speech and academic freedom.Viola, who did not respond to a
request for comment sent to her university email address, accused Benton of "doxing" her, a practice of disclosing other people's personal
information online as a way to harass or intimidate them
She asked people "not to assume I am the author of some or all of those comments.""I dispute the incorrect attributions and specious
allegations posted by Joshua Benton on his Twitter feed at Harvard's Nieman journalism think tank," Viola said in a statement, according to
the Inquirer
"I am appalled [by] his improper 'doxing' and by his flagrant violation of the Twitter, Disqus, Nieman and Harvard's terms of service, the
apparent violation of the Consumer Fraud and Abuse Act - as well as the ethical and legal standards of journalism
I consider this a personal defamatory attack as well as an attempt to silence academic freedom and people everywhere."Doxing typically
involves posting highly personal details, such as a cellphone number or home address, which was not done in this case."Ms
Viola voluntarily logged into a commenting service and left a comment on our site using her Temple email address," Benton said, according to
the Inquirer
"All I did was click one link to see all the other comments she had posted using her Temple email address."The "truthseeker" account was
created on the platform Disqus, which allows users to comment on different websites under one user name
The account was registered to Viola's official university email address, the Temple Press reported.The conspiracy theory over the death of
DNC staffer Seth Rich, which has been debunked numerous times, flourished in right-wing media circles last year, culminating in a report on
Fox News that was later retracted by the outlet
The theory posited that the DNC staffer, who was murdered on a Washington street in the summer of 2016, had been killed as retaliation for
leaking information to WikiLeaks."The DNC had him killed," the truthseeker account posted
"This Russia story was manufactured as a distraction
You stupid libs keep pushing the Russian narrative with not one shred of evidence."According to the screenshots Benton posted, truthseeker
wrote repeatedly that "I am a college professor at a major east coast university," a lawyer, and a Trump supporter.Viola has a law degree
from Widener University in Chester, Pennsylvania, and is a licensed attorney, according to her Temple University bio.The truthseeker account
wrote that "the reason Trump won is because more people voted for him than your girl.""And save your breath on the tired refrain that
Hillary won the popular vote," it wrote, "because of some illegal votes cast in California."The president has helped popularized the
baseless theory that he would have won the popular vote had it not been for massive voter fraud.The truthseeker account notes that Viola's
interests include "the nexus between emerging media and the law's response to it, as well as the effect of the internet on broadcast
journalism."(This story has not been edited by TheIndianSubcontinent staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)